Jerome Levine
May 4, 1937-April 8, 2006
Our dear friend and colleague, Jerry Levine, died on April 8, 2006, after a long and hard fought battle with lymphatic cancer. Jerry was 68 years old.
Jerry had a profound influence on the subject of topology, and most particularly on the subject of knot theory. He received his PhD under the direction of Norman Steenrod at Princeton University, in 1962, and began his career as an instructor at MIT. There Jerry began his long stream of results in higher dimensional knot theory that profoundly redefined the subject. Jerry's early results in knot theory were among the first and most significant applications of the new tool of surgery theory which dominated geometric topology during the 1960's and 1970's. After a short period as an Associate Professor at the University of California, Berkeley, Jerry moved to Brandeis University, returning to Boston, the town he loved, where he had met Sandy, his wife, many years previously. Jerry's influence and contributions continued throughout his career, with his latest publications still to appear in 2006.
Jerry's love of mathematics was exceeded only by his gentleness, his patience, and his concern for others, as displayed through his always generous support for mathematicians early in their career.
Separate pages provide links to many of Jerry's papers, as well as a full CV. A list of Jerry's students is on the AMS Genealogy Website. The Mathematics Department has created a prize in honor of Jerry's wonderful legacy of guiding graduate students; it is called the Jerome Levine Prize and is given annually to a graduate student finishing with an outstanding PhD thesis. We gratefully acknowledge the support of Jerry's friends and colleagues in funding this award.