Ron,
Fortran was THE thing for sure. By the time I got out of grad school (NCSU Mech Eng), I was a semi-expert in it along, unfortunately, with IBM 370 JCL. Fortunately, while I was in grad school this thing called a terminal came along and eliminated the need to actually punch cards (now you work with your "deck" on screen, lol) then followed by the IBM PC release and remote connections to TUCC (Triangle University Computing Center -- where the two shared IBM mainframes resided) via a sweet 300 baud auditory modem.
Re punch cards, for anyone there at the time, recall waiting in those long lines at comp center at NCSU in the late 70's just to get the privilege of using a punch machine to create your deck, then submitting said deck to reader (another line during busy times), then standing around the "public printer" to wait for your output (if lucky, 10 minutes, if not perhaps 45min) only to then find the first of many errors to come so you can then go stand in line again and start the process over -- great fun. It was always amazing how crowded that place was at 2am.
NCSU created satellite mini-centers (Dabney, Burlington, etc) to help the load, but those just became jammed at crunch times too.
Everyone should have had to go through this process in order to use a computer. Makes you appreciate modern technology as opposed to just taking it for granted.
