http://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/doc/hopper/grace.html (World Wide Web Directory, ~04/1995)
The Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing
The Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing
Washington, DC
June 9-11, 1994
The Grace Hopper Celebration of Women conference is a technical conference
presenting talks by many of the most successful women in the computing field
as well as panels, workshops and birds-of-a-feather sessions. The speakers
are leaders in their fields and represent the major technical computing
disciplines, and the academic, government and industrial communities.
Attendees will be informed of the latest advances in the rapidly changing
computing field. In addition to focusing on and celebrating women's
achievements, the conference will encourage collaboration across the
subfields of computing. The Technical talks will cover significant work in
many of the computing disciplines given by some of the field's most respected
researchers and practitioners. Attendees will leave with up to date
information about their own and other areas.
Anita Borg, General Chair
Network Systems Laboratory
Digital Equipment Corporation
Telle Whitney, Program Chair
Actel Corporation
Co-sponsored by the Computing Research Association (CRA), the Association
for Computing Machinery (ACM) and the IEEE Computer Society.
Supported by the Office of Naval Research, the National Science Foundation, Digital Equipment Corp., Sun Microsystems, Motorola Corp., AT&T Bell Labs, Intel Foundation, Lotus Development Corporation, Silicon Graphics Inc., American Assoc. for Artificial Intelligence, Actel Corp.
Collaboration and information exchange
Speakers will be asked to describe their vision of the future of their field.
They will comment on open problems with emphasis on possibilities for
significant advances which appear to require collaboration within and across
areas of expertise. Informal sessions will give attendees
the opportunity to discuss these possibilities and make contacts.
Panel Discussion on "The Management Option"
Journalist Bronwyn Fryer will moderate a panel discussion among senior
women who have moved from technical roles into management. Within the many fields and companies that together comprise the computing industry, much of the power lies in the hands of management. Panel participants will talk about the choices that led them into management, and will present their views of the future of the industry. The panel will include:
- Dr. Helen Bradley, Vice President of Software, Sun Systems
- Dawn Gilbert, Vice President of Sales, US Multivendor Services, Digital Equipment Corporation
- Dr. Paula Hawthorne, Vice President of Engineering at Montage Software, Inc
- Sandy Lerner, Co-Founder of CISCO Systems
A Celebration of Women's Achievements
Women's significant achievements in computing have rarely been recognized
en masse. This conference gives them recognition by the community of women,
the computing community, and the world. The synergy we will far exceed the
sum of the individual contributions.
Role Models, Mentors and Networking
By gathering a large number of professional technical women together in a
single forum, attendees will make contact with more successful role models
and potential mentors than has ever been possible. We will foster lasting
relationships that will help to reverse the trend of women dropping out of
computing. Scholarships and travel grants will ensure participation by
students and others less able to afford the cost of attending.
Conference Format
The conference will be held in the center of Washington D.C. at the Loew's
L'Enfant Plaza Hotel, on June 9-11, 1994. It is a three day event. The first
two days, featuring speakers in a common session, are followed by a single
day of concurrent panels, workshops, and bird-of-a-feather sessions on a
broader range of topics.
On the evening of June 9 we will gather at a gala banquet at the hotel.
On June 10, conference attendees will be bussed to a reception at the
fabulous Nation Museum of Women in the Art for a buffet reception and
a program by women using computers in their art.
The registration fees will be $350 ($150 students) and will
include a gala banquet on June 9, a reception at the National Museum of
Women's Art on June 10, as well as lunches and continental breakfasts.
Conference Organization
- General Chair - Anita Borg, Digital Equipment Corporation
- Program Chair - Telle Whitney, Actel Corporation
- Program Committee - Amy Lansky, Nasa Ames Research;
Dianne Martin, George Washington University;
Shari Pfleeger, City University of London;
Bob Ritchie, Hewlett-Packard Corporaption;
Barbara Simons, IBM
- Treasurer - Fred Weingarten, Computing Research Assn.
- Local Arrangements - Dianne Martin, George Washington Univ.
- Scholarships and Grants - Sheila Humphreys, Univ. of Cal. Berkeley
- Workshops - Rachelle Heller, George Washington Univ.
- Registration - Lu Kleppinger, George Washington Univ.
- Fund Raising - Helen Frey, Reliable Distributed Information
- Publicity - Pavani Diwanji, SunSoft
- Press Secretary - Laura Downey, NIST
- Celebration Booklet - Susan Epstein, City University of New York
- Poster - Karin Scholz, Karin Scholz Design
- Daycare - Leslie Shade, McGill University
Warner