| Sylvia Nasar | |
|---|---|
| Born | 17 August 1947 Rosenheim, Germany |
| Occupation | Journalist Biographer Professor of Journalism |
Sylvia Nasar (born 17 August 1947 in Rosenheim, Germany) is a German economist and author, best known for her biography of John Forbes Nash, A Beautiful Mind. Events 986 - A Byzantine army was destroyed in the pass of Trajan's Gate by the Bulgarians under the Comitopuli Year 1947 ( MCMXLVII) was a Common year starting on Wednesday (link will display full 1947 calendar of the Gregorian calendar. Rosenheim is a town in Bavaria ( Germany) at the confluence of the rivers Inn and Mangfall Germany, officially the Federal Republic of Germany ( ˈbʊndəsʁepuˌbliːk ˈdɔʏtʃlant is a Country in Central Europe. Employment is a Contract between two parties, one being the employer and the other being the employee. Events 986 - A Byzantine army was destroyed in the pass of Trajan's Gate by the Bulgarians under the Comitopuli Year 1947 ( MCMXLVII) was a Common year starting on Wednesday (link will display full 1947 calendar of the Gregorian calendar. Rosenheim is a town in Bavaria ( Germany) at the confluence of the rivers Inn and Mangfall Germany, officially the Federal Republic of Germany ( ˈbʊndəsʁepuˌbliːk ˈdɔʏtʃlant is a Country in Central Europe. A Beautiful Mind
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Nasar was born to a German mother and Uzbek father. Her family immigrated to the United States in 1951, then moved to Ankara, Turkey in 1960. Ankara is the capital of Turkey and the country's second largest city after İstanbul. She graduated from Antioch College in 1970, and earned a masters' degree in economics at New York University in 1976. Antioch College was a private independent Liberal arts college in Yellow Springs, Ohio, United States, and was the founder and flagship New York University ( NYU) is a private, Nonsectarian, Coeducational Research University in New York City. For four years, she did research with Nobel Laureate Wassily Leontief. This is a list of Nobel Prize Laureates awarded for their outstanding contributions to Humanitarian causes for Peace, work in Literature Wassily Wassilyovitch Leontief (Василий Васильевич Леонтьев August 5, 1905, Munich, Germany February 5 She is currently the Knight Chair in Business Journalism at Columbia University. Columbia University is a private University in the United States and a member of the Ivy League. Her husband is the noted economist Darryl McLeod. They have three children and live in Tarrytown, New York. Tarrytown is a village in the Town of Greenburgh in Westchester County, New York, United States.
In the August 28, 2006 The New Yorker, Nasar's article Manifold Destiny contained the only interview with Grigori Perelman, who solved the Poincaré conjecture, but rejected the 2006 Fields Medal, and examined Fields Medalist S.T. Yau's response to Perelman's proof. The New Yorker is an American Magazine that publishes reportage commentary criticism essays fiction satire cartoons and poetry Grigori Yakovlevich Perelman (Григорий Яковлевич Перельман born 13 June 1966 in Leningrad, USSR (now St In Mathematics, the Poincaré conjecture (French pwɛ̃kaʀe is a Theorem about the characterization of the three-dimensional sphere among The Fields Medal is a prize awarded to two three or four Mathematicians not over 40 years of age at each International Congress of the International Mathematical Shing-Tung Yau ( born April 4, 1949) is a Chinese American Mathematician working in Differential geometry, and involved Yau threatened to file a lawsuit, but never followed through.