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  2. John Edmund Kerrich - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Edmund_Kerrich

    John Kerrich was born in Norfolk, England [2] and grew up in South Africa.He was educated there and in the UK (First class Honours in Mathematics & MSc Astronomy, University of the Witwatersrand; Diploma in Actuarial Mathematics, University of Edinburgh).

  3. James R. Newman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_R._Newman

    James Roy Newman (1907–1966) was an American mathematician and mathematical historian. He was also a lawyer, practicing in the state of New York from 1929 to 1941. During and after World War II, he held several positions in the United States government, including Chief Intelligence Officer at the US Embassy in London, Special Assistant to the Undersecretary of War, and Counsel to the US ...

  4. Alan J. Hoffman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_J._Hoffman

    World War II interrupted Hoffman's studies but not his interest in mathematics. He was called to service in February 1943 and served in the U.S. Army from 1943 to 1946, spending time in both Europe and the Pacific.

  5. Kurt Gödel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurt_Gödel

    World War II started in September 1939. Before the year was up, Gödel and his wife left Vienna for Princeton. To avoid the difficulty of an Atlantic crossing, the Gödels took the Trans-Siberian Railway to the Pacific, sailed from Japan to San Francisco (which they reached on March 4, 1940), then crossed the US by train to Princeton. [30]

  6. Abraham Wald - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abraham_Wald

    Abraham Wald (/ w ɔː l d /; Hungarian: Wald Ábrahám, Yiddish: אברהם וואַלד; () 31 October 1902 – () 13 December 1950) was a Jewish Hungarian mathematician who contributed to decision theory, [1] geometry and econometrics, and founded the field of sequential analysis. [2]

  7. Andrew M. Gleason - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_M._Gleason

    During World War II Gleason was part of OP-20-G, the U.S. Navy's signals intelligence and cryptanalysis group. [11] One task of this group, in collaboration with British cryptographers at Bletchley Park such as Alan Turing, was to penetrate German Enigma machine communications networks. The British had great success with two of these networks ...

  8. Benoit Mandelbrot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benoit_Mandelbrot

    After World War II ended, Mandelbrot studied mathematics, graduating from universities in Paris and in the United States and receiving a master's degree in aeronautics from the California Institute of Technology. He spent most of his career in both the United States and France, having dual French and American citizenship.

  9. Warren Weaver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Weaver

    Weaver was especially impressed with the potential of Shannon's classified work on cryptography and Information theory from World War II. Finally, the fourth proposal was that there may also be linguistic universals underlying all human languages which could be exploited to make the problem of translation more straightforward.