.
                             CREDIT
                             ======
.
Doc Henley has his own CREDIT, there are a list of others.
 As I go back and figure out certain professor names, I will
 add them.
.
Dr. Paul Williams.
   For the constant advice and ideas. I would have never
   completed one college degree, let alone a second one,
   without you and your fatherly advice and understanding;
   on topics both personal and math/copmp sci related.
   Dr. WIlliams was one of those ultra-rare PHDs, that you were
   just *sure* they would have been UBER-successful managing
   something big for some corporation and reaping personal
   rewards for it; Instead? Dr. Williams dedicated his entire
   LIFE to helping *other* people achieve success.
.
Dr. Anthony "Dr P" Pyzdrowski.
    This man single-handedly makes *all* "polish jokes" a
    moot point. I hardly ever get seriously "impressed" and
    "intimidated" with any one person academically; this man
    intimidates and impresses *daily*. All young men need
    someone to look up to, and emulate, to be their own personal
    hero. You see, Dr. P gets *out* of his field *regularly*,
    to do big projects. When my day finally came, and I wanted
    to DESIGN something BIG, in another field? I was prepared...
    "How would Dr. P go about this...", then the answer was
    forthcoming. MUCH like Dr. Paul Williams, Dr. P gave up
    a very successful "EE" design career to re-vamp and
    re-invigorate my alma mater's Math CompSCi department.
.
Dr. Weinrich.
    Dr. Weinrich? You said a couple of things during lecture,
    that meant little to me at the time; later on? These little
    GEMS you just tossed out became some of the very BIGGEST
    things I got OUT of my education. Two examples that stand
    out:
.
     "STRUCTURED programming? Does *not* have as a definition
     'no goto statements'. Structured code is... WELL STRUCTURED!
     JUDICIOUS and PROPER usage of the GOTO statement?
     does *not* hurt a damned thing."
.
     "People? never forget this... the ONLY thing the object
     model GIVES you? Is special variable names; they allow you
     to organize a large project."

Dr. Hoozits.
     Foreign Professor, PhD, had a thick accent. He taught...
     what I thought of as some "oddball" higher courses. LISP 
     among them. I have about no use for LISP then or now, but,
     the biggest GEM was when he explained the surprisingly
     simple rules to evaluate a mathematical expression byte
     by byte. I could "never" have written my own language(s)
     before, without this "base" the language sits upon.
     I have written this "math module" three different times
     now, and I am always amazed at how SIMPLE the rules are,
     and how FEW of them there are, for the power it hands you.
     
