In 1961 he became a founder member of a computer services company C.E.I.R (UK), which BP bought and renamed Scicon, and in 1967 he became visiting professor at Imperial College, London.[2][7][8]
The Times suggested that he "used his blend of theory and state-of-the-art practice to encourage several generations of young mathematicians and computer scientists," and that his "many papers and his seminal book Mathematical Programming in Practice were major influences in their field, with their succinctness and clarity."[4]
Beale's FRS memoir mentioned his "extraordinary skill" and "substantial contributions to knowledge".[1]
The Operational Research Society awards the Beale Medal for "the most outstanding sustained contribution to Operational Research",[10] and hosts the Beale Lectures in his honour [11] as “one of OR's true greats”. [12]
A two-day symposium was held in his memory at the Royal Society in 1987.[13]
Beale, Evelyn Martin Landsdowne; MacKley, Lynne (1988). Introduction to optimization. Wiley. ISBN9780471917601. (Based on his lecture notes and working papers at Scicon and edited by his former colleague Lynne Mackley.)
^ abcPowell, M. J. D. (December 1987). "Evelyn Martin Lansdowne Beale. 8 September 1928-23 December 1985". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 33: 22–45. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1987.0002. JSTOR769945. S2CID62223612.
^Forrest, J. J. H.; Tomlin, J. A. (2006). "Branch and bound, integer, and non-integer programming". Annals of Operations Research. 149: 81–87. doi:10.1007/s10479-006-0112-x. S2CID15266569.