Glen E. Bredon August 24, 1932 - May 8, 2000 Professional History Ph.D. (Mathematics) Harvard, 1958 Member, Institute for Advanced Study, 1958-60 Asst. Prof. to Prof., UC Berkeley, 1960-68 Distinguished Prof., Rutgers University, 1968-93 Voluntarily Retired, 1993 Most Satisfying Professional Accomplishments Three Advanced Mathematical books: Sheaf Theory, McGraw Hill, 1967 Introduction to Compact Transformation Groups, Academic Press, 1972 Topology and Geometry, Springer-Verlag, 1993 Most Satisfying Nonprofessional Accomplishment Two years in mid 70šs with photography of, and (successful) with lobbying in Washington for the exquisite Kaiser Wilderness Area Personal History After barely surviving the marriage from Hell (1958-60), I married Anne Loeb in 1963, who taught me the true meaning of love. Two children: Joelle, 1963, a beautiful child, lamentably autistic Aaron, 1965, a computer whiz Lived in: Cambridge, MA, 1954-58 Princeton, NJ, 1958-60 Berkeley, CA, 1960-68 Princeton, NJ, 1968-93 Now Anne and I spend all of our time in the Sierra Nevada.