William Karush (1 March 1917 â 22 February 1997) was an American professor of mathematics at California State University at Northridge and was a mathematician best known for his contribution to KarushâÂÂKuhnâÂÂTucker conditions. In his master's thesis he was the first to publish these necessary conditions for the inequality-constrained problem, although he became renowned after a seminal conference paper by Harold W. Kuhn and Albert W. Tucker. He also worked as a physicist for the Manhattan Project, although he signed the Szilárd petition and became a peace activist afterwards.
Sam and Tillie (formerly Shmuel and Tybel) Karush immigrated to the United States from Biaà Âystok, then under Russian control, now Poland. Karush was born in Chicago, Illinois on March 1, 1917. He graduated from Murray F. Tuley High School in 1934. He attended the Central YMCA College in Chicago for two years before transferring to University of Chicago, where he studied mathematics and received a Bachelor of Science in 1938, a Masters of Science in 1939, and a Ph.D. in 1942.
From 1942 to 1943, he worked as a mathematician for the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, D.C. and from 1943âÂÂ1945, he was employed by University of Chicago, while working on the Manhattan Project. He stayed at the University of Chicago as an associate professor until 1956 when he took up a position in industry. In 1967 he returned to academia as a professor at California State University, Northridge.