Tomorrow, March 8, is the International Day of the Woman -- and I celebrate the day with mixed feelings. YES, there are many women I want to celebrate. BUT WHY are they not celebrated daily, equally with men? And a more specific concern, WHY, when the word "mathematician" is used, is the person assumed to be a man. (There is, on the other hand, a nice non-gendered neutrality in numbers -- as in this first stanza of "Numbers," by Mary Cornish, found below.)
In this posting I celebrate Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (1906-1992) -- a mathematician with a doctorate from Yale, a navy admiral, a computer scientist who led in the development of COBOL, an early (c.1959) programming language. A person I had the good fortune to meet when she visited Bloomsburg University in 1984 to receive an honorary Doctor of Science Degree. Hopper was imaginative and articulate; here is some poetry found in her words.
If it's a
good idea,
do it.
Showing posts with label COBOL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COBOL. Show all posts
Saturday, March 7, 2015
Friday, June 8, 2012
Computer code -- is poetry?
Dubliner Eavan Boland is a master poet (and one of my favorites); Ireland shares her with the creative writing program at Stanford University. In Against Love Poetry (Norton, 2001), we find Boland's tribute to the also-amazing master of language, Grace Murray Hopper (1906-1988).
Code by Eavan Boland
Code by Eavan Boland
An Ode to Grace Murray Hopper 1906-88
maker of a computer compiler and verifier of COBOL
Poet to poet. I imagine you
at the edge of language, at the start of summer
in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, writing code.
You have no sense of time. No sense of minutes even.
They cannot reach inside your world,
your gray work station
with when yet now never and once.
You have missed the other seven.
This is the eight day of Creation.
Labels:
Bloomsburg University,
COBOL,
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compiler,
computer,
Eavan Boland,
Grace Murray Hopper,
language,
mathematician,
mathematics,
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