CANADIAN OBTAINS A PERFECT SCORE AND WINS A GOLD MEDAL AT THE 2004 IMO

Graham Wright gpwright at cms.math.ca
Fri Jul 16 10:47:44 EDT 2004


NEWS RELEASE

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CANADIAN OBTAINS A PERFECT SCORE AND WINS A GOLD MEDAL AT THE 2004
INTERNATIONAL MATHEMATICAL OLYMPIAD IN ATHENS, GREECE.
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Approximately 500 students competed at the 45th IMO. Only 45 were
awarded Gold Medals of which an exceptional group of four students
achieved a perfect score (42 out of 42). "This year a Canadian
student, Jacob Tsimerman, achieved this rare honor and can be
considered world champion", said Dr. Christopher Small, Canadian Team
Leader.

Competing against students from 84 other countries, Canadian high
school students have done extremely well, winning one Gold Medal,
three Bronze Medals and two Honorable Mentions at the 45th
International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO), Athens, Greece from July 4
-18, 2004.

The six students who competed for Canada were: Oleg Ivrii, Don Mills
Collegiate Institute, Toronto (Ontario); János Kramár, University of
Toronto Schools, Toronto (Ontario); Dong Uk (David) Rhee, McNally High
School, Edmonton (Alberta); Peng Shi, Sir John A. MacDonald Collegiate
Institute.Toronto (Ontario); Jacob Tsimerman, University of Toronto
Schools, Toronto (Ontario); and Yufei Zhao, Don Mills Collegiate
Institute, Toronto (Ontario).

The team was accompanied by the Team Leader, Dr. Christopher Small
(University of Waterloo), the Deputy Team Leader, Dr. Edward Wang
(Wilfrid Laurier University), and the Observer, Professor Felix Recio
(University of Toronto).

At the Awards Ceremony which will be held on July 17th, 2004 in Athens
a Gold Medal will be awarded to Jacob Tsimerman; Bronze Medals to
János Kramár, Peng Shi and Yufei Zhao.  Oleg Ivrii and Donk Uk (David)
Rhee will receive Honorable Mentions.

"Our young team performed extremely well and I am very proud of all of
our students," said Dr. Small.

"The IMO is the world championship high school mathematics
competition.  All six problems were very difficult and all of the
Canadian students have done remarkably well. They have all
demonstrated the problem solving skills, knowledge and creativity that
is essential to compete at this very high level," said Dr. Graham
Wright, Executive Director of the Canadian Mathematical Society (CMS),
the organization responsible for the selection and training of
Canada's IMO team.

Although students compete individually, country rankings are obtained
by adding the team's scores. The maximum score for each student is 42
and for a team of six students the maximum is 252. The Canadian team
placed 20th out of 85 competing countries with a score of 132.

Since 1981, Canadian students have received a total of 15 gold, 27
silver, and 55 bronze medals.

The six members of the Canadian IMO team were selected from among more
than 200,000 students who participated in local, provincial and
national mathematics contests. Prior to leaving for the 45th IMO, the
team trained at the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) from June
24th to July 8th, 2004.

Team members must be less than 20 years old when they write the IMO.
The 2004 IMO contest was set by an international jury of
mathematicians, one from each country, and was written on Monday July
12th and Tuesday, July 13th.  On each day of the contest, there are
three questions to be solved within a time limit of four and one-half
hours.

The top 10 teams and their scores are: China (220); USA (212); Russia
(205); Vietnam (196); Bulgaria (194); Taiwan (190); Hungary (182);
Iran (178); Romania (176).

Jacob Tsimerman, Dong Uk (David) Rhee, Peng Shi and Yufei Zhao will be
returning to Canada on July 18th, arriving at Pearson International
Airport (Terminal 1) at 17:25 on Air Canada Flight Number 883. Oleg
Ivrii and János Kramár are remaining in Europe to participate in the
Tournament of the Towns.

Sponsors of the 2004 Canadian IMO team include: the Canadian
Mathematical Society; NSERC PromoScience; the Ontario Ministry of
Education; the Newfoundland and Labrador Ministry of Education; the
Quebec Ministry of Education; the Northwest Territories Ministry of
Education; Alberta Learning; the Saskatchewan Ministry of Education;
Sun Life Financial; the Samuel Beatty Fund; Maplesoft; Centre de
recherches mathématiques; the Fields Institute for Research in the
Mathematical Sciences; the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical
Sciences; the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of
Calgary; the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of
New Brunswick at Fredericton; the Department of Mathematics and
Statistics, University of Ottawa; le département de mathématiques,
Université du Québec à Montréal; the Department of Mathematics,
University of Toronto; the Centre for Education in Mathematics and
Computing, University of Waterloo; the Department of Statistics and
Actuarial Science, University of Waterloo; the Department of
Mathematics, University of Western Ontario; the Department of
Mathematics, Wilfrid Laurier University; the Department of Mathematics
and Statistics, University of Winnipeg; and the Department of
Mathematics and Statistics, York University.

The 46th International Mathematical Olympiad will take place in
Cancun, Mexico in July.

For more information, contact:

Dr. Graham P. Wright
Executive Director
Canadian Mathematical Society
(613) 562-5702 (CMS Office)
director at cms.math.ca
www.cms.math.ca/Competitions/





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