Entry Fairley:1974:GCB from sigcse1970.bib

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BibTeX entry

@Article{Fairley:1974:GCB,
  author =       "Richard E. Fairley",
  title =        "A graduate curriculum in {Business-Oriented
                 Computing}",
  journal =      j-SIGCSE,
  volume =       "6",
  number =       "1",
  pages =        "37--39",
  month =        feb,
  year =         "1974",
  CODEN =        "SIGSD3",
  DOI =          "https://doi.org/10.1145/953057.810436",
  ISSN =         "0097-8418 (print), 2331-3927 (electronic)",
  ISSN-L =       "0097-8418",
  bibdate =      "Sun Nov 18 08:53:47 MST 2012",
  bibsource =    "http://portal.acm.org/;
                 http://www.math.utah.edu/pub/tex/bib/sigcse1970.bib",
  note =         "Proceedings of the 4th SIGCSE symposium on Computer
                 science education.",
  abstract =     "The Department of Computer Science at the University
                 of Colorado has recently developed a graduate
                 curriculum in Business-Oriented Computing. The program
                 was developed in recognition of the increasing demand
                 for individuals who are trained in both business
                 methodology and computer science. The 30 semester hour
                 program is designed to produce masters level computer
                 scientists capable of integrating the needs of the
                 business community with the technology of computer
                 science. Prerequisites for the program include a
                 Bachelor's degree in Business (or the equivalent), ten
                 semester hours of computing, and nine semester hours of
                 upper division mathematics. The prerequisite computing
                 courses are: Introduction to Computer Science for
                 Business Majors (CS 202), a four hour course in COBOL
                 programming; Business Data Processing Methods (CS 312),
                 a three hour course in FORTRAN emphasizing business
                 applications; and Assembly Language and System Software
                 (CS 400). The mathematics courses are typically in the
                 areas of statistics, probability theory, mathematical
                 programming, computability, and linear algebra. At the
                 University of Colorado, the programming and mathematics
                 courses can be taken in the undergraduate Computer
                 Based Information Systems option of the Business School
                 curriculum.",
  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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