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Dr. W. Charles Holland, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, has been named a Distinguished Research Professor by the
University's Board of Trustees. Holland, whose name is known among mathematicians around the world, was given the title during
the trustees' June 25, 1993 meeting. The honor is one of the highest awarded by the University to a faculty member.
The mathematician is only the fifth individual to receive the title, which recognizes a professor's national and international
acclaim for academic accomplishments through research and publications. Others who are Distinguished Research Professors include
Dr. Gary Hess, a professor of history and expert on U. S.-Southeast Asian relations; Dr. Douglas Neckers, chair of the chemistry
department and executive director of the Center for Photochemical Research; Dr. Jaak Panksepp, a psychology professor who
is known for his expertise in psychobiology; and Philip F. O'Connor, a best-selling novelist and retired director of the University's
creative writing program.
Holland is recognized as a world leader in his specialty within the field of mathematics, the highly technical study of ordered
groups. Not only do some of his colleagues rank him among the best mathematicians in the United States, but they also say
he is among the most gifted mathematicians in the world. Noted one who supported his nomination for the post, "His insight
and stimulation have made Bowling Green the Mecca for all research workers in the field."
Holland is credited with developing a theory early in his career that proved to be the key to understanding general infinite
ordered groups. Although at first doubted by experts, his results provided the tool that made a deep analysis of lattice-ordered
groups possible, according to Dr. A. W. M. Glass, chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics. As his work in the
field continued, Holland later founded a mathematical school, "l'equipe americaine".
Holland came to Bowling Green in 1972 to help start the University's doctoral program in mathematics. According to his colleagues,
so great has his influence been in the study of ordered groups that half of the researchers in the subject are his students
or former students.
He has published nearly 50 articles in mathematical journals in the United States and abroad and has been invited to speak
at universities in Canada, China, Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Italy, Mexico, and the United States as well as in the
former Soviet Union. In 1984, the Bowling Green mathematician was named an honorary fellow of the Societe Francaise de l'Algebre
Orderee, an international mathematics organization.
Holland is also a member of the Logarhythms, a quartet of Bowling Green mathematics professors who entertain groups with comic
songs about math.
Monitor, July 5, 1993
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