Not sure if it's relevant:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/WordMARC

My brother was one of the few engineers on this product, in Palo Alto. The 
software ran on dozens of different machines and architectures, using the most 
portable language of the day: Fortran 77.  I believe MARC was the umbrella 
name/company for a number of different products. 

He got me a summer job there - I had to print out the sources and then make 
copies for everyone. We also wired the offices with rs-232 runs to the PRIME 
lurking in the basement.  

Formative years...

Sent from my teeny little terminal. 

> On Sep 26, 2015, at 10:30 PM, Eric Christopherson <echristopher...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> 
>> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015, Jay Jaeger wrote:
>> (BTW, My memory of that acronym is "Machine Assisted Resource
>> Coordinator", a small-sized Unix work-alike developed by Ed Ziemba (RIP)
>> using Leor Zolman's BDS C compiler).
> 
> I'm having trouble finding much about this system; most of it is on your
> web page and the Wikipedia page for BDS C, which appears to borrow quite
> a bit from your page. Was MARC an OS itself, or a Unix-like layer on
> CP/M? Is it available to download and play with?
> 
> -- 
>        Eric Christopherson

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