7 | -- | 0 | Joyce C. Little. Report on three tutorials for SIGCSE Bulletin proceedings |
19 | -- | 37 | John W. Hamblen. Computer manpower in the United States-supply and demand: an update |
38 | -- | 40 | William B. Thompson, Thomas G. Moher, William T. Wood, David W. DeHerder. An instrumental laboratory for systems software development |
41 | -- | 44 | Fred C. Homeyer. An experimental microcomputer course (a case history) |
45 | -- | 52 | R. A. Rink, G. Droucas. A further note on using GPSS to study a student-operating system |
53 | -- | 54 | Raymond D. Gumb. Language extensibility in extended Fortran: data types and pointer variables |
55 | -- | 56 | Warren T. Jones, Donald L. Kalmey. The utility of computer simulation as instructional devices for operating systems courses |
57 | -- | 62 | Pertti Järvinen. Notes on educational planning: a systems approach |
63 | -- | 69 | Raymond Pavlak Jr., Adir Pridor. Assembler in a Fortran environment with a new debugging aid |
70 | -- | 76 | Brian E. Carpenter, P. C. Jenkins, L. W. Pearson, L. K. Thomas. MUSIC: a simulated computer for teaching purposes |
77 | -- | 78 | Nelson T. Dinerstein. A remedial software design course |
79 | -- | 84 | Donald H. Bell, Joseph W. Panko. Educational opportunities for the deaf in data processing at Rochester Institute of Technology |
85 | -- | 87 | Larry E. Druffel, Vance A. Mall, Robert N. Hawley, Kenneth L. Krause, Marion A. Pumfrey. Another way to present computer programming |
88 | -- | 90 | Joyce M. Bash. The writing of an assembler in the programming language course |