Moller, Carol Eymann2017-06-192017-06-192016-01-26Carol Eymann Moller, OH 498. Oral history interview by Thomas J. Misa, 26 January 2016. Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.OH 498http://hdl.handle.net/11299/188514Transcript, 37 pp.Carol Moller took courses at a branch of UCLA close to her childhood home in Los Angeles and then graduated from Stanford University in 1957 as a math major. She took a job as a computer programmer at Shell [Oil] Development in Emeryville, CA. She describes flow charting in machine language, batch processing with punch cards, and then the coming of FORTRAN. She and her husband came to Minnesota for his pediatrics residency, and she took a position with General Mills mechanical division (on East Hennepin) working on a highly classified antimissile project. She moved to Texas for two years when her husband went into the Army. In the 1980s she studied several languages (at the University of Minnesota) and then took up historical linguistics and ESL teaching. This material is based on work funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation award B2014-07 “Tripling Women’s Participation in Computing (1965-1985).”enComputer historyWomen's historyGenderAlfred P. Sloan FoundationAffirmative actionGeneral Mills, Inc.Rand Corporation.Shell Oil CompanyStanford University.University of MinnesotaOral history interview with Carol Eymann MollerOral History