Jacques Heyman came up to Cambridge to read Maths in 1941 at the tender
age of sixteen, having shown considerable promise at school. A second
class pass after his first year convinced him he was 'no mathematician'
so he switched to the Engineering Department in 1942 to study under Professor
Inglis. He graduated in 1944, having been allowed an extra year of study
because of the war. He was immediately drafted in to work on jet engines,
but wanted to get back to working on structures. In 1946, Baker had an
opening for a research assistant.
Heyman recalls that it was an odd time for the university. Many
veterans were coming back, and schoolboys were coming up. He found
himself supervising people who were older than himself, and 'immensely
older in experience'.