of 1966 he attended the second year of an
NSF-sponsored
summer institute in mathematics and computing at the
University of Oklahoma. Richard Andree taught the computing
class which mostly used the language GO-GO which was later
renamed ALPS. Andree, Harold Wiebe, Ralph Howenstein, and
another grad student were changing the language frequently
during the class, which was occasionally a little
disorienting. Dale believes it was used in the previous
summer as well and that it was about this time that Kemeny
(one of the designers of BASIC) saw it during a visit.
["Synchronization and Scheduling in ALPS Objects",
P. Vishnubhotia, Proc 8th Intl Conf Distrib Com Sys, IEEE
1988, pp. 256-264].
(1994-11-24)