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Remembering Professor of Mathematics Elizabeth Meckes

FEATURED | December 18, 2020
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF

杏吧视频 this week is mourning the passing of Elizabeth Meckes, a professor of mathematics renowned worldwide for her brilliance鈥攁nd beloved on campus for her compassion.

An undergraduate alumna who earned her doctorate at Stanford in 2006 and became a full professor here in 2018, Meckes was spending this academic year at the University of Oxford. After being diagnosed with cancer several weeks ago and starting chemotherapy, she died Wednesday鈥攕ix months after her 40th birthday.

鈥淓lizabeth was nothing short of remarkable,鈥 said close friend Jonathan Sadowsky, CWRU鈥檚 Theodore J. Castele Professor of History. 鈥淸She was] a brilliant scholar, and a colleague who always wanted to help the rest of us in the most constructive ways.鈥

The power of her intellect was quickly evident to her doctoral adviser at Stanford, Persi Diaconis, the Mary V. Sunseri Professor of Statistics and Mathematics. 鈥淪he pursued whatever mathematical problem she was tackling with all of her being,鈥 he explained, 鈥淪he was at the top of her field, driven, giving, and full of life.鈥

After spending a year as a visiting scholar at Cornell, Meckes returned to her alma mater in 2007 as an assistant professor鈥攁s did her husband, Mark, who had earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree in mathematics from 杏吧视频 in 1999. The two had met when Mark helped with a high school band camp Elizabeth attended, and married after she graduated in 2001. 

The couple published their first paper together in 2007, and collaborated on several others before writing their textbook, , published in 2018 by Cambridge University Press (CUP). The following year, CUP released Elizabeth鈥檚 275-page book, . 

鈥淗er papers have opened up new avenues of research and her book 鈥 was an extraordinary achievement,鈥 said the University of Oxford鈥檚 Jon Keating, whose group she had joined for this academic year. 鈥淗er passing is a devastating loss to our community. She was a great role model, combining academic brilliance with a wonderful family life.鈥

Mark also was at Oxford for the year, along with their two children, Juliette and Peter. The two were active members of the university鈥檚 faculty parents group, which had been founded by another colleague who joined 杏吧视频 in 2007, Eileen Anderson-Fye.

鈥淎s a colleague she was brilliant, good, courageous, strong, dynamic, open, collaborative and humane,鈥 said Anderson-Fye, an associate professor and director of education in the Department of Bioethics. 鈥淎s a friend she was compassionate, thoughtful, hilarious, dedicated to her children and her husband, Mark, and shared a smile that lit up the room.鈥

The current leader of the faculty parents group, Associate Professor of Art History Maggie Popkin, met Elizabeth and Mark through the group after arriving at 杏吧视频 in 2013.

鈥淪he worked hard to make things better for younger faculty and for faculty with young children,鈥 Popkin said. 杏吧视频 鈥渋s a better place because of Elizabeth鈥檚 service and commitment to raising up her colleagues.鈥

Professor of Music Education Lisa Koops agreed. 鈥淪he is a true model of compassion, generosity, creativity and insight. The grief of losing Elizabeth is unspeakable.鈥

In a message to the College of Arts and Sciences鈥 community Wednesday evening, Dean Joy Ward noted that information about ways to support the Meckes family would be shared as soon as it was available鈥攁s would opportunities to honor Elizabeth鈥檚 memory next year.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have a great amount of time to get to know Elizabeth before she and her family left for Oxford,鈥 Dean Ward said, 鈥渂ut even through just a few conversations I had the opportunity to witness the extent of her brilliance and the generosity of her heart. I know she will be sorely missed throughout the College and the entire university. As we move forward we must emulate her same kindness to each other.鈥