8554 Guy Steele/Richard Gabriel: The evolution of Lisp. 2nd ACM Sigplan History of Programming Languages Conf. April 1993, 80p. [8620] 8552 Henry Baker: Lively linear Lisp - 'Look Ma, no garbage!'. ACM Sigplan Notices 27/8 (1992), 89-98. [8620] 8550 Henry Baker: Computing a*b (mod n) efficiently in ANSI C. ACM Sigplan Notices 27/1 (1992), 95-98. [8620] 8544 Richard Gabriel: Lisp - good news, bad news, how to win big. AI Expert June 1991, 31-39. [8620] 8553 Henry Baker: Critique of DIN kernel Lisp definition version 1.2. Lisp and Symb. Comp. 4/4 (1992), 371-398. [8620] 8555 Peter Norvig/Kent Pitman: Tutorial on good Lisp programming style. Lisp Users and Vendors Conf. April 1993, 116p. [8620] 8548 Alberto Riva: Common Lisp, LispWeb and the birth of the WebStations. Internet 1995, 2p. [8620] 8547 John Mallery: A Common Lisp hypermedia server. Proc. 1st Int. Conf. WWW CERN May 1994, 7p. [8620] 8546 Kenneth Anderson/Duane Rettig: Performing Lisp analysis of the Fannkuch benchmark. Internet 1995, 11p. [8620] Fannkuch is a good benchmarch developed by Bruno Haible and involves only operations on small integers and integer vectors. The improved version is between 24 and 116 % slower than C when run on several Lisp implementations. It is easy to write benchmarks that make Lisp appear slower than C. However, as with any highly tuned benchmark, a small change can have a profound affect on performance. 8549 Mark Kantrowitz/Barry Margolin: Answers to FAQs about Lisp. Internet, ca. 130p. [8620] 8591 Robert Scheifler a.o.: CLX. Common Lisp X interface. Texas Instruments 1989. [8620]