Ellen P. Reese

Ellen P. Reese (August 30 1926–April 2 1997) was the Norma Cutts Dafoe professor of psychology at Mount Holyoke College until 1994.[1]

She received her B.A. in psychology from Mount Holyoke in 1948 and her M.A. in 1954. The Ellen P. Reese Grants for Faculty/Student Research has been established in her name. In 1997 Mount Holyoke held a conference dedicated entirely to her memory.

Awards

Reese was honored in 1986 by the American Psychological Association (APA) with the Distinguished Contribution to Education in Psychology Award. In 1992, the APA included her in a list of the 100 most important women in psychology.[1]

gollark: To make it easier, just assign each variable its own unique location in memory and continuously read/write from those to registers.
gollark: Bad simple codegen isn't though as far as I know.
gollark: Codegen isn't that bad I think, you just break your functions down into simple instruction sequences, assign variables to registers, ??? spilling, and emit the appropriate instructions.
gollark: You don't need to be fault tolerant if your users don't make mistakes.
gollark: Well, parsing is fairly okay, I don't know much about how codegen works, and there are no* other steps.

References

  1. Morris, Edward K. "Biography of Ellen P. Reese". Retrieved 2013-10-23.


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