Template:Selected anniversaries/May 12: Difference between revisions

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||Joseph John Rochefort (b. May 12, 1900) was an American Naval officer and cryptanalyst. His contributions and those of his team were pivotal to victory in the Pacific War. Rochefort was a major figure in the United States Navy's cryptographic and intelligence operations from 1925 to 1946, particularly in the Battle of Midway.
||Joseph John Rochefort (b. May 12, 1900) was an American Naval officer and cryptanalyst. His contributions and those of his team were pivotal to victory in the Pacific War. Rochefort was a major figure in the United States Navy's cryptographic and intelligence operations from 1925 to 1946, particularly in the Battle of Midway.


||William Maurice "Doc" Ewing (b. May 12, 1906 ) was an American geophysicist and oceanographer.  
||1906: William Maurice "Doc" Ewing born ... geophysicist and oceanographer.  


File:Stanisław Leśniewski.jpg|link=Stanisław Leśniewski (nonfiction)|1907: Mathematician, logician, and crime-fighter [[Stanisław Leśniewski (nonfiction)|Stanisław Leśniewski]] publishes his philosophy of three nested formal systems and their application to detecting and preventing [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
File:Stanisław Leśniewski.jpg|link=Stanisław Leśniewski (nonfiction)|1907: Mathematician, logician, and crime-fighter [[Stanisław Leśniewski (nonfiction)|Stanisław Leśniewski]] publishes his philosophy of three nested formal systems and their application to detecting and preventing [[crimes against mathematical constants]].


||1910 Dorothy Hodgkin, English biochemist, crystallographer, and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1994)
||1910: Dorothy Hodgkin born ... biochemist, crystallographer, and academic, Nobel Prize laureate.


||1918 Julius Rosenberg, American spy (d. 1953)
||1918: Julius Rosenberg born ... American spy.
 
||1919: Wu Wenjun born ... mathematician and academician at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), best known for the Wu's method of characteristic set. Pic: https://www.quantumcalculus.org/wenjun-wu-1919-2017/


|File:Lev Schnirelmann.jpg|link=Lev Schnirelmann (nonfiction)|1923: Mathematician [[Lev Schnirelmann (nonfiction)|Lev Schnirelmann]] uses proof that any natural number greater than 1 can be written as the sum of not more than C prime numbers, where C is an effectively computable constant, to detect and prevent [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
|File:Lev Schnirelmann.jpg|link=Lev Schnirelmann (nonfiction)|1923: Mathematician [[Lev Schnirelmann (nonfiction)|Lev Schnirelmann]] uses proof that any natural number greater than 1 can be written as the sum of not more than C prime numbers, where C is an effectively computable constant, to detect and prevent [[crimes against mathematical constants]].


||1924 Alexander Esenin-Volpin, Russian-American mathematician and poet (d. 2016). No pic.
||1924: Alexander Esenin-Volpin born ... mathematician and poet. No pic.


||George Christopher Williams (b. May 12, 1926) was an American evolutionary biologist. Pic.
||1926: George Christopher Williams born ... evolutionary biologist. Pic.


||1926 The Italian-built airship Norge becomes the first vessel to fly over the North Pole.
||1926: The Italian-built airship Norge becomes the first vessel to fly over the North Pole.


File:Konrad Zuse (1992).jpg|link=Konrad Zuse (nonfiction)|1941: Engineer, inventor, and pioneering computer scientist [[Konrad Zuse (nonfiction)|Konrad Zuse]] presents the Z3, the world's first working programmable, fully automatic computer, in Berlin.
File:Konrad Zuse (1992).jpg|link=Konrad Zuse (nonfiction)|1941: Engineer, inventor, and pioneering computer scientist [[Konrad Zuse (nonfiction)|Konrad Zuse]] presents the Z3, the world's first working programmable, fully automatic computer, in Berlin.

Revision as of 07:08, 26 August 2018