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1. The Man

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2017

W. J. Langford*
Affiliation:
Battersea Grammar School, Abbotswood Road, Streatham, S.W. 16

Extract

Our Association was founded deliberately to “improve” the teaching of geometry, and its work has extended to cover every branch of the mathematics taught in the pre-undergraduate years. It is no surprise that, among the many distinguished mathematicians who have contributed to this development, a few stand apart clearly for the extent of their influence. Judged by any standards, E. H. Neville was one of the greatest of them all, and this tribute, by one of his earliest pupils at University College, Reading, is written with a sense of deep personal affection and gratitude.

Type
Professor Eric Harold Neville, M.A., B.Sc.
Copyright
Copyright © Mathematical Association 1964 

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References

1.Multilinear functions of direction and their uses in differential geomentry(Cambridge, 1921).Google Scholar
2.Prolegomena to analytical geometry in anisotropic euclidean space of three dimensions (Cambridge, 1921)Google Scholar
Jacobian elliptic function (Oxford, 1944; second edition 1951).Google Scholar
The fourth dimension (Cambridge, 1921).Google Scholar
Royal Society mathematical tables, I. The Farey series of order 1025, (Cambridge, 1950).Google Scholar
Royal Society mathematical tables, II. Rectangular-polar conversion tables (Cambridge, 1956).Google Scholar