
The RESISTORS started in Hopewell Township prior to 1967 consisting of a group of Hopewell Township School students who formed a club to smoke pot in a small stone building on Poor Farm Road in protest of the lack of decent science program in their school system. They visited me in my barn and changed their purpose getting high on computers instead. - Claude Kagan
Here is a link to the Sam-76 self-extracting zip file. The resulting .exe file should be 1714153 bytes long. Claude sent me this text relating to it, but I'm not sure who he is quoting:
Very good, BTW do you have a copy of the RESISTORS book, called he "sam76 Language", the foreword written by NAT, and the "backword" details a lot of names, and some of the history. That was the major long lasting product of the RESISTORS and the book is still valid, and the sofware is available for a number of platforms including the source code. That is also in AOL (keyword sam76). If you want the book let me have your address and I will be delighted to mail you a copy. The artwork in it was done by Joe Tulloch. and the book has been available since 1976, and is banned from the Hopewell Township School system due to the saracastic comments about said system.Claude told me that he will be giving copies of the Sam76 book to all reunion attendees.Claude - You might want to put in the page some of the artwork from that book. Note that this book is the only computer book that I know of where the examples are actually executed as part of the typeset process, so that the results of the examples are absolutely accurate to the extent that the sample is correct. The typeset software was written in the sam76 language and is contemporary with UNIX roff.