Entry Chanon:1978:GIC from sigcse1970.bib

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BibTeX entry

@Article{Chanon:1978:GIC,
  author =       "R. N. Chanon",
  title =        "A graduate immigration course in computer science",
  journal =      j-SIGCSE,
  volume =       "10",
  number =       "1",
  pages =        "32--32",
  month =        feb,
  year =         "1978",
  CODEN =        "SIGSD3",
  DOI =          "https://doi.org/10.1145/990654.990567",
  ISSN =         "0097-8418 (print), 2331-3927 (electronic)",
  ISSN-L =       "0097-8418",
  bibdate =      "Sun Nov 18 07:38:04 MST 2012",
  bibsource =    "http://portal.acm.org/;
                 http://www.math.utah.edu/pub/tex/bib/sigcse1970.bib",
  note =         "Papers of the SIGCSE\slash CSA Technical Symposium on
                 Computer Science Education.",
  abstract =     "As part of a RIAS grant from the NSF, a pilot course
                 intended for incoming graduate students in computer
                 science was offered during the fall of 1977. This
                 course was intended to acquaint new graduate students
                 with (1) the CS graduate curriculum and degree
                 requirements; (2) the areas of CS faculty interest,
                 research, and support; (3) current areas of research in
                 CS; and (4) the computing facilities available through
                 the UT Computation Center and the department's software
                 laboratory. These goals were realized through regular
                 lectures, several programming problems and ten lectures
                 from different faculty members about their research
                 interests and current work. Specific assignments for
                 each student were determined on the basis of their
                 backgrounds and interests. (A questionnaire answered
                 during the first lecture helped to determine these.) An
                 important part of the course involved about twelve
                 lectures citing widely applicable topics from the first
                 three volumes of {$<$ u$>$The} Art of Computer
                 {Programming$<$}/{u$>$}, by D. E. Knuth. This course is
                 believed to be a valuable asset to the department's
                 curriculum because of the diverse nature of its
                 faculty, computing facilities, and graduate students.",
  acknowledgement = ack-nhfb,
  fjournal =     "SIGCSE Bulletin (ACM Special Interest Group on
                 Computer Science Education)",
  journal-URL =  "http://portal.acm.org/browse_dl.cfm?idx=J688",
}

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