Finding aid for:

Engineering Research Associates Records


Hagley Museum and Library
P.O. Box 3630
298 Buck Road East
Wilmington, DE 19807
Manuscripts and Archives Department
manuscripts@hagley.org

Collection Information

Scope and Content
History

Series I: William Norris Papers
Series II: Arnold Cohen Papers
Series III: Legal Records
Series IV: Oral History Interviews

Administrative Information

Call number: Accession 2015

Acquisition Information: Deposit of Unisys Corporation

Use Restrictions: Copyright restrictions may apply.

Related materials: Accession 1825, Sperry-Univac Records

Quantity: 21 linear feet

Dates: 1946-1959

Scope and Content

The ERA records are divided into four series. Series I - William Norris Papers. Series II - Papers of Arnold Cohen (head of the Research Division). Series III - Legal Records and Patents. Series IV - Oral Histories. These records (1948-1957) document the years that ERA was an independent company as well as the period during which it was a division of Remington Rand, and later Sperry Rand.

Series I. William Norris Papers, have been divided into two subseries:

Subseries 1. Administrative records includes memoranda from the Research Division, Engineering Department, Operations Division, Manufacturing Division, Product Planning Committee and Patent Department (1953-57). These records describe the relationship between ERA and Sperry Rand. They focus on administrative issues - corporate organization, strategic planning, personnel policy, research priorities, allocation of resources, and fiscal accountability. There are several files which describe the relationship between the ERA and Eckert-Mauchly divisions and documents the ways in which work was allocated to allow ERA to focus on military and Eckert-Mauchly to focus on civilian projects.

Subseries 2. - General Correspondence (arranged alphabetically) documents major projects and contracts. These files describe work on the magnetic storage drum and the ERA 1101 and 1103 computer systems. The records document ERA's contracts with the Bureau of Ships, Atomic Energy Commission, the National Bureau of Standards, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. There are also files on competitive systems (mostly IBM), sales and marketing records, contracts and correspondence - documenting efforts to market the UNIVAC I and II. Software development files include correspondence of Admiral Grace Hopper.

Series II. Arnold Cohen Papers focus on Research & Development. There is considerable information on the development of magnetic storage and ERA's contracts with the Office of Naval Research for the building of the Atlas Computer. There are also files describing the relationship between ERA and M.I.T.'s Servomechanism Laboratory, and the Lawrence Livermore Radiation Laboratory. The latter describe the LARC computer project. Records documenting the 1947 symposium at Harvard University on "Large Scale Digital Calculating Machinery" describe early efforts to develop airline reservation systems and to automate procedures at Prudential Insurance Company.

Series III. Legal Records and Patents. During the late 1960s and early 1970s the questions of who developed the first electronic digital computer and the first magnetic storage drum were the focus of a number of Patent infringement lawsuits. Honeywell v. Sperry, Technitrol v. Sperry Rand, and Sperry Rand v. Control Data revolved around these questions. These files include copies of briefs, trial transcripts, and exhibits.

Series IV. Oral Histories contain transcripts of oral history interviews which were done for Sperry Rand's unpublished 1978 history book. Of particular interest are the interviews with Arnold Cohen and Sidney Rubens.

History

Engineering Research Associates' (ERA) origins can be traced to a classified World War II era Navy project which recruited highly skilled cryptologists, mathematicians, engineers, and physicists to break German and Japanese codes in order to pinpoint the movements of their ships. These tasks required the use of computing devices that could calculate data at ever increasing speeds. This led to an effort to investigate electronic solutions to cryptologic problems.

The work of this group was coordinated by Commander Howard T. Engstrom, who before the war had been a professor of mathematics at Yale University; and Lt. Commander William C. Norris, former sales manager for Westinghouse. After the war, the Navy made an effort to keep this team together and offered several members civil service appointments. However, Engstrom and Norris preferred to go into business for themselves. In the fall of 1945, they began searching for financial backing, but this proved to be difficult because they were unable to discuss their classified projects with potential investors. Finally, John Parker, a Wall Street investment banker and former head of Northwestern Aeronautical Corporation, provided the necessary capital. In January 1946, Engineering Research Associates was formed in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where John Parker was based.

In the fall of 1946, ERA received its first major contract from the Office of Naval Research to compile a report on "High Speed Computing Devices". This report, which became the definitive study of the infant state of computing, was later published in book form by McGraw Hill. During this project, ERA personnel was given access to classified government reports and worked with computer pioneers John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert, inventors of the ENIAC, and John von Neumann, of Princeton University's Institute for Advanced Study.

ERA was dependent on government funded cost-plus—fixed-fee contracts. In August 1947, it began work for the Navy on Task 13 - a project to design a general all-purpose stored-program computer. During this project ERA developed the first magnetic storage drum; the technology upon which the next two generations of computers was based. In October, 1950, ERA completed work on the Atlas computer - America's first electronic stored-program computer. The Atlas with its 2,700 vacuum tubes was capable of running twenty-four hours a day with only 10% of the time allotted for maintenance.

ERA hoped to establish a niche in the private sector. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, it worked with TWA to develop an automated airline reservation system. It also had a number of contracts with Prudential Insurance Company. However, the Navy was its primary customer. This left it vulnerable to Washington politics. Even though it was recognized as the most advanced computer company in the world, Drew Pearson's 1951 column in the "Washington Merry Go Round" charged Norris and Engstrom had used war time government connections to advance their private business. Pearson charged that ERA's Navy contracts represented a clear conflict of interest and were not subjected to competitive bidding. By 1952, under considerable political pressure, ERA merged with the Remington Rand Corporation. At first it operated as a semi-autonomous division, but after the 1955 Sperry merger, it was consolidated with the Eckert-Mauchly division of Sperry Rand and became part of Sperry-UNIVAC. William Norris never found this to be a satisfactory relationship. In 1957, Norris left Sperry to establish the Control Data Corporation. Later that year, the ERA people who remained were given a good deal more autonomy when Sperry created its St. Paul Research Division led by Sidney Rubens and Arnold Cohen. This division's primary job was to develop computer systems for the military and it played a crucial role in developing the command and control systems for the U. S.'s International Continental Ballistic Missiles and early space satellites. In 1960, what was left of the ERA group became Sperrys' Military Division, which was renamed the Aerospace Division. Accession 1952 - archives of the Aerospace Division - contains records from these periods.


Series I:
William Norris Papers

Sub-series 1:
Administrative Records
Folder 1/1Engineering Department Memoranda. — 1953-1954
Folder 1/2Engineering Department Memoranda. — 1955-1957
Folder 1/3Operations Division, Technical Memoranda. — March 1950-June 1951
Folder 1/4Operations Division, Technical Memoranda. — 1952-1953
Folder 1/5Operations Division, Technical Memoranda. — 1953-1954
Folder 1/6Research Division, minutes and correspondence. — 1956-1959
Folder 1/7New York Central Railroad - computerized reservation system. — 1954
Folder 2/1William Norris, General Correspondence. — 1950-1953
Folder 2/2William Norris, General Correspondence. — 1954-1955
Folder 2/3William Norris, General Correspondence. — 1956-1957
Departmental / Committee / Divisional Correspondence & Records
Folder 2/4Administrative Committee - Remington Rand. — December 1955-May 1956
Folder 2/4aEckert-Mauchly Division Correspondence. — 1955-1957
Folder 2/5Engineering Committee minutes. — 1952-1959
Folder 2/6Engineering Committee minutes. — 1956
Folder 2/7Engineering Division, General Correspondence. — 1954
Folder 2/8Financial Planning and Control. — 1956
Folder 2/9Form Committee. — 1956
Folder 2/10Information Science Division. — 1956
Folder 2/11Legal Division. — 1953-1956
Folder 2/12Management Meeting minutes. — 1957
Folder 2/13Manufacturing Division. — 1953-1957
Folder 2/14Military Engineering Division, Remington Rand
Folder 2/15-16Management Policies - Administrative Procedures. — 1947-1956
Folder 2/17Norwalk Laboratory - Employment, Salaries, Classifications. — 1956-1957
Folder 2/18Patent Department. — 1958
Folder 2/19Plant Locations. — 1957
Folder 2/20-22Product Planning Committee. — 1956-1957
Folder 2/23UNIVAC Division Monthly Progress reports

Sub-series 2:
General Correspondence
A
Folder 2/24Accounting Systems Electronic (Port Authority, NY)
Folder 2/25Advertising, Sales, Promotion
Folder 2/26Air Force, 1103 Computer. — 1953
Folder 2/27Airport - time utilization - magnetic storage drum. — 1949
Folder 2/28Airline Flight Plan Storage System. — 1951
Folder 2/29Airline Reservation System. — 1949
Folder 2/30Association for Computing Machinery. — 1947-1948
(includes proceedings of first meeting, Aberdeen, MD, 1947)
Folder 2/31Atomic Energy Commission re High Speed Digital Computers. — 1956
Folder 2/32Auerbach Corporation. — 1965
Box 3B-C
Folder 3/1Binary Computer Coding. — 1948
Folder 3/2Bureau of Ships (Directory)
Folder 3/2aCharactron Rapromatic. — 1956
Folder 3/3Cohen, Arnold. — 1956-1960
Folder 3/3aCompetitors. — 1953-1957
Folder 3/3bCompetitors. — 1956
Folder 3/4Competitors, IBM. — 1953-1955
Folder 3/5Competitors - IBM. — 1955
Folder 3/6Competitors - IBM. — 1957
Folder 3/7Competitors - Logistics Research
Folder 3/8Computing Centers. — 1952-1956
Folder 3/9Computing Centers. — 1956
Folder 3/10Computing Center (Arlington, VA)
Folder 3/11Contributions
Folder 3/12-15Customer Contacts - UNIVAC I
Folder 3/16-18Customer Correspondence (general). — 1955-1957
Folder 3/19Customer Correspondence "A". — 1952
Folder 3/19aCustomer Correspondence "B". — 1954-1956
Folder 3/20Customer Correspondence "N". — 1952-1957
Folder 3/21Customer Correspondence "T". — 1953-1956
Folder 3/22Customer Correspondence "U". — 1953-1955
Folder 3/23Customer Correspondence "V". — 1953-1955
Folder 3/24Customer Correspondence "W". — 1953-1956
Box 4C-H
Folder 4/1Customer Correspondence "B" UNIVAC I
Folder 4/2Customer Correspondence "M" UNIVAC I
Folder 4/3Customer Correspondence "I" UNIVAC I
Folder 4/4Customer Correspondence "S" UNIVAC I
Folder 4/5Customer Correspondence "T" UNIVAC I
Folder 4/6Customer Correspondence "U" UNIVAC I
Folder 4/7Customer Correspondence "W" UNIVAC I
Folder 4/8Customer Correspondence "B" UNIVAC II
Folder 4/9Customer Correspondence "M" UNIVAC II
Folder 4/10Customer Correspondence "N" UNIVAC II
Folder 4/11Customer Correspondence "O" UNIVAC II
Folder 4/12Customer Correspondence "R" UNIVAC II
Folder 4/13Customer Correspondence "S" UNIVAC II
Folder 4/14Customer Correspondence "T" UNIVAC II
Folder 4/15Cunningham, W.R. re employment. — 1956
Folder 4/16Defence Marketing Project MAC. — 1963
Folder 4/17Delchamps, H.J. (vita)
Folder 4/18Demonstration Calculator. — 1956
Folder 4/18aDisc File
Folder 4/19Digital Communications
Folder 4/19aDocument Handling Equipment
Folder 4/19bDunn & Bradstreet credit report
Folder 4/19cDumex, Arnold (consultant)
Folder 4/21Eckert-Mauchly salary information
Folder 4/21aEckert-Mauchly requisitions
Folder 4/22EDVAC Display
Folder 4/22a80-90 Column Equipment
Folder 4/23Engineering Tuition Policy
Folder 4/24ERA "Home Office Presentation". — 1953
Folder 4/25ERA 1101 & 1103 Computers. — 1952-1953
Folder 4/26ERA 1103 and its competitors. — 1954
Folder 4/27ERA 1103 and its competitors. — 1954-1955
Folder 4/28ERA and its competitors. — 1955
Folder 4/29ERA 1103 A Program Schedule Review Meeting minutes. — 1956
Folder 4/30ERA Annual Reports. — 1948, 1949, 1950
Folder 4/31ERA Financial Statements. — 1951, 1952
Folder 4/32Error Prevention System - License Agreement. — 1955-1957
F
Folder 4/33Fry, Thornton (consultant)
Folder 4/33aFerracators Production of Magnetic Cores. — 1957
Folder 4/34Ford Instrument Company. — 1956
Folder 4/35Forecast of Operations UNIVAC Division. — 1957-1961
Folder 4/36409 Computer. — 1953-1957
G
Folder 4/37GEMAC Calculator. — 1956
Folder 4/38General Standard Practice - Personnel Policy. — 1957
Folder 4/39Gutterman, Robert (consultant)
Folder 4/40Hardenbergh, Robert
Folder 4/41High Speed Sorter. — 1956
Folder 4/42High Speed Writing and Selective Altering of Digital Information of Magnetic Surfaces. — 1950
(Bureau of Ships)
Folder 4/43High Speed Printer. — 1953-1954
Box 5H-M
Folder 5/1Hooper, Admiral Grace. — 1953-1954
Folder 5/2-3IBM-Sperry Licensing Agreement. — 1956
Folder 5/4IBM Sponsored Design of Magnetic Drum Calculator. — 1949-1953
Folder 5/5Input/Output Media. — 1947
Folder 5/6-8Industrial Relations. — 1953-1954
Folder 5/9International Telemeter Corp. — 1954-1955
Folder 5/10-12Laboratory Administration. — 1951-1956
Folder 5/13Laminar Drum Development. — 1956
Folder 5/14LARC computer. — 1955-1957
Folder 5/15Licensing Agreements. — 1956
Folder 5/16Magnetic Core Program. — 1953-1957
Folder 5/17Magnetic Delay Lines
Folder 5/18Magnetic Drum Calculator. — 1950
report
Folder 5/19Magnetic Drum Calculator (project E 46 Technical Memoranda). — 1950
Folder 5/20Magnetic Drum Historical Record at ERA. — 1954
Folder 5/21Magnetic Drum Storage for Digital Information Processing Systems. — 1949
Folder 5/22Magnetic Drum Technique for Telegraph Storage Relay. — 1949
Folder 5/23Magnetic Heads
Folder 5/24Magnetic Records (Arnold Cohen). — 1947
Folder 5/25Magnetic Storage Drum Memory (includes National Bureau of Standards Report). — 1948
Folder 5/26Magnetic Storage for Digital Information Processing Systems. — 1949
Folder 5/27Magnetic Storage Systems. — 1953-1954
Folder 5/28Magnetic Storage Unit Characteristics. — 1949
Folder 5/29Magnetic Switch Blocks. — undated
Folder 5/30Magnetic Tape Program. — 1957
Folder 5/31Magnetic Tape (technical memoranda). — 1956
Box 6M-P
Folder 6/1Maintenance Electronic Services, Inc. — 1957
Folder 6/2Management Training
Folder 6/3Mass Storage. — 1955-1957
Folder 6/4-5Massachusetts Institute of Technology - MAC memoranda. — 1963-1964
Folder 6/6MITHRA Laboratory (Norwalk, CT). — 1957
Folder 6/7Medium Speed Printer. — 1956
Folder 6/8Mid Continent Engineering. — 1954
Folder 6/9Midwest Research Institute. — 1957
Folder 6/10Military Systems Engineering Facility. — 1957
Folder 6/11Minnesota Electronics Company. — 1955
Folder 6/12Minnesota Club
Folder 6/13Minnesota Nuclear Operations Group. — 1956
Folder 6/14Missile Rocket Survey (J.G. Miles). — 1957
Folder 6/15National Bureau of Standards Proposal to Build a digital computer. — 1948
Folder 6/16National Bureau of Standards Report and Contract. — 1948
Folder 6/17National Industrial Conference Board
Folder 6/18Ore Car Weighing
Folder 6/19Organization Charts
Folder 6/20Overhead
Folder 6/21Over time
Folder 6/22Personnel Recruitment
Folder 6/23Point of Sale Recorder and Tape to Card Converter
Folder 6/24Plant Operations
Folder 6/25Powers SAMAS Accounting Machine Ltd
Folder 6/26Product Planning - digital computers
Folder 6/27Print Circuit Laboratory. — 1955-1957
Folder 6/28Printing Punch
Folder 6/29Prints (records of)
Folder 6/30Progress Reports - Task Order I. — 1947
Folder 6/31Pulseo Transformers
Folder 6/32Product Design Dept
Folder 6/33Product Development Committee
Folder 6/34Product R & D File
Folder 6/35Project Planning and Cost Controls
Folder 6/36Publications Department
Folder 6/37Punched Card Product Planning
Folder 6/38Punched Card System Board
Folder 6/39Purchasing
Box 7R-S
Folder 7/1-2Radio Electronics Manufacturing Association - International News,. — 1956
Folder 7/3Raytheon Nomad Project
Folder 7/4READ PUNCH UNIT. — 1954-1956
Folder 7/5Record Storage
Folder 7/6-7Requisitions
Folder 7/8Research & Development (general)
Folder 7/9Roberts, A.E. (consultant agreement)
Folder 7/10Rotary Club
Folder 7/11Sales. — 1950-1953
Folder 7/12Sales. — 1954-1955
Folder 7/13Sales. — 1956-1957
Folder 7/14Sales Coordinating Committee - INIVAC Division. — 1955
Folder 7/15Sales Promotion. — 1953-1957
Folder 7/16Sales Promotion. — 1957
Folder 7/17-18Sales Reports. — 1957
Folder 7/19Sales and Related Technical Correspondence. — 1955
Folder 7/20Sales and Technical Correspondence. — 1956
Folder 7/21Security
Folder 7/22Sears Roebuck & Company - Armour County Equipment
Folder 7/23-24Selective Alteration of
Folder 7/25Sperry Corporation. — 1955
Folder 7/26Sperry Corporation. — 1956-1957
Box 8S-Z
Folder 8/1Sperry Rand
Folder 8/2Storage Problems in Digital Computers - Seminar. — 1947
Folder 8/3Systems Planning Status Report
Folder 8/4Teleregister Corporation (Collins Radio)
Folder 8/5-7Toll Collection
Folder 8/8Traffic Engineering
Folder 8/9Tuscon facility
Folder 8/10-12UNIVAC
Folder 8/13UNIVAC Costs
Folder 8/14UNIVAC - ERA Sales
Folder 8/15UNIVAC Sales reports. — 1951-1957
Folder 8/16UNIVAC 1101
Folder 8/17UNIVAC 1103
Folder 8/18-19UNIVAC II Sales Prospects
Folder 8/20UNIVAC Management
Folder 8/21Project Whirlwind Harvard Computational Laboratory
Folder 8/22Zenith Radio Corp
Box 8 aRemington Rand. — 1952-1957
Republic Steel presentation. — 1956

Series II:
Arnold Cohen Papers
Box 9General Files
Folder 9/1ERA Product Descriptions
Folder 9/2Facilities and Personnel - St. Paul, Minnesota
Folder 9/3Film Memory (MIT Lincoln Laboratory Project). — 1961-1963
Folder 9/4International Conference on Information Processing. — 1958
Folder 9/5LARC Computer System - General Description
Folder 9/6Lawrence Livermore - University of California Radiation Laboratory - LARC Computer. — 1959-1960
Folder 9/7Lawrence Livermore Radiation Laboratory - Hyper Computer
Folder 9/8Magnetic Film Memory
Folder 9/9Magnetic Storage. — 1957-1959
Folder 9/10Memory Systems (Magnetic Tape Handler). — 1960
Folder 9/11Mount Pocono Conference on Logical Design. — 1960
Folder 9/12Peripheral Equipment. — 1960
Folder 9/13Peripheral Subsystems. — 1966
Folder 9/14Princeton Meeting - Commercial Engineering. — January, 1966
Folder 9/15Project 274,000 Systems Development. — 1957
Folder 9/16Project 9080 - Character Representation. — 1955
Folder 9/17Thin Film Manufacture. — 1963
Folder 9/18"X" type Military Computer
Folder 9/19"XU" 72 Computer System. — 1959
Files - re: Development of Magnetic Storage
Folder 9/20General File, Project B-3001 (includes preliminary proposal to Office of Naval Research "Computing Machine Investigation" 1946). — 1946-1959
Folder 9/21Office of Naval Research, Bread Board Computer. — 1947
(Tompkins)
Folder 9/22Arnold Cohen's Trip Report MIT Servomechanisms Laboratory. — 1947
Folder 9/23Acoustic Delay Lines (project 3001) Naval Research Laboratories. — 1945
Folder 9/24Basic System Design Task Order 13. — 1947-1950
Folder 9/25Basic Toggles and Gates. — 1948
Folder 9/26High Speed Computing Devices (McGraw Hill)
Folder 9/27"Magnetic Drum Storage for Digital Information Processing Systems" paper by Arnold Cohen
Folder 9/28"Development in Methods of Electrostatic Storage" report to the Bureau of Ships. — 1949
Folder 9/29"49-Position Translator Switch" report to the Bureau of Ships. — 1948
Folder 9/30Addresses on a Computer Drum. — undated
Folder 9/31Proposed Binary Accumulator. — 1947
Folder 9/32Parallel Computer - National Bureau of Standards (30 and 36 digit). — 1948
Folder 9/33Magnetic Storage Drum prints
Folder 9/34Prints miscellaneous
Folder 9/35Wayne Conference on Automatic Computing Machinery (includes information on the Raytheon Digital Computer and the IBM Defense Calculator). — 1951
Folder 9/36Rutgers Conference - IBM Card Programmed Calculator, Arnold Cohen's notes. — 1950
Folder 9/37Magnetic Storage, Arnold Cohen's Publications. — 1949-1951
Folder 9/38Harvard University Computational Laboratory, Symposium on Large Scale Digital Calculating Machinery. — 1947
(includes descriptive material distributed by the Moore School at the 1947 EDVAC display and memorandum for H.J. Volk "Sequence Controlled Calculators for the Prudential" 1946)
Folder 9/39Prudential Sequence Control Calculators, copies of 1946-1947 memoranda
Folder 9/40Technical Memoranda (ditto masters), includes Arnold Cohen and William Keye "Selective Alteration of Digital Data in Magnetic Drum". — 1946-1952
Folder 9/41Arnold Cohen's IRE Paper re Single Alteration. — 1947
Folder 10/1Magnetic Drum History (includes photographs). — 1968
Folder 10/2Memoranda re magnetic drum patent. — 1958
Folder 10/3The Nature of Patent Rights and the Protection of Inventions (talk given by John W. Mailley of Cushman, Darby & Cushman. ERA's patent counsels.)
Folder 10/4Magnetic Drum Technology - background
Folder 10/5Miscellany - Honeywell v. Sperry Rand
Folder 10/6Patents general correspondence. — 1953-1964
Folder 10/7Patents
Folder 10/7aPatent Policy Plan
Folder 10/7bReport - Patent Survey - Product Recommendations
Folder 10/8Technical Report announcements. — 1950-1954
Folder 10/9Magnetic Drum Patents
Folder 10/10-13Technitrol v. Sperry Rand. — 1958-1961
Box 11Research Reports - Arnold Cohen files
Folder 11/1-2Bore Hole Camera (conical mirror). — 1950-1951
Folder 11/3Eclipse Pioneer - Bendix Aviation Corporation contract report. — 1948
Folder 11/4Electromagnetic Balance. — 1949
Folder 11/5Flight Instruments (pressure operated). — 1953
Folder 11/6Helical Scanner for Magnetic Factrol Records. — 1952
Folder 11/7High Frequency Loss Loops for Saturable Magnetic Cores. — 1950
Folder 11/8Magnetic Numerscope Printer. — 1949
Folder 11/9Microfilm Selector - general description. — 1947
Folder 11/10Microfilm Selector Equipment. — 1949
Folder 11/11Microfilm Selector - manufacturing manual
Folder 11/12Microfilm Selector - contract report
Folder 11/13-14Microfilm Rapid Selector Progress Reports. — 1947
Folder 11/15Ore Car Data Processing System. — 1951
Folder 11/16Self Recording Instruments. — 1949
Folder 11/17A Study leading to the design of a transistorized parallel digital computer. — 1954
Folder 11/18Taurus - Task 23 - Summary of objectives to equipment development. — 1951
Folder 11/19Toll vehicle classification equipment. — 1953
Folder 11/20Toridal Coil Winder. — 1953
Folder 11/21Transistor Group Progress Report. — 1955
Box 12Invention disclosures. — 1950s and 1960s
Contract Administration - U.S. government contract file. — 1960s
Box 13Product files - UNIVAC II, III, 418, 422, 494 and 1100 series
Box 14Product files - 1206, 1218, 1824, 1212, 1107, 1108, 1110, 1195, 1219, 1224, 1818, 1616, 1830, 1840, 9000, 9500, 1107

Series III:
Legal Records
Box 15Honeywell v. Sperry lawsuit
Box 16-18Sperry Rand v. Control Data
Box 19-20Technitrol v. Sperry Rand

Series IV:
Oral History Interviews
Folder 12/1Art Kotz
Sidney Rubens
Arnold Cohen
Irv Wilking
Dick Mullins
Ray Miller
Bern Eklund
Lou Cramer
Roger Moerke
Earl La Bahn
Jerry Behan
Bill Jeffries
Don Backstrom
Jack Ross
Rodger Gadner
Genevieve Sederstrom
Earl Case and Jack Kadrie
Lorraine Kellner
Wally Miner
Keith Davidson
Vince Albrecht
George Johnson
Folder 12/2Oral Histories continued - edited versions