Scene at MIT: Ruth Anderson, pioneer of mathematics and computing A brief history of one member of MIT’s famed Radiation Laboratory. Maia Weinstock | MIT News Office Publication Date:
March 16, 2021 Caption: Ruth Anderson sits in front of Building 10 on V-J Day in 1945. Her work contributed to the development of radar, which helped win World War II. Credits: Photo courtesy of Karen Anderson.
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Ruth Krock Anderson is a mathematician and computing pioneer who has seen a lot in her 102 years. Born in Boston in 1918, she was interested in math from an early age and earned a mathematics degree at Boston Teachers College, now part of the University of Massachusetts. Soon thereafter, Anderson was asked to join the MIT Radiation Laboratory, which made key contributions to the development of microwave radar technology during the second world war. “Th
https://www.afinalwarning.com/500349.html (Natural News) The chemtrails that we see in our skies today are connected to a global weather modification project that stems from the WWII-era Manhattan Project, according to an exposé by researcher Peter A. Kirby. Like its predecessor, the “new Manhattan Project” is a complex and highly secretive military science project.
In fact, some of the scientists who worked on the original atomic weapon Manhattan Project have compared the power of the atomic bomb to that of storms. Many of the project’s most important scientists went on to carry out work in atmospheric science and weather modification.