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- Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!leland.Stanford.EDU!alderson
- From: alderson@elaine46.Stanford.EDU (Rich Alderson)
- Subject: Re: World's Toughest Computers
- In-Reply-To: prp@ssd.intel.com (Paul Pierce)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov21.002018.14639@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Originator: alderson@leland.Stanford.EDU
- Sender: news@leland.Stanford.EDU (Mr News)
- Reply-To: alderson@elaine46.Stanford.EDU (Rich Alderson)
- Organization: Stanford University Academic Information Resources
- References: <1992Nov19.190739.18948@rchland.ibm.com> <BxzED5.B0H@world.std.com> <BxzsFx.5r7@SSD.intel.com>
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 92 00:20:18 GMT
- Lines: 28
-
- In article <BxzsFx.5r7@SSD.intel.com>, prp@ssd (Paul Pierce) writes:
- >There was the infamous bombing of the Army Math Research Center at U.
- >Wisconsin in the late 60's. (I'm sure someone there can correct this account,
- >but what the hey, its folklore.) Karl Armstrong, Ken Fine, et. al. stole Tad
- >Pinkerton's van (Tad was the director of the computing center), filled it with
- >fertilizer soaked in gasoline, parked it next to Sterling Hall (the Physics
- >department and AMRC), and set it to go off around 4AM.
- >
- >The blast was heard throughout the city. (Seven miles away, it woke up my
- >mother). A physics grad student, Robert Fassnacht(?) was killed. Major damage
- >to the building.
- >
- >A CDC-924 dropped through one whole floor, and when they connected it up again
- >it still worked. I heard this model was originally designed for submarines,
- >but the physics department got some surplus. One was still in use there in the
- >mid 70s.
-
- Interestingly enough, I saw a book this past weekend in a local Brentano's
- called _Rads_, on precisely this incident. It took place in the spring of 1970
- (which I remembered, 'cause I was a college freshman at the time).
-
- I wonder if the book (which I'm waiting for in paperback :-) will mention the
- computer that survived?
- --
- Rich Alderson 'I wish life was not so short,' he thought. 'Languages take
- such a time, and so do all the things one wants to know about.'
- --J. R. R. Tolkien,
- alderson@leland.stanford.edu _The Lost Road_
-