SHEMYAKIN 340 



the same time, 1933 to 1945, he was also teaching at the Lenin- 

 grad Military -Naval Academy. He worked in several research 

 institutions including the Leningrad Electrophysical Institute 

 and the Central F^dio Laboratory of a Trust for Low Voltage 

 Plants. Shchukin has been a Major General in the Engineering- 

 Technical Service. He became a member of the Communist 

 Party of the Soviet Union in 1944. In 1946 he was elected a 

 Corresponding Member of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences 

 and in 1953 an Academician. 



Shchukin' s main work is in the propagation of short waves 

 and in short wave communication at great distances in two-way 

 radiotelegraph broadcasting without power losses and methods 

 of controlling pulse distortions, the study of non- stationary 

 processes in resonance and band amplifiers. 

 Bibliography: 



Propagation of Radiowaves (textbook), 1940. 



Non- stationary processes in resonance and bank amplifiers. 



Izvest. Akad. Nauk S.S.S.R., Ser. Fiz., 1946, 10, #1. 



Method of controlling impulse distortion to radio reception. 



Izvest. Akad. Nauk S.S.S.R., Ser. Fiz., 1946, 10, #1. 

 Biography: 



A. N. Shchukin. Radio, 1947, #4. 



F. Chestnov . In the World of Radio. Moscow: 1954. 

 Office: USSR Academy of Sciences 



Leninskii Prospekt, 14 

 Moscow, USSR 

 Residence: Alekseeskogo studgorodka 3ii pr. 31 



Moscow, USSR 

 Telephone: 13 07 74 



SHEMYAKIN, MIKHAIL MIKHAILQVICH (Organic Chemist) 



M. M. Shemyakin was born July 26, 1908. After graduating 

 from Moscow University in 1930, he worked at the Scientific 

 Research Institute of Organic Intermediates and Dyes until 

 1935. From 1930 to 1937 he was also at the Moscow Institute 

 of Fine Chemical Technology and from 1935 to 1945 at the All- 

 Union Institute of Experimental Medium. Shemyakin was made 

 professor, in 1942, at the Moscow Textile Institute where he 

 had been working since 1937. In 1945 he began work at the 

 Institute of Biological and Medical Chemistry of the U.S.S.R. 

 Academy of Sciences and in 1958 at the Institute of Organic 

 Chemistry of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. He became a 

 member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1951. 



