From 1949 to 1952 he worked in the Radiotécnico Institute of the University of Buenos Aires but he was dismissed for political reasons in 1952 and did not return to university teaching until Perón was removed from power in 1955. He returned to Argentina in 1949 but, because of his opposition to Perón, his life was difficult. After post-doctoral studies at the Henri Poincaré Institute in Paris, advised by Georges Darmois and Maurice Fréchet, supported by a scholarship from the government of France, he spent a year in Italy working with Mauro Picone at the Istituto per l'Applicazioni del Calcolo in Rome. At the time his daughter was born he was completing his doctorate in physics and mathematics at the University of Buenos Aires. Before giving details of Cora Sadosky's education and career, we look briefly at her parents, who were both mathematicians, and also see some of the problems that were encountered by academics in Argentina.Īlthough Manuel Sadosky was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, his parents, Natalio Sadosky and Maria Steingart, were Jewish Russian immigrants who had fled Russia because of continued violence against Jews. She was, however, known as 'Corita' by those who had known her from her youth. In fact, although she was known as Cora, the name on her birth certificate is "Corina". We have listed her as Cora Susana Sadosky but, after her marriage to Daniel Goldstein her name became Cora Susana Sadosky de Goldstein. Biography Cora Sadosky's parents were Manuel Sadosky and Corina Eloisa Ratto de Sadosky.
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