She enlisted as a Naval officer during World War II, and served in the WAVES as a codebreaker. She was part of the Magic project, whose decryptions of Japanese communications led to the ambush and death of Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto.[1][3] During this service she met Merchant Marine and later mechanical engineer Lloyd M. Trefethen;[3] they married in 1944.[4]
Trefethen was for many years a professor of English at Tufts University,[3] and served for 18 years as executive editor for the Council of East Asian Studies at Harvard University.[1]
She and her husband had had two children, quilter Gwyned Trefethen in 1953 and mathematician Lloyd N. Trefethen in 1955.[1][5]
She died on March 1, 2012.[1]
Books
With Joseph F. McCloskey, Trefethen edited the book Operations Research for Management (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1954).[6]
She wrote the first chapter of the book, an early history of the field of operations research.[7]
She is also the author of Writing a Poem (The Writer, 1970), on the process of writing poetry.[8]
^Astill, Ken; Nelson, Fred; Humphrey, Joseph A. C. (1999), "Dedication to Lloyd MacGregor Trefethen on the Occasion of His 80th Birthday", Journal of Fluids Engineering, 121 (1), {ASME} International: 3, doi:10.1115/1.2822008
Swager, William L. (February 1955), Journal of the Operations Research Society of America, 3 (1): 127–129, JSTOR166740{{citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
Rivett, B. H. P. (1956), Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A, 119 (1): 94–95, doi:10.2307/2342975, JSTOR2342975{{citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
Karlin, Samuel (June 1956), Journal of the American Statistical Association, 51 (274): 391–392, doi:10.2307/2281366, JSTOR2281366{{citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
Prager, W. (January 1957), Quarterly of Applied Mathematics, 14 (4): 440, JSTOR43636028{{citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)