A. Ross Eckler Jr.

A. Ross Eckler Jr.
Born (1927-08-29) August 29, 1927
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Nationality American
Occupation logologist, centenarian researcher

Albert Ross Eckler Jr. (born August 29, 1927) is a logologist and statistician, and author, the son of statistician A. Ross Eckler. He received a B.A. from Swarthmore College and a Ph.D. in mathematics from Princeton University.

Biography

While at Bell Labs, Eckler co-authored Mathematical Models of Target Coverage and Missile Allocation with Stefan A. Burr.[1]

Eckler is the former publisher and editor of Word Ways: The Journal of Recreational Linguistics. He wrote a book on logology titled Making the Alphabet Dance.

He is also the author of The National Puzzlers' League, The First 115 Years, a history of the National Puzzlers' League (NPL).[2] He and his wife Faith have been married for more than 50 years,[3] and are former NPL editors under the collective nom de plume "Faro" (with variant forms "FAro" for Faith and "faRO" for Ross).[4]

Eckler's hobbies are genealogy and supercentenarian research. Eckler has disproved exaggerated age claims such as those of Charlie Smith and George Fruits while authenticating others such as Delina Filkins (1815–1928).

Works

See also

References

  1. Eckler, Albert Ross Jr.; Burr, Stefan (1972). Mathematical models of target coverage and missile allocation (1st ed.). Military Operations Research Society, Alexandria, Va. ASIN B0006W2E2O. OCLC 1183447.
  2. Eckler, Albert Ross Jr. (1998). The National Puzzlers' League, The First 115 Years (1st ed.). National Puzzlers' League, New York. ASIN B001B3MEEU. OCLC 55705246.
  3. Farrell, Jeremiah. "Meet the Ecklers". http://wordways.com. Retrieved 8 March 2010. External link in |publisher= (help)
  4. Reference Books and Periodicals For Puzzle Solvers and Composers, Merlin (updated by Saxifrage), National Puzzlers' League, accessed 2015-02-07; under periodicals this lists "Word Ways: The Journal of Recreational Linguistics, published quarterly by Faro (Faith and Ross Eckler)".

External links


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