CONNECTING WOMEN IN MATHEMATICS ACROSS CANADA
              December 7-8, 2006
            
            
 
            Siobhan Roberts
              Siobhan Roberts, author of a biography of Donald Coxeter (King of 
              Infinite 
              Space, published this fall by Anansi), is a Toronto freelance writer 
              and journalist whose work focuses on reconciling what the British 
              novelist and scientist C.P. Snow famously referred to as "the 
              two cultures" of science and art.
            In 2001 she met Donald Coxeter, then age 94, and was taken with 
              his tremendous and enduring passion for geometry, as well as his 
              stomach-curdling bedtime elixir  Kahlúa coffee liqueur, 
              peach schnapps, sometimes a splash of vodka, all mixed with soymilk 
               and his lifelong habit of standing on his head every morning, 
              to which he attributed his longevity. She followed Coxeter to the 
              last geometry conference he would attend, in Budapest in the summer 
              of 2002, where he gave the opening address, providing a new and 
              elegant proof of a theorem relating to "four mutually tangent 
              circles," a subject which finds application in data-mining 
              technology.
            Roberts has written for numerous general interest and scientific 
              publications including The New York Times "Science Times," 
              The Walrus, SEED, The Mathematical Intelligencer, Canadian Geographic, 
              the Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, and the Boston Globe "Ideas" 
              section. She is currently developing a documentary film on Coxeter. 
              Her magazine profile of the geometer, "Figure Head," appeared 
              in Toronto Life magazine and won a National Magazine Award. She 
              also won an NMA for her Saturday Night article "Broken Records" 
               focusing on Canada's National Archives, this feature article 
              investigated the future of the past and how new technology is endangering 
              rather than enhancing the
              preservation of archives. 
            
            CONNECTING WOMEN IN MATHEMATICS ACROSS CANADA
              December 7-8, 2006