Entry Cameron:1979:CSC from sigcse1970.bib

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BibTeX entry

@Article{Cameron:1979:CSC,
  author =       "J. S. Cameron and Z. A. Karian",
  title =        "Computer science curriculua for small colleges",
  journal =      j-SIGCSE,
  volume =       "11",
  number =       "1",
  pages =        "215--219",
  month =        feb,
  year =         "1979",
  CODEN =        "SIGSD3",
  DOI =          "https://doi.org/10.1145/953030.809586",
  ISSN =         "0097-8418 (print), 2331-3927 (electronic)",
  ISSN-L =       "0097-8418",
  bibdate =      "Sun Nov 18 07:38:08 MST 2012",
  bibsource =    "http://portal.acm.org/;
                 http://www.math.utah.edu/pub/tex/bib/sigcse1970.bib",
  note =         "Proceedings of the 10th SIGCSE Symposium on Computer
                 Science Education.",
  abstract =     "Denison University is a small, liberal arts college
                 located in Granville, Ohio. It has a student body of
                 approximately 2000 undergraduates and a faculty of
                 approximately 165. Courses in Computer Science have
                 been offered since 1969, and in 1972 it became possible
                 to award a Bachelor's degree in Mathematical Sciences
                 with a Concentration (minor) in Computer Science. In
                 1975, a full scale Bachelor's program in Computer
                 Science was authorized, and the first degrees were
                 awarded in 1976. The program was designed to satisfy
                 two objectives. First, there are a number of students
                 who are oriented towards management and are interested
                 in the applications of computing in industrial
                 environments. Many of these students either pursue a
                 double major or major in one area and develop a strong
                 background in another field. These students frequently
                 do not need a strong mathematical background, but do
                 need a broad exposure to a variety of applications. The
                 Bachelor of Arts degree program was designed for these
                 students. Our second objective was to construct a
                 program for those students who were interested in
                 computer science as a profession; these students would
                 probably go to graduate school or take technical
                 positions in industry upon graduation. For these
                 students we provided the Bachelor of Science degree,
                 which is a more rigorous program.",
  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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