Our 110th issue opens with the concluding half of our interview with University of Florida graduate student in mathematics Fatima Akinola. In this half, Fatima tells us more about her mathematics and leaves readers with a number of fun math questions to puzzle out that are examples of the kinds of things she thinks about in her own work.
Robert Donley adds another installment to his path counting saga with a look at generating functions associated to conjoined compositions.
Next, Emily and Jasmine resolve the mystery that confronted them in the previous issue while exploring the Taylor series for the tangent function. Since there mystery involved sums of entries in a triangle of numbers akin to Pascal’s triangle, they first attempted to settle the mystery by using induction and algebra. However, that quickly became unappetizing. In the end, they resolved the mystery by related everything back to the tangent function.
Girls’ Angle has been working with girls in a new math club organized by Prof. Fadipe-Joseph Olubunmi of the University of Ilorin in Nigeria (which is, coincidentally, where our interviewee is from). They inspired a question about bracelets which forms the topic of the latest contribution from Lightning Factorial. The cover illustrates all 50 different bracelets one can form using 12 beads total, with 6 black and 6 red.
We conclude with Notes from the Club which includes a sampling of problems from our traditional end-of-session Math Collaboration, which was designed this time by Girls’ Angle mentors Yaqi Li, Hanna Mularczyk, and AnaMaria Perez.
We hope you enjoy it!
Finally, a reminder: when you subscribe to the Girls’ Angle Bulletin, you’re not just getting a subscription to a magazine. You are also gaining access to the Girls’ Angle mentors. We urge all subscribers and members to write us with your math questions or anything else in the Bulletin or having to do with mathematics in general. We will respond. We want you to get active and do mathematics. Parts of the Bulletin are written to induce you to wonder and respond with more questions. Don’t let those questions fade away and become forgotten. Send them to us!
Also, the Girls’ Angle Bulletin is a venue for students who wish to showcase their mathematical achievements that go above and beyond the curriculum. If you’re a student and have discovered something nifty in math, considering submitting it to the Bulletin.
We continue to encourage people to subscribe to our print version, so we have removed some content from the electronic version. Subscriptions are a great way to support Girls’ Angle while getting something concrete back in return. We hope you subscribe!












