Krawtchouk's Mind
A reader writes: "Central Europe Review is running an article on a gulag-condemned Soviet scientist whose contribution to the first computer is virtually unknown because of the Cold War mentality that infected much of society on both sides of the Iron Curtain.
The story tells of how in 1937, American digital computer pioneer John Atanasoff came across a Myhailo Krawtchouk paper on a new method for finding approximate solutions to differential equations. Atanasoff tried sending a letter to him, but received no response. Krawtchouk had been attainted for giving a favorable review of the work of "enemies of the people" and shipped to Siberia for 20 years of gold mining, where he died four years later. Krawtchouk's biography gives a more detailed account of how Krawtchouk was labeled a "Polish spy" and "Ukrainian nationalist," stripped of his Academy of Sciences membership, and forced to sign a confession -- that he later retracted -- under torture and threats upon his family.
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It's a shame that we couldn't do that twenty to thirty years ago or else Bill Gates could of gotten 20 years of coal mining in PA.
Oh wait...
Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
What you say? One country invading another for natural resources under the pretext of liberation and justice?
Why, that is so far-fetched it's incomprehensible-flaven-goyven. With the oil, and the grudges, and cowboy hats, and the terrrism, and the nuculur threat, and the weapons of mass destruuuuuuuction.
My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.
In Soviet Russia.... ...oh, never mind.
I guess it's too late for a "Free Krawtchouk" website and defense fund t-shirt sales.