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  1. www.encyclopedia.com › computers-and-computing-biographies › grace-hopperGrace Hopper - Encyclopedia.com

    Jun 8, 2018 · In Grace Hopper, Navy Admiral and Computer Pioneer, Charlene Billings explains that Hopper used a strategy from her schooldays—the forward pass in basketball. Forbidden under the rules for women's basketball to dribble more than once, one teammate would routinely pass the basketball down the court to another, then run down the court herself and be in a position to receive the ball and make the basket.

  2. www.encyclopedia.com › computers-and-computing-biographies › grace-murray-hopperGrace Murray Hopper - Encyclopedia.com

    May 14, 2018 · HOPPER, GRACE MURRAY(b. New York [1], New York [2], 9 December 1906, d. Washington, D.C., 1 January 1992),computer sciences, programming languages, COBOL.An admiral who never went to sea, Hopper owed her success in the U.S. Navy, as in civilian life, to her mastery of computers and computing.

  3. Hopper, Grace Brewster Murray ( b . 9 December 1906 in New York City; d . 1 January 1992 in Arlington, Virginia), naval officer, mathematician, and computer expert. Hopper was one of three children of Walter Fletcher Murray, an insurance broker, and Mary Campbell Van Home, a homemaker.

  4. Grace Brewster Hopper. 1906-1992. American Mathematician and Computer Programmer. Grace Hopper developed COBOL, a computer programming language, in the 1950s and her related innovations, such as compilers used for business processes, provided a foundation for more sophisticated computing systems.

  5. Grace Murray Hopper"> A ship in port is safe, but that is not what ships are built for. —Grace Murray Hopper. A joint project of Harvard University and International Business Machines (IBM), the Mark I was built at the IBM laboratory in Endicott, New York, and moved to the Cruft Lab where it was ready for operations by summer 1944. Driven by ...

  6. This concept of grace is commonly admitted by theologians; for every supernatural gift is rightly called grace, and preeminent among these is God Himself. Bibliography: c. baumgartner, La Gr â ce du Christ (Tournai 1963). i. willig, Geschaffende und Ungeschaffende Gnade (M ü nster 1964). h. rondet, Gratia Christi (Paris 1948). p.

  7. Hopper, Hedda and Louella ParsonsDriven, sometimes ruthless, Hollywood rivals whose gossip columns wielded considerable power in the entertainment industry of the 1940s and 1950s. Source for information on Hopper, Hedda and Louella Parsons: Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia dictionary.

  8. Born Dorothy Mary Crowfoot on May 12, 1910, in Cairo, Egypt; died on July 29, 1994, at her home in Shipstonon-Stour, in Warwickshire county in central England, after suffering a stroke; daughter of John Winter (a classics scholar and archaeologist) and Grace Mary (Hood) Crowfoot (a weaver and amateur botanist); graduated from Sir John Lehman School, Beccles, 1928; Somerville College, Oxford, B.A., 1931; Source for information on Hodgkin, Dorothy (1910–1994): Women in World History: A ...

  9. www.encyclopedia.com › history › encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-mapsMarilyn vos Savant - Encyclopedia.com

    Mar 16, 2018 · Marilyn vos Savant. Writer Marilyn vos Savant (born 1946) has an I.Q. of 228, the highest ever recorded. Marilyn vos Savant's intelligence quotient (I.Q.) score of 228, the highest ever recorded, brought the St. Louis-born writer instant celebrity and earned her the sobriquet "the smartest person in the world."

  10. www.encyclopedia.com › plants-and-animals › animalsGrasshopper - Encyclopedia.com

    May 21, 2018 · The muscular back legs of grasshoppers allow powerful propulsion. The legs have a muscular femur (thigh), a long, slender tibia (shin), and a five-jointed foot with claws. Before jumping, the grass hopper flexes its rear legs and projects itself through the air with an explosive kick, sometimes using its wings to help it glide.

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