Earliest Known Uses Of Some Of The Words Of Mathematics (F) MapColour Theorem is the title of a paper by percy John heawood (1861-1955) whichappeared in the Quarterly Journal of Pure and Applied Mathematics in 1890. http://members.aol.com/jeff570/f.html
Extractions: Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics (F) Last revision: July 23, 2002 F DISTRIBUTION. The F distribution was tabulated - and the letter introduced - by G. W. Snedecor Calculation and Interpretation of Analysis of Variance and Covariance (1934). (David, 1995). The letter was chosen to honor Fisher. The term F distribution is found in Leo A. Aroian, "A study of R. A. Fisher's z distribution and the related F distribution," Ann. Math. Statist. FACTOR (noun). Fibonacci (1202) used factus ex multiplicatione (Smith vol. 2, page 105). Factor appears in English in 1673 in Elements of Algebra by John Kersey: "The Quantities given to be multiplied one by the other are called Factors." FACTOR (verb) appears in English in 1848 in Algebra by J. Ray: "The principal use of factoring, is to shorten the work, and simplify the results of algebraic operations." Factorize (spelled "factorise") is found in 1886 in Algebra by G. Chrystal (OED2). The term FACTOR ANALYSIS was introduced by Louis L. Thurstone (1887-1955) in 1931 in "Multiple Factor Analysis," Psychological Review
UK Market Research - British Market Research Association 0151 327 6444 e peter.knowles@heawood.com w http//www.heawood.com Contact NMGFinancial Services Consulting 30 percy Street London W1P 9FF t 020 76910131 f http://www.bmra.org.uk/members.asp
The Workers Page Clark. percy Horton, Robert Fraser, Dorothy Bennett, Lois Ann Dort, JohnColdrick. Greg Lutick, Gerald Rossong, Earl Luffman, Richard heawood. Warren http://collections.ic.gc.ca/archaeology/second/archaeology/workers/workers.html
Extractions: This is not a complete listing. We apologize if we have forgotten anyone. If indeed we have forgotten someone then please contact us below, to update this page. Here is a small video clip (926 Kb) of some of the workers in the 1993-1994 digs. Elizabeth Snow (Supervisor) Rob Ferguson (Supervisor) Rob Ferguson (Supervisor) Rob Ferguson (Supervisor) Rob Ferguson (Supervisor) Rob Ferguson (Supervisor) Harold Roberts Terry Parker Allen Angeconeb David Moore Ginny Boudreau Dorothy Bennett Eric Roberts Gerald Rossong Joan Bond Gerald Rossong Dorothy Bennett Joyce Bouchie Elaine Butler Bill Anderson Adrian Boudreau Fred Rhynold Terry Parker Betty Boudreau Bill Anderson Art Livingston Martin David Allen Angconeb Joyce Bouchie Ginny Boudreau Allen Angeconeb Meta Dobson Jim MacKenzie Chris Lumsden Scott Buchanan John Moir Wayne Duguay Joanne Bieler Scott Buchanan Andre Chiasson Donna Lumsden Scott Finley Doug Ross Andre Chaisson Marlon E. Clark Percy Horton Robert Fraser Dorothy Bennett Lois Ann Dort John Coldrick Fred Rhynold Nancy Greencorn Stan Horton Patricia Doucette Vicki Hunter Suzanne Plousos Amy Haines Keith Roberton Henry Fredericks Lois Ann Dort Stephen Meade Bernie Horne Robert Fraser John Guilfoyle Patricia Doucette Joe Last Eddie Kelley Nancy Greencorn Denise Hansen Henry Fredericks Eddie Kelley Joe Last Stan MacKenzie Noah Haspray John Guilfoyle Sharon MacMillan Jim MacKenzie Scott MacEachern Bernard Horne Denise Hansen David Brennan Stan MacKenzie Cecilia Dollard Craig MacKinnon Noah Haspray
Burials 1900 Edwin 67 40 1912 HUSSELBEE Charles Frederick 3w 41 1912 LODGE Francis heawood 5445 Charlotte 62 247 1929 TILL Joan Marion 22 237 1929 TIMMS percy Reginald 19 http://www.berkswich.org.uk/burials1900_53.htm
Reporter 13/12/00: Congregation Of The Regent House On 9 December 2000 Brouwer, René Roel Dymond, David percy Faulkner, Paul Anthony Fuller, Dorian Gergely JohnHardingham, Neil Robert Harris, Alistair James heawood, Jonathan Paul http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/reporter/2000-01/weekly/5831/27.html
Extractions: Previous page Table of Contents Next page A Congregation of the Regent House was held at 2 p.m. All the Graces that were submitted to the Regent House ( p. 272 ) were approved. Michael Anthony Message, of St Catharine's College, was elected to the office of Deputy Proctor for the remainder of the academical year 2000-01, and made his public declaration in accordance with Statute D, VI, 5. The following degrees were conferred: in person
Antique Maps And Prints horse and goats Country Quarters engraved by T.heawood after a picture Heath etchingSurrey Walton Heath an original etching by percy Robertson (signed http://www.antiqueprints.com/Prints/!recent_changes.html
Extractions: Please click on thumbnail image for a larger view of the image , note that images shown are for guidance only and usually do not reflect the full quality of the subject (see About the Prints and Maps I sell To convert pounds into other currencies I recommend the Xenon Labs Currency Converter 27th March 2003 New Section fine-art high quality etchings and engravings taken from the original steel and copper plates. The first section is online, featuring a number of large decorative Scottish views. Lebanon " The Tomb of St. George, Bay of Kesrouan " (between Beirut and Tripoli) engraved by M.J.Starling after a picture by W.H.Bartlett, published Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1840. Steel engraved print with recent hand colour. Size 19.5 x 12.5 cms. Ref D8797. Price £14
History Of Mathematics: Chronology Of Mathematicians A list of all of the important mathematicians working in a given century.Category Science Math Mathematicians Directories 1941) *SB; Kurt Hensel (18611941) *SB *MT; Alfred North Whitehead(1861-1947) *MT; percy John heawood (1861-1955) *MT. Henri Andoyer http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/chronology.html
Extractions: Note: there are also a chronological lists of mathematical works and mathematics for China , and chronological lists of mathematicians for the Arabic sphere Europe Greece India , and Japan 1700 B.C.E. 100 B.C.E. 1 C.E. To return to this table of contents from below, just click on the years that appear in the headers. Footnotes (*MT, *MT, *RB, *W, *SB) are explained below Ahmes (c. 1650 B.C.E.) *MT Baudhayana (c. 700) Thales of Miletus (c. 630-c 550) *MT Apastamba (c. 600) Anaximander of Miletus (c. 610-c. 547) *SB Pythagoras of Samos (c. 570-c. 490) *SB *MT Anaximenes of Miletus (fl. 546) *SB Cleostratus of Tenedos (c. 520) Katyayana (c. 500) Nabu-rimanni (c. 490) Kidinu (c. 480) Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (c. 500-c. 428) *SB *MT Zeno of Elea (c. 490-c. 430) *MT Antiphon of Rhamnos (the Sophist) (c. 480-411) *SB *MT Oenopides of Chios (c. 450?) *SB Leucippus (c. 450) *SB *MT Hippocrates of Chios (fl. c. 440) *SB Meton (c. 430) *SB
Joyce Grenfell (1910-1979) We're delighted To be able to say We're unable to pay Off our debts, We're excitedBecause percy's got mange And we've run up a bill at Stage Hand, John heawood. http://www.bestweb.net/~foosie/grenfell.htm
Extractions: JOYCE GRENFELL Joyce Grenfell was born Joyce Phipps in Montpelier Square, London, on February 10, 1910. Her father was Paul Phipps, an architect and her mother was Nora Langhorne, sister of Nancy Astor, the first woman to sit in the House of Commons. She was educated at the Francis Holland School, London, and the Christian Science School, Clearview, in South Norwood, and then she was "finished off" in Paris where she attended Mlle. Ozanne's finishing school at the age of 17. Click here for a caricature of Joyce she drew herself. From an early age she invented characters and pretended to be other people. Being funny and imaginative came easily to her. She had a London childhood and considered herself a "townie." She left school at 17, the same year she met Reggie Grenfell; they were married two years later, in 1929 at St. Margaret's Westminster; they remained married for 50 years until her death. All throughout her childhood, she sang songs with her American mother, who was self taught on the guitar. In the pre-TV days when people amused themselves, she performed in amateur theatricals in her own home and those of friends. Joyce and her mother used to play at "Ladies" and talk to each other in various voices. She had quite a knack for imitating people. Joyce had weekly elocution lessons with a lady she characterized as deaf, and a cockney with adenoids. As an adolescent, she fancied the glamour of being an actress but she wasn't very keen on acting. Her father insisted she study at RADA which she did for one term in1927 where she found plays too restrictive with no room for spontaneous invention. For RADA she played a shepherdess with a song to sing.
Pioneers History from Victoria with their four sons Edward, Lionel, Eric and heawood in 1915 Theyhad four children percy, Lillian (married Lance Ainsworth), Ernie and Ethel http://www.corrigin.com/about_the_pioneers.htm
Extractions: CORRIGIN.COM About The Pioneer's ABE Edward Lionel Came from Victoria with their four sons: Edward, Lionel, Eric and Heawood in 1915 and took up virgin land east of Corrigin, where after years of hard work they built a successful farming operation. A BE Edward Robert (1900 - 1972) ABE, Francis Lionel Came to Corrigin with his parents, Edward Lionel and Caroline Matilda and three brothers in 1915. In 1926 he move to East Bilbarin to clear and develop his farm. He married Elizabeth Dorham in 1943. They had five children David, Fay, Colin, Alan and Kathleen. ABE George Eric Farmed with parents and brothers near Corrigin, never married. Good bush mechanic and inventor. Killed in farm accident in 1952 aged 47. AINSWORTH Herbert A. In 1922 Herbert Annesley Ainsworth, a gold prospector, and his wife Amy Lilias, moved to Corrigin from Kalgoorlie. They raised their family in a house in Goyder Street. Arthur Lionel (8/3/1903 to 12/3/1988) - well known as a rifleman, worked in the Co-op. Lancelot Annesley (8/3/1905 to 21/4/1983), worked for Co-operative Bulk Handling. Ethel Doris (12/11/1906 to 12/4/1961) worked in the Post Office and Alf SpanneyÕs Electrical store, Madge (24/8/1908) worked in various town businesses, Amy Phyllis (4/1/1912) became a school teacher and Lilias May (3/5/1913) trained as a tailoress and worked in the Co-op.
December 11 Altorf, sculptor (October 3 Monument), dies at 79 In 1964, percy Kilbride, actor 1995,Arthur Mullard, comedian, dies at 82 In 1995, John heawood, actor singer http://www.dailyalmanacs.com/almanac2/december/1211.html
Deceased Actors (1970 - Present) 'H' Ray 01/17/99 Heath Jr., John G. 03/30/72 Heatter, Gabriel 12/11/95 heawood, John01 07/19/94 Helpmann, Sheila 10/21/76 Helton, Edna 09/11/71 Helton, percy 12/15 http://www.accessv.com/~sven/deceased/actors_0h.htm
Burials (H) Sheepy Magna Hall, Elizabeth, Sheepy Magna, LEI, 02 July 1837, 87, Hamblin, percy, Pinwall, LEI,10 November 1959, 68, ? New Churchyard. heawood, Mary, 14 September 1746, Wife Richard . http://www.mdlp.co.uk/resources/Sheepy/Burials/surname_h__he.htm
Poster Of Heawood died 48 years ago 24th January 1955 heawood made important contributions to the four colour theorem. Find out more at http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Posters/124.html
Mappa.Mundi Magazine - Locus - The Four-Color Map Problem Augustus De Morgan » Charles Sanders Peirce » Alfred Bray Kempe » PercyJohn heawood » A mathematical physicist's discussion of the 4 color theorem http://mappa.mundi.net/locus/locus_014/
Extractions: The Four-Color Map Problem When I was around a dozen years old I became enamored of the four-color map problem. I'm not sure how I discovered it: I remember a science-fiction story in which the problem was described. As I recall, the story's narrator discovers a solution that he then could no longer remember. E. C. Bridgman's, 1896 Rail Road and Township map of New York illustrates the four color mapping problem - as a practical matter, green, yellow, pink and tan are sufficient to map the townships. Some say the four color theorum was finally proved by Appel and Haken in 1976, but others claim that the question is yet to be resolved satisfactorily.
Kamil4 67Edward heawood, A History of Geographical Discoveries in the Sixteenth and SeePercy G Adams, Travellers and Travel Liars 1600-1800 (Berkeley University http://members.tripod.com/~warlight/KAMIL_4.html
Extractions: The Origins of the Travelogue and its Role in Establishing the Twentieth Century Picture of Turkey As far as the representation of Turkey, its people and culture is concerned, another literary genre to be dealt with in this investigation is travel-writing since 'an examination of the varied texts produced by travellers shows how prejudices, stereotypes and negative perceptions of other cultures can be handed down through generations' ( Comparative Literature , 99). In association with the idea of representing one particular culture, travel writing is considered by various scholars such as Sara Mills, Mary Louise Pratt and Susan Bassnett, to be a part of the process of manipulation which affects and conditions people's attitudes to other cultures in which 'travel writers constantly position themselves in relation to their point of origin in a culture and the context they are describing' ( ). Discussing the significance of travel accounts Bernard Lewis has made a similar conclusion in his "Some English Travellers in the East" where he states, despite some exceptions, that 'all travellers' tales have a not unimportant place in history, at least in that part of it which is concerned with the formation and projection of images' ( The literature of travel has evolved through the centuries. Early examples of travel writing usually appeared in the form of guidebooks and itineraries such as that of Pausanias, who travelled the Mediterranean countries as well as the Nile and the Dead Sea, as far back as the second century AD (
MMS Online Graph Theory Course Introduction ten years. However, in 1890, another British mathematician, percy JohnHeawood, found a mistake in Kempe's work. The problem remained http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/mmss/courses/graph/
Problema Dels Quatre Colors La demostració es donà per bona durant 11 anys fins que el 1890, percy John Heawoodféu notar un error en largumentació de Kempe i, a més, mostrà que l http://www.iec.es/institucio/societats/SCMatematiques/AMM/web-posters/pag_4color
Extractions: Guthriea capensis i Erica Guthriei En les coloracions a què fa referència el problema de Gurthrie, regions no frontereres es poden acolorir amb el mateix color i regions que tenen un únic punt en comú també. Amb aquestes condicions, els mapes de les figures 1(a) i 1(b) es poden acolorir amb només quatre colors, com mostren les figures 1(b) i 2 (b). A més, aquests són exemples de mapes que no es poden acolorir amb menys de quatre colors. El que resulta sorprenent és que, com afirmava Guthrie, per complicat que sigui un mapa es pugui pintar amb només quatre colors. El problema consistia en demostrar que quatre colors són suficients per a qualsevol mapa o bé en trobar-ne un que en requereixi cinc o més. La major part de demostracions errònies es basen en el convenciment que el nombre mínim de colors que cal per pintar un mapa és el màxim nombre de regions dos a dos adjacents. Després es prova que en cap mapa no hi pot haver cinc regions tals que cadascuna sigui adjacent a les altres quatre, un resultat que ja era conegut per De Morgan. La conclusió és immediata: quatre colors són suficients per a qualsevol mapa. Malauradament, la hipòtesi de partida és falsa, com prova el mapa de la figura 3. En aquest mapa el nombre màxim de regions mútuament adjacents és tres, però requereix quatre colors, tres per a les regions de la corona i un altre per a la central.
Untitled Document Giuseppe Veronese (18541917) *MT; percy Alexander MacMahon (1854-1929)*SB; Marcel Louis Brillouin (1854-1948) *MT 1880. Giovanni http://faculty.gwhs.org:16080/~arose/history.html
Untitled Document The summary for this Chinese (Traditional) page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set. http://www.stys.com.tw/techx/text1.php3?idxx=55