Very nice - a complete archive of past issues of the famous journal, courtesy of the University of Göttingen. A quick perusal of just the first few issues reveals submissions by Alexander Grothendieck, David Mumford and Enrico Bombieri, amongst others.
PS: By the way, the real reason for my looking up the journal is this paper by Kenneth Ribet - "On Modular Representations of Gal(Q'/Q) Arising from Modular Forms" - which turned out to be crucial to Andrew Wiles' proof of the Taniyama-Shimura conjecture in the semistable case.
Wikipedia > Mathworld (for the simple reason that it allows unhindered peer editing.)
BTW, I thought Wiles' proof was still not completely accepted.
Posted by: Alek | February 13, 2005 at 07:25 PM
"Wikipedia > Mathworld (for the simple reason that it allows unhindered peer editing.)"
That's precisely why I chose to link to Mathworld; I don't want readers to go visiting pages only to find that the page on elliptic curves has been vandalized with gratuitous information on GNAA.
"BTW, I thought Wiles' proof was still not completely accepted."
If you read the link on the Taniyama-Shimura conjecture, you'll see that it was fixed.
Posted by: Abiola Lapite | February 13, 2005 at 07:28 PM