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From: Lawrie Schonfelder <j.l.schonfelder@liverpool.ac.uk>
Reply-To: j.l.schonfelder@liverpool.ac.uk
To: SC22/WG5 members <SC22WG5@dkuug.dk>
Subject: Fwd: (SC22.1527) Obituary from Washington Post
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I am sure I am not the only person who remembers Betty to receive this but 
just in case I am forwarding it.

As a J3er in the early 80s I remember Betty with great affection. My first 
reaction was that she was a somewhat dotty old biddy but it did not take me 
long to realize that this was a grave mistake. She was engagingly excentric, 
a might fay but when it mattered she was actually as sharp as they came. She 
was also extraordinarily kind to young arrogant upstart greenhorn standard 
committee members. I recall many a very entertaining dinner with Betty and 
others where without quite knowing how Betty managed to change a number of 
minds about what we should do both about the design of Fortran and where we 
should go to eat.

Betty was a genuine original. I will always feel privilaged to have known 
her, even if only peripherally.


--- Begin Forwarded Message ---
Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2001 10:43:16 -0500
From: Matthew Deane <mdeane@ANSI.org>
Subject: (SC22.1527) Obituary from Washington Post
Sender: owner-SC22@dkuug.dk
To: 'SC 22 Experts List' <sc22@dkuug.dk>

Reply-To: Matthew Deane <mdeane@ANSI.org>
Message-ID: <200112121542.QAA24748@dkuug.dk>


I was passed along this obituary from the former SC 22 Chairman who noted
that many of you knew Betty from her work with programming languages.


Betty Holberton Dies; Helped U.S. Develop Computer Languages
By Claudia Levy


Frances "Betty" Snyder Holberton, 84, the software pioneer who programmed
the groundbreaking ENIAC digital computer for the Army in the 1940s and
later helped create the COBOL and FORTRAN languages used to operate the
world's computers, died Dec. 8 at the Kingshire Manor assisted-living
community in Rockville. She had suffered a stroke and had diabetes.

Late in life, Mrs. Holberton was credited for her efforts to make the
language and equipment of programming user-friendly. After World War II, she
created an instruction code, called C-10, that allowed for control of the
new UNIVAC -- the first general-purpose computer -- by keyboarded commands
rather than by dials and switches.

While engineers focused on the technology of computing, Mrs. Holberton lay
awake nights thinking about human thought processes, she later told
interviewers.

She came up with language using mnemonic characters that appealed to logic,
such as "a" for add and "b" for bring. She designed control panels that put
the numeric keypad next to the keyboard and persuaded engineers to replace
the UNIVAC's black exterior with the gray-beige tone that came to be the
universal color of computers.

UNIVAC was put to work during the 1950 Census, and it ultimately
revolutionized business.

During the rest of her career, spent as a supervisory mathematician at the
Navy's David Taylor Model Basin and the National Bureau of Standards, Mrs.
Holberton continued to push to make computers easier for ordinary people to
use, Kathryn A. Kleiman observed in writings about Mrs. Holberton.

It was Kleiman's research, first as a young programmer and later as a lawyer
and documentary-maker, that finally brought Mrs. Holberton recognition and
national honors in the 1990s as a pioneer of computer science. Mrs.
Holberton  appears in a photograph that is part of the  UNIVAC exhibit at
the  National Museum of American History.

Mrs. Holberton, a longtime resident of Potomac, was born in Philadelphia.
She was the daughter and granddaughter of astronomers, who encouraged her
ability in mathematics. She hoped to major in the field at the University of
Pennsylvania but was discouraged by a  professor who thought that women
belonged at home. She instead majored in English and journalism and worked
initially for the Farm Journal, compiling information about consumer
spending and guiding the magazine's economics statistics section.

When men were diverted to wartime service, the Army recruited Mrs. Holberton
and about 80 other female mathematicians to compute ballistics trajectories
by hand and with desktop calculators at the University of Pennsylvania.

The women, who were classified as sub-professionals and called "computers,"
worked on equations that took more than 30 hours to solve. 

The Army sponsored a top-secret project to create an electronic digital
computer that would speed up the calculations. The first special-purpose
digital computer with regenerative memory had been invented by John Vincent
Atanasoff at Iowa State College in 1937.

The Army chose six women, including Mrs. Holberton, to program the ENIAC,
which weighed 30 tons and filled a room. The women had to route data and
electronic pulses through 3,000 switches, 18,000 vacuum tubes and dozens of
cables.

"There were no manuals," one of the women, Kay McNulty Mauchley Antonelli,
later told Kathleen Melymuka for an interview in Computer World. "They gave
us all the blueprints, and we could ask the engineers anything. We had to
learn how the machine was built, what each tube did. We had to study how the
machine worked and figure out how to do a job on it. So we went right ahead
and taught ourselves how to program." 

Mrs. Holberton took responsibility for the central unit that directed
program sequences. Because the ENIAC was a parallel processor that could
execute multiple program sections at once, programming the master unit was
the toughest challenge of her 50-year career, she later told Kleiman.

By the completion of the ENIAC project in 1946, work that once took 30 hours
to compute instead took 15 seconds.

Mrs. Holberton went on to work on UNIVAC programming for payrolls, inventory
and other universal functions for the company begun by ENIAC's developers.
It evolved into Sperry Univac and then Unisys.

She developed the first sorting route for UNIVAC and wrote a sort-generator
application that allowed for customized programs.

While working at David Taylor and the National Bureau of Standards, she

served with committees that created COBOL (Common Business Oriented
Language), wrote standards for FORTRAN (Formula Translation) and set other
national and international computer standards. She retired from the bureau,
now the National Institute of Standards and Technology, in the 1983.

Her honors include the Lovelace Award of the National Association of Women
in Computing.

Survivors include her husband of 51 years, John Vaughan Holberton of
Rockville; two daughters, Priscilla Holberton of Silver Spring and Pamela
Holberton of Rockville; two sisters; and a brother.

  

--- End Forwarded Message ---


--
Lawrie Schonfelder
Honorary Senior Fellow, University of Liverpool
Home: 1 Marine Park, West Kirby, Wirral, UK  CH48 5HN
Phone: +44(151)625 6986



