And people were seeing C in CS classes because it let you write the OS, which is part of what CS degrees wanted to teach. Pascal didn't really let you do that.
ISO Pascal not, ISO Extended Pascal, Concurrent Pascal USCD Pascal, Object Pascal certainly did, and several OSes do exist, that were written in them.
Ah, but Pascal dialects don't count.
In that case same applies to the C dialect, non ISO C compliant, full of compiler extensions as alternative to hand written Assembly, that is allowed in most kernels.
However the main point stands, most CS degrees used UNIX alongside the Lion's book, or Minix, thus strenghting C's position on this use case.
Ah, but Pascal dialects don't count.
In that case same applies to the C dialect, non ISO C compliant, full of compiler extensions as alternative to hand written Assembly, that is allowed in most kernels.
However the main point stands, most CS degrees used UNIX alongside the Lion's book, or Minix, thus strenghting C's position on this use case.