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Bookmarks

Series 1

Set of 5 commemorative bookmarks documenting the accomplishments of André-Louis Cholesky, Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss, William Sealy Gosset, Leslie Kish, and Frank Wilcoxon.

$2.25 in North America
(Price includes shipping.)

$3.50 elsewhere
(Price includes shipping.)

Series 2

Set of 5 commemorative bookmarks documenting the accomplishments of Ronald Aylmer Fisher, Francis Galton, Adrien-Marie Legendre, James Tobin, and Ernst Hjalmar Waloddi Weibull.

$2.25 in North America
(Price includes shipping.)

$3.50 elsewhere
(Price includes shipping.)

Series 3

Set of 5 commemorative bookmarks documenting the accomplishments of Gertrude Mary Cox, Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier, Herman Otto Hartley, Henry Felix Kaiser, and John Wilder Tukey.

$2.25 in North America
(Price includes shipping.)

$3.50 elsewhere
(Price includes shipping.)

All vignettes are written by Nicholas J. Cox, Durham University, United Kingdom. An index of the vignettes available in the Stata documentation can be found in the Quick Reference and Index.

Details: Series 1

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André-Louis Cholesky

André-Louis Cholesky (1875–1918) was born near Bordeaux in France. He studied at the Ecole Polytechnique and then joined the French army. Cholesky served in Tunisia and Algeria and then worked in the Geodesic Section of the Army Geographic Service, where he invented his now-famous method. In the war of 1914–1918, he served in the Vosges and in Romania but after return to the Western front was fatally wounded. Cholesky’s method was written up posthumously by one of his fellow officers but attracted little attention until the 1940s.

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Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss

Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777–1855) was born in Braunschweig (Brunswick), now in Germany. He studied there and at Göttingen. His doctoral dissertation at the University of Helmstedt was a discussion of the fundamental theorem of algebra. He made many fundamental contributions to geometry, number theory, algebra, real analysis, differential equations, numerical analysis, statistics, astronomy, optics, geodesy, mechanics, and magnetism. An outstanding genius, Gauss worked mostly in isolation in Göttingen.

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William Sealy Gosset

William Sealy Gosset (1876–1937) was born in Canterbury, England. He studied chemistry and mathematics at Oxford and obtained employment as a chemist with the brewers Guinness in Dublin. Gosset became very interested in statistical problems, which he discussed with Karl Pearson and later with Fisher and Neyman, and published several important papers under the pseudonym “Student”, including that on the test that usually bears his name.

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Leslie Kish

Leslie Kish (1910–2000) was born in Poprad, Hungary, and entered the United States with his family in 1926. He worked as a lab assistant at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research and studied at the College of the City of New York, fighting in the Spanish Civil War before receiving his first degree in mathematics. Kish worked for the Bureau of the Census, the Department of Agriculture, the Army Air Corps, and finally the University of Michigan. He carried out pioneering work in the theory and practice of survey sampling, including design effects, balanced repeated replication, response errors, rolling samples and censuses, controlled selection, multipurpose designs, and small-area estimation.

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Frank Wilcoxon

Frank Wilcoxon (1892–1965) was born in Ireland to American parents. After working in various occupations (including merchant seaman, oil-well pump attendant and tree surgeon), he settled in chemistry, gaining degrees from Rutgers and Cornell and employment from various companies. Working mainly on the development of fungicides and insecticides, Wilcoxon became interested in statistics in 1925 and made several key contributions to nonparametric methods. After retiring from industry, he taught statistics at Florida State until his death.

Details: Series 2

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Ronald Aylmer Fisher

Ronald Aylmer Fisher (1890–1962) (Sir Ronald from 1952) studied mathematics at Cambridge. Even before he finished his studies, he had published on statistics. He worked as a statistician at Rothamsted Experimental Station (1919–1933), as professor of eugenics at University College London (1933–1943), as professor of genetics at Cambridge (1943–1957), and in retirement at the CSIRO Division of Mathematical Statistics in Adelaide. His many fundamental and applied contributions to statistics and genetics mark him as one of the greatest statisticians of all time, including original work on tests of significance, distribution theory, theory of estimation, fiducial inference, and design of experiments.

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Francis Galton

Francis Galton (1822–1911) was born in Birmingham, England, into a well-to-do family with many connections: he and Charles Darwin were first cousins. After an unsuccessful foray into medicine, he became independently wealthy at the death of his father. Galton traveled widely in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, and he became celebrated as an explorer and geographer. His pioneering work on weather maps helped in the identification of anticyclones, which he named. From about 1865, most of his work was centered on quantitative problems in biology, anthropology, and psychology. In a sense, Galton (re)invented regression, and he certainly named it. Galton also promoted the normal distribution, correlation approaches, and the use of median and selected quantiles as descriptive statistics. He was knighted in 1909.

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Adrien-Marie Legendre

Adrien-Marie Legendre (1752–1833) was born in Paris (or possibly in Toulouse) and educated in mathematics and physics. He worked in number theory, geometry, differential equations, calculus, function theory, applied mathematics, and geodesy. The Legendre polynomials are named for him. His main contribution to statistics is as one of the discoverers of least squares. He died in poverty, having refused to bow to political pressures.

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James Tobin

James Tobin (1918–2002) was an American economist who after education and research at Harvard moved to Yale, where he was on the faculty from 1950 to 1988. He made many outstanding contributions to economics and was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1981 “for his analysis of financial markets and their relations to expenditure decisions, employment, production and prices.” He appeared thinly disguised as a character in Herman Wouk’s novel The Caine Mutiny (1951) who thwarts the ambition of Willie Keith to be the first in his class at midshipman school: “A mandarin-like midshipman named Tobit, with a domed forehead, measured quiet speech, and a mind like a sponge, was ahead of the field by a spacious percentage.”

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Ernst Hjalmar Waloddi Weibull

Ernst Hjalmar Waloddi Weibull (1887–1979) was a Swedish applied physicist most famous for his work on the statistics of material properties. He worked in Germany and Sweden as an inventor and a consulting engineer, publishing his first paper on the propagation of explosive waves in 1914, thereafter becoming a full professor at the Royal Institute of Technology in 1924. Weibull’s ideas about the statistical distributions of material strength came to the attention of engineers in the late 1930s with the publication of two important papers: “Investigations into strength properties of brittle materials” and “The phenomenon of rupture in soils.”

Details: Series 3

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Gertrude Mary Cox

Gertrude Mary Cox (1900–1978) was born on a farm near Dayton, Iowa. Initially intending to become superintendent of an orphanage, she enrolled at Iowa State College, where she majored in mathematics and attained the college’s first Master’s degree in statistics. She started a PhD in psychological statistics at Berkeley but returned to Iowa State after only two years to work with George W. Snedecor. Cox was put in charge of establishing a Computing Laboratory and began to teach design of experiments, the latter leading to her classic text with William G. Cochran. In 1940, Snedecor showed Cox his all-male list of suggestions to head a new statistics department at North Carolina State College and, at her urging, added her name. She was selected and built an outstanding department. Cox retired early to work at the new Research Triangle Institute between Raleigh and Chapel Hill. She consulted widely, served as editor of Biometrics, and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences .

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Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier

Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier (1768–1830) was born in Auxerre in France. He got caught up in the Revolution and its aftermath, and was twice arrested and imprisoned between periods of studying and teaching mathematics. Fourier joined Napoleon’ s army in its invasion of Egypt in 1798 as a scientific adviser, returning to France in 1801, when he was appointed Prefect of the Department of Isère. While Prefect, Fourier did his important mathematical work on the theory of heat, based on what are now called Fourier series. This work was published in 1822, despite the skepticism of Lagrange, Laplace, Legendre, and others—who found the work lacking in generality and even rigor—and disagreements of both priority and substance with Biot and Poisson.

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Herman Otto Hartley

Herman Otto Hartley (1912–1980) was born in Germany as Herman Otto Hirschfeld and immigrated to England in 1934 after completing his PhD in mathematics at Berlin University. He completed a second PhD in mathematical statistics under John Wishart a t Cambridge in 1940 and went on to hold positions at Harper Adams Agricultural College, Scientific Computing Services (London), University College (London), Iowa State College, Texas A&M University, and Duke University. Among other awards he received and distinguished titles he held, Professor Hartley served as the president of the American Statistical Association in 1979. Known affectionately as HOH by almost all who knew him, he founded the Institute of Statistics, later to become the Department of Statistics, at Texas A&M University. His contributions to statistical computing are particularly notable considering the available equipment at the time. Professor Hartley is best known for his two-volume Biometrika Tables for Statisticians (jointly written with Egon Pearson) and for his fundamental contributions to sampling theory, missing-data methodology, variance–component estimation, and computational statistics.

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Henry Felix Kaiser

Henry Felix Kaiser (1927–1992) was born in Morristown, New Jersey, and educated in California, where he earned degrees at Berkeley in between periods of naval service during and after World War II. A specialist in psychological and educational statistics and measurement, Kaiser worked at the Universities of Illinois and Wisconsin before returning to Berkeley in 1968. He made several contributions to factor analysis, including varimax rotation (the subject of his PhD) and a measure for assessing sampling adequacy. Kaiser is remembered as an eccentric who spray-painted his shoes in unusual colors and listed ES (Eagle Scout) as his highest degree.

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John Wilder Tukey

John Wilder Tukey (1915–2000) was born in Massachusetts. He studied chemistry at Brown and mathematics at Princeton and afterward worked at both Princeton and Bell Labs, as well as being involved in a great many government projects, consultancies , and committees. He made outstanding contributions to several areas of statistics, including time series, multiple comparisons, robust statistics, and exploratory data analysis. Tukey was extraordinarily energetic and inventive, not least in his use of terminology: he is credited with inventing the terms bit and software, in addition to ANOVA, boxplot, data analysis, hat matrix, jackknife, stem-and-leaf plot, trimming, and winsorizing, among many others. Tukey’s direct and indirect impacts mark him as one of the greatest statisticians of all time.

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