From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: doug@cs.dartmouth.edu (Doug McIlroy) Date: Thu, 24 Sep 2015 22:14:57 -0400 Subject: [TUHS] Questions regarding early Unix contributors Message-ID: <201509250214.t8P2EvCu026479@coolidge.cs.Dartmouth.EDU> I can assure you that Lorinda Cherry wrote most of the important code in WWB, including style and diction. The idea for them came from Bill Vesterman at Rutgers. Lorinda already had parts, a real tour de force, which assigned parts of speech to words in a text. Style was the killer app for parts and was running within days of his approach to the labs wondering whether such a thing could be built. Lorinda also wrote deroff, which these tools of course needed. WWB per se was packaged by USDL; I am sorry I can't remember the name of the guiding spirit. So Lorinda's code detoured through there on its way into research Unix. Chris van Wyk was cvw. He was at Bell Labs, not BSD. Chuck Haley is indeed Charles B. Haley. Andy Koenig was ark.