[1] Her mother created an endowment for chamber music at Swarthmore College, which has been supported by successive generations of her family.
[5] In 1961, Fetter interviewed with a member of the team who used a LGP-30 in MIT's Department of Nuclear Engineering, who recommended her to Margaret Hamilton.
[6] Hamilton soon moved on to another project, and Fetter took over the computational work for Edward Lorenz's research, plotting the motion of a particle experiencing fast convection in an idealised beaker.
[6] In the 1970s, she and her husband moved to Colorado, where Gille is now a senior scientist emeritus at the National Center for Atmospheric Research.
[8] Fetter took computer science classes at the University of Colorado Boulder, but soon left to work in tax preparation.