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DECEMBER 1975 1 


TITLES 


This is the annual index for DATA PROCESSING DIGEST for the year 1975, Vol. 21, Nos. 
1-12. The index is divided into three sections: the list of titles as they appeared in the Digest, a 
list of the authors, and a subject index. All articles are cited by one or more subject words. The 
numbers following the alphabetical entries indicate issue and pages in which the item is found. 
The number preceding the hyphen is the issue; the numbers following the hyphen are the pages. 


Index 


VOLUME 21, 1975 


Title 


ABA Payments System Policy Conference, 
8-19 

Access, 9-17 

Accounting and EDP, 5-11 

Accounting and EDP: the Case Against 
Accounting Computers (and for 
Intelligent Terminals), 7-4 

Addressograph Multigraph Announces 
a New Card Security Feature, 12-8 

Adversary Analysis: Computerized Testing 
of Computers, 11-1 

AEDS Annual Students Programming 
Contest, 11-37 

Aetna’s Consolidated System Handles 
Total Policy Processing Job, 6-15 

An AFIPS System Review Manual On 
Security, 2-21 

Ahead: Coordinative Management, 4-8 

AICPA Time Sharing Tax Catalog 
Available, 10-6 

All About CRT Terminals, 2-14 

Amplification Factor Of an Information 
Retrieval System, 12-28 

Amtrak, 4-15 

An Analysis of Measurement Procedures 
for Computer Systems, 9-2 

Analysis of the Market for Applications 
Software in an In-House Time Sharing 
Environment, 9-9 

Another Look at Computer Room 
Security, 11-22 

ANS COBOL Syntactical Handbook, 3-27 

APL An Interactive Approach, 5-25 

Application Of Variance Reduction To 
Large Scale Simulation Problems, 5-22 

Are Programs Patentable When Combined 
with General Purpose Computers? 7-11 

Are We Doing Things Right? 8-16 

Are We Overrating the Privacy Issue? 8-21 

Are Your EDP Costs Reasonable? 9-14 

Arkansas Bank Puts Profit In Computer 
Plan, 6-18 

As Timesharing Goes By, 7-2 

The Association of Time-Sharing Users, 
12-25 

At Last, Major Roles for Minicomputers, 
7-1 

Attack Inefficient Electronic Data 
Processing Applications and the 
Underlying Problems That Spawn Their 
Inefficiency, 11-27 

Audio Visual Educational Package on 
Computers for the User, 9-20 

Audit and Control for EDP, 3-8 

Audit and Control of Computer Systems, 
7-16 

Audit Aspects of Utility Programs, 12-18 

Audit Control Over Computer- Assisted 
Audit Techniques, 12-20 

Audit Review of Program Code — I, 12-19 

Audit Review of Program Code — II, 
12-20 

Auditability, 9-2 

Auditing Around Or Through the 
Computer, 2-21 


The Auditor's Use of System 
Documentation, 8-8 

Auerbach Computer Technology Reports, 
2-22 

Auerbach Data Processing Management, 
3-28 

Auerbach Reports, 3-28 

Automated Pupil Transportation, 5-21 

Automating and Marketing Coupon 
Paying Services, 1-4 

Automation and Unemployment: A Look 
at the Basic Assumptions In the 
Computer Field, 12-25 


Backing into an Information System, 12-21 

Bank Group Improves Service, 
Consolidates EDP with Front Ends, 
11-14 

Bar Codes for Data Entry, 7-7 

Basic Steps In Developing Simulation 
Models, 6-22 

Behavioral, Organizational Aspects of 
Computers, Allied Technology, 11-30 

The Benefits of Standard Practices, 10-13 

Better Deal from Special or General 
Purpose Devices? 11-11 

Beyond 1984: A Technology Forecast, 4-3 

Beyond Structured Programming, 12-23 

Bibliography of 1974 Performance 
Literature, 7-13 

A Blueprint for Documentation Standards, 
3-11 

Book Review Replies, 11-36 

Books Useful In Teaching Business 
Applications Of the Computer, Eighth 
Edition, 4-23 

BOTTOMLINE, 12-27 

Bowling Over the Minis, 7-14 

A Branch-and-Branch Algorithm for 
Pagination, 8-20 

A Breakthrough, 12-17 

A Briefing on the Impact of Privacy 
Legislation, 11-29 

Broad-Scale Computerization — Now, 
3-15 

Building EDP Success By Standing On 
Shoulders, 4-9 

Building Human Factors into Computer 
Applications: The Computer Pro- 
fessional Must Overcome a ‘Jackass 
Fallacy’! 11-8 

Burning Down the Data Center, 12-1 

Bus Routing In a Multi-School System, 
5-20 

Business Data Processing, 5-23 

BYTE, 12-28 


C&S On-Line Communications Net Speeds 
Service Throughout Georgia, 11-15 

Cal Fed Takes EFTS Shortcut ; Consultant 
Designs POS System, 10-21 

California Company Happy It 
Rediscovered the Keypunch, 1-8 

Calspan Shows Print Identifier, 12-10 

Can High-Payoff Applications Be 
Identified? 11-28 


Can Organizational Development Help 
Data Processing? 12-4 

A Capsule View Of Data Security For the 
Data Processing Manager, 5-11 

Care and Handling Of Magnetic Tape, 
12-17 

A Case Against Large-Scale Computers, 
10-31 

A Case for Distributed Processing, 10-9 

The Case for European Co-operation in 
Standards, 10-29 

The Case for Remote Job Entry, 3-3 

The Case for the Flexible Disc, 9-10 

Challenging Problems, 1-9 

Changes in Computer Services, 10-29 

The Changing DP Organization, 4-3 

Changing Technology Beginning to Have 
Profound Impact on Data 
Communications Terminals, 8-5 

Characters In a Dialogue, 1-14 

Chief Executives, Local Government, and 
Computers, 12-6 

Choosing Proper Computer Output 
Systems, 3-4 

CIF Aids Automation of Returned Check 
Function, 8-10 

Clever Data System Keeps Manager 
Ahead of Game, 2-4 

Cobol Logic and Programming, Third 
Edition, 5-26 

COM: Programmers’ Lib, 9-16 

The Coming Shape Of IBM, 3-24 

Commentary, 10-14; 11-29; 12-12 

Comparing Threaded and Inverted List 
Structures, 3-11 

Comparison Guide To Carrier Tariffs and 
Extent Of Service, 3-23 

A Comparison of Software and Hardware 
Monitors, 1-10 

Computer-Aided Design Of Urban Transit 
Systems, 2-11 

The Computer and the Individual, 11-30 

Computer Assisted Audit System, 5-8 

Computer Assisted Fraud — Who Gets 
the Axe? 6-2 

Computer Audit Software, 11-27 

Computer-Based Aid To Managing 
Patients With Chronic Illness, 4-19 

A Computer-Based Corporate Planning 
Model, 2-21 

A Computer Based Educationally Oriented 
Investment Screening System, 8-12 

Computer-Based Requirements Planning, 
2-4 

Computer Considerations For the Trust 
Department, 1-4 

Computer Control of Electric- Power 
Systems, 2-10 

Computer Data Base Systems: Who Needs 
Them? 9-12 

Computer Force for Change In Spain, 1-8 

Computer Generated Documentation, 
8-14 

Computer Handles Routine Credit 
Reviews, 11-16 





2 DATA PROCESSING DIGEST 


Computer Helps Southern Stretch M/W 
Dollars, 5-9 

Computer Identification Of Constrained 
Handprinted Characters With a High 
Recognition Rate, 2-11 

The Computer In Management 
Information and Control Systems, 3-25 

The Computer Industry's Social 
Responsibilities — Another Approach, 
8-21 

The Computer Industry's Social 
Responsibility: A Self-Appraisal, 6-20 

Computer Is Stores’ Sleuth, 1-7 

Computer Management of a Will 
Inventory, 2-3 

A Computer Model Approach to 
Budgeting, 8-18 

Compute: Monitoring Of Preventive 
Maintenance, 5-7 

Computer Networks Are Here, 7-2 

Computer Networks: Making the Decision 
To Join One, 2-17 

Computer Performance Appraisal — a 
Top Priority For Top Management, 
3-18 

Computer Program Exchange System, 
11-7 

Computer Program Puts Ads In Paper In 
Minutes, 6-12 

Computer Programmer Job Analysis/ 
Reference Text, 2-21 

The Computer Room Library, A 
Professional Records Center, 10-17 

Computer Services Statistical Reference 
Book, 12-25 

A Computer Simulation Model of Library 
Operations, 8-18 

Computer Software and Copyright, 7-10 

Computer System Security, 1-12 

Computer Systems Batch Benefits, 3-14 

Computer Systems Can Help To Solve 
the Production Equation, 3-12 

Computer Systems Measurement, 12-5 

Computer Technology and Surveillance, 
11-21 

Computer Terminal for Physically 
Handicapped, 12-10 

Computer Terms For the Deaf, 3-28 

Computer Time-Sharing’s Emerging Role 
In the Life/Health Insurance 
Environment, 12-15 

The Computer Users’ Year Book, 1974, 
5-23 

The Computerised Shop, 3-19 

Computerization Aids Utilization Review, 
11-14 

Computerized Distribution : How Specific 
Companies Work, 12-16 

Computerized Estimating, 3-16 

Computerized I.V. Admixture Services, 
2-5 

Computerized Nurse Scheduling, 12-14 

Computerized Planning Of Annual Rail 
Programs, 2-21 

Computerized Production Control Saves 
$$ for Manufacturer, 8-11 

Computerized Record of Maintenance 
Activities, 2-9 

Computerized System Aids Staffing in 
Strikes, 11-14 

Computerized Voting: Many Happy 
Returns? 2-8 


Computerizing Accounts Receivable, 
10-21 

Computerizing Police Reports in Madison, 
10-22 

Computers, 6-21; 8-22 

Computers and Bureaucratic Reform, 4-23 

Computers & Management for Business, 
8-23 

Computers and Our Society, 2-23 

Computers and Where the Cars Are, 10-20 

Computers At the Racetrack, 2-9 

Computers: First the Maxi, Then the 
Mini, Now It’s the Micro, 3-2 

Computers in Cardiology, 10-31 

Computers in Small Business, 9-18 

Computers In the 1980s, 4-24 

Computers, Quantitative Techniques, 
and the Struggle For the Correct 
Investment Decision, 5-22 

Continental Upgrades Reservations with 
TDM Phone Switch, 10-27 

Control of Super-Zap, 10-13 

Control Over a Hard-Driving Business, 6-8 

Controlling Complex Claims, 9-16 

Corporate Simulation Models: A Survey, 
9-19 

Cost Implications of Privacy Protection in 
Databank Systems, 11-20 

Cost Justifying Performance Evaluation 
Projects, 10-16 

Cost/Vendor Evaluation System, 10-12 

The Costs of Privacy, 12-20 

Court Warns: Don’t Hide Your Mistakes 
Behind the Computer, 6-5 

CPU Architecture: Mainframes React To 
Datacomm Growth, 2-16 

Creative Computing, 5-23 

Cryptography and Data Communications, 
9-9 


Current Status Of Ambulatory Health 
Care Computer Applications, 4-18 
Cutting Time-Sharing Costs, 10-11 


Data Acquisition and Logging, 11-18 

A Data Bank for Enhanced Safety, 10-23 

Data Banks, A Cause For Concern, 9-21 

A Data Base for Nonprogrammers, 7-11 

Data Base Management, 9-12 

Data Base Management System, 10-5 

Data Base Management Systems, 8-1 

Data Base Management Systems: A 
Critical and Comparative Analysis, 8-4 

Data Base Management Systems For Trust 
Department, 1-5 

Data Base Management Systems: User 
Experience In the USA, 5-4 

Data Base Systems: A Practical Reference, 
8-4 

Data Bases and the Lawyer: Challenge 
and Enigma, 10-32 

Data Center Security, 11-22 

Data Communications: a Systems 
Mentality Is Needed, 7-3 

Data Independence In Data Base Systems, 
6-6 

Data Processing Contracts and the Law, 
1-17 

DATA PROCESSING EDUCATION, 
12-27 

Data Processing Equipment: Lease, Rent 
Or Buy? 9-14 

Data Processing System Pays Off, 8-12 


Data Processing Systems: Their 
Performance, Evaluation, 
Measurement, and Improvement, 3-27 

The Data Recorder, 1-21 ° 

Data Security In an On-Line Computer 
Environment, 1-11 

Data Terminals Take on More of the 
Action. . ., 12-7 

The Database Defined, 3-21 

A Database Management System In 
Practice, 3-20 

Datacomm Network Keeps Constant Vigil 
at World Trade Center, 7-6 

Datacomm Brings Big-City Medical 
Expertise To Remote, Rural Areas, 4-15 

DATAMANAGER -— A Freestanding 
Data Dictionary System, 10-6 

Decision Criteria for Selecting a Business 
Computer System, 7-12 

A Dedicated-User 1.344 Megabit Satellite 
Data Transmission Network, 11-10 

Defining Requirements for EDP Systems, 
10-9 

The Demise of Generalized Audit Software 
Packages, 3-5 

Designing For Generality, 3-10 

Designing For Minimum Downtime, 2-2 

Developing a Patient Information System, 
2-5 

Developments in Programmable 
Automation, 11-31 

The Difficulties of Evaluating Modern 
Computers, 8-16 

Digital Processes, 11-29 

Digital Terminal for Patrolmen Tested 
in DC, 9-24 

Dillard's Sets On-Line Pace from Ordering 
To Receiving and Selling, 10-26 

Direct Mail Publisher Offers Computerized 
Order System to Others, 11-17 

Disc Cartridge Cleaning, 9-5 

Disc Packs and Disc Cartridges . . . the 
History and the Future, 5-19 

Dispelling the Mystique, 1-12; 4-20; 8-17; 
12-19 

Display Terminals Beat Out Audio 
Response & TTY’s for Bank’s Net, 11-15 

Distributed Computing: A Growing 
Concept, 10-19 

Distributed Data Processing, 11-12 

Distributed Minis Score Over One Large 
System At Equitable, 6-14 

Do Independents Offer More Than 
Mainframers? 12-12 

Documentation: The Beginning of the 
End, 9-8 

Dominion Takes a Different Approach to 
Label Printing, 11-16 

DP Career Paths, 4-22 

DP People — Who Do They Think They 
Are? 10-30 

DP Salary Survey, 4-22 


EAL Cuts Datacomm Overhead By 
Servicing Other Firms’ DP Needs, 12-16 

Economics of Informatics, 8-17 

The Economics of New Information 
Networks, 11-12 

EDP — A 20-Year Ripoff, 2-19 

EDP Rail Car Control Today — Total 
Traffic Systems Tomorrow, 8-10 





EDP Salary Increases Outpaces Last Year's 
Rate Of Inflation, 5-17 

EDP Simulation Brings Two-Fold 
Advantages, 12-16 

The EDP Technician, the Accountant, 
and Internal Control, 11-26 

EDP: Who Will Assess Its Value? 5-16 

Education For DP Users, 5-17 

EFT and the Future of Banking, 12-13 

EFTS: A Look At the Future, 4-2 

EFTS: Blessing or Curse? 11-21 

EFTS — INDUSTRY REPORT, 12-27 

EFTS: What Do Retailers Want? 
Sophisticated POS — At a Low Price, 
6-10 

Eighth Annual Guide to Audio/Visual 
Instruction for Data Processing, 8-21 

The ‘Else’ Must Go, Too, 7-8 

Embezzler’s Guide to the Computer, 9-13 

The Emerging Microcomputer, 3-4 

Emulator Architecture, 10-11 

Encyclopedia of Computer Science and 
Technology, 8-25 

The End of an Era? 1-16 

Equity Funding — Implications For 
Auditing and Data Processing, 1-13 

Essentials Of Information Processing, 2-24 

Estimates and Bounds on Computational 
Effort in the Accelerated Bound-and- 
Scan Algorithm, 11-34 

European EDP Market Dimensions, 8-20 

Evaluating CRT’s on Cost and 
Performance, 10-5 

Evaluating Modems, 1-1 

Evaluating Performance In Computer 
Auditing, 5-14 

Evaluating Prospective Employees, 10-18 

Evaluation of the Manitoba Schools 
Computer Network, 8-22 

An Executive's Guide To Computer-Based 
Planning, 3-17 

An Exercise in Resource Allocation, 1-9 


Facilities Management: An EDP 
Alternative, 4-20 

Facilities Planning, 2-23 

Fair Credit Billing Act : A Compliance 
Checklist, 12-26 

Faster Billing With Computer Boosts 
Cash Flow, 2-3 

Financial Data Banks: A Guide For the 
Perplexed, 4-23 

Finding and Keeping an EDP Manager, 
12-5 

Finding Cash For Communications, 5-4 

The First “No Software” Computer: The 
ADAM System of John Peers & 
Company, Inc. — Part 2: The Trouble 
with Computers. . . Is People, 11-2 

Five Practical Guidelines for Successful 
Completion of Simulation Models, 11-32 

Five-Year Plan Puts 68 Branches On-Line 
to Bank Applications, 11-15 

Flexible Reliable Packages Goal Of 
Datacomm Users, 2-12 

Floppy Disk Drives and Systems, 10-2 

Floppy Disks Spin Into Systems, 4-13 

For EDP Operations, Tough New 
Strategies, 4-19 

Forecasting What Your Business System 
Will Do, 12-29 

Forgotten Management System, 5-3 


Fortran IV, Revised Edition, 5-25 

The Four Phases of EDP Auditing, 8-8 

Freedom's Edge: The Computer Threat 
To Society, 1-16 

The Frictional Interface Between 
Computers and Society, 4-22 

From a Mod 6 to a Mod 8 to Two/32s, 
10-22 

Fundamental Nature of Errors — Data 
Capture; and the Use of a Data 
Dictionary, 9-6 

The Future For Electronic Business 
Systems, 12-26 

The Future of Computing: Is the Sky the 
Limit? 11-31 

The Future of Personal Data Bases, 11-30 


Getting More From Your Computer, 2-16 

Getting More Out of EDP, 12-16 

Getting Ready for a Larger Role in Data 
Processing, 10-5 

Getting Significant Results, 9-15 

GM's Parts Ordering System, 2-6 

A Graduate Course in Database 
Management, 9-20 

A Guide To Computer- Assisted Methods 
For Distribution Systems Planning, 6-21 

A Guide To Computer Control & Audit 
Guidelines, 4-20 

Guide To Reference Sources in the 
Computer Sciences, 12-27 


Handbook of APL Programming, 8-24 

Have the Keyboard-To-Disc 
Manufacturers Lived Up To Their 
Promises? 2-15 

HELP — A Computer System For Medical 
Decision Making, 4-19 

Here Comes the Microprocessor, 12-10 

Hierarchical Approach to Computer 
System Integrity, 8-7 

A Hierarchical Network, 5-6 

Hospital Accounting on a Mod 6, 10-23 

Hospital-Wide Info System Aids Admin, 
Doctors and Nurses, 4-16 

Hospitals Meet Health Care Goals With 
Minis and DP Service Net, 12-15 

How a Small Bank Made On-Line Banking 
a Reality, 1-3 

How CNR Will Operate With TRACS, 2-5 

How Do You Choose a Data Base 
Management System? Carefully! 4-8 

How Does Your Data Security Measure 
Up? 5-13 

How GM's New Warehouse Serves 1500 
Customers On a 1-Day Basis, 3-16 

How Good Is Your EDP? 12-5 

How Jerrold Electronics Controls Projects 
By Computer, 1-4 

How Much a Second for CPU? 3-14 

How to Check on Data Operations, 10-12 

How to Cost and Charge for DP Services, 
11-23 

How To Evaluate Service Offerings Of 
Varied Carriers, 3-22 

How To Find the Right Software Package, 
1-13 

How to Harness Information Resources: 
a Systems Approach, 7-17 

How To Identify Computer Vulnerability, 
1-10 

How To Install a Database System, 3-22 


TITLES 


DECEMBER 1975 3 


How to Keep Pace with Minicomputer 
Innovations, 10-4 

How to Make Sure Your EDP Auditors Are 
Doing Their Job, 9-1 

How to Make Your Computer More 
Productive, 9-3 

How To Pick the Top Training Methods, 
3-13 

How to Process Inventory and Accounting 
Jobs with 16K, 8-12 

How to Program Computers in COBOL, 
7-19 

How To Protect Yourself When 
Contracting For Computer Systems, 6-5 

How To Select Source and Key Entry 
Systems, 10-3 

How Will Computers Run Retailing in 
1985? 4-2 

HRA On-Line Time and Attendance 
System, 10-23 

Hudson Authorizes Credit Systemwide Via 
Mini-Based Net, 1-6 

A Hypercube Queuing Model for Facility 
Location and Redistricting in Urban 
Emergency Services, 7-15 


IBM, CML Satellite and the Clayton Act, 
The FCC’s Retreat from Competition in 
the Telecx ications Industry, 9-22 

IBM Unifies Structure For Teleprocessing, 
4-14 

IBM’s System/32 Exposes Another 
Strata Of Users to Computers, 4-13 

Identifying Groups Of Computer Users 
Through Factor Analysis, 5-17 

Impact of the Minicomputer on the 
Curriculum, 7-14 

Implementing An On-Line System Can Be 
Painful, 12-22 

Implementing Computer Simulation of 
Traffic Signal Systems, 11-33 

Improving a Track Record, 1-7 

Improving the System Building Process, 
2-15 

“In-Circuit” Technique Promises to 
Simplify Use of Micro Computers, 9-9 

In Search of the Fair Measure, 6-9 

“Independence” Set Sights On Computer 
Hardware Maintenance, 2-14 

Industrial Applications Growing as 
Computer Use Goes Worldwide, 7-14 

Information Mapping, 4-7 

Information Needed, Computer To the 
Rescue, 3-17 

Information Processing, 3-25 

Information Processing 74, 5-23 

Information Technology in Local 
Government, 11-35 

An Inhouse Terminal System, 10-24 

Input/Output, 8-8 

Inside Microprocessors, 4-12 

Installing a DBMS: Management Report, 
8-3 

Insurance Upgrade, 10-22 

Insuring Computers, 12-3 

Intelligent Terminals and Distributed 
Processing, 5-1 

Interactive Computing in Basic, 5-24 

An Interactive Procedure for the School 
Boundary Problem with Declining 
Enrollment, 8-19; 11-35 








a DATA PROCESSING DIGEST 


Intergovernmental Applications of 
Electronic Data Processing, 8-17 

Internal Control Evaluation: How the 
Computer Can Help, 10-14 

Internal Control Is Not Optional, 11-25 

Investment Planning For the Development 
Of a National Resource — Linear 
Programming Based Approaches, 5-21 

IRS Audits of EDP Systems, 7-11 

Is It Time for Users to Go On-Line? 10-19 

Is “Structured Programming” Any 
Longer the Right Term? 1-15 

Is the Programming Revolution Here? 7-9 

Is Your DP Center in Needless Danger? 
12-21 

Isochronous Communications — A Data 
Transmission Bridge, 11-10 

Issues in Computer Performance 
Evaluation: Some Consensus, Some 
Divergence, 10-14 

It Pays To Evaluate Your Systems 
Department, 5-15 

It's Time To End the Confusion and Get 
Standards On the Track, 5-19 


A JECC Report: The State Of Japan's 
Information Service Industry, 12-28 
JUDITH, a Computer Program to Advise 

Lawyers in Reasoning a Case, 10-7 


Keyboard Simulator Cuts Training Costs, 
11-5 

Keynoter Stresses Distributed Route to 
Data Networks, 8-5 

Kiviat Graphs — Conversion and Figures 
of Merit, 4-5 

Know Your Common Carriers, 3-22 

Korvette Automates Sales Checkout To 
Aid Management Decisions, 1-5 


Lack Of Education and Incentives In the 
EDP Industry, 5-17 

Language Simplifies Workload 
Documentation, 11-7 

A Large Computer System for On-Line 
Data Acquisition and Analysis of Data 
from Analytical Instruments, 9-15 

Large Scale Off-Track Betting Systems, 
2-9 

Law Enforcement Communications Span 
the Nation With NLETS, 6-12 

Leasing: A Phenomenon That Drains 
the Balance Sheets of All But IBM, 
10-28 

Lee Way Goes On-Line to Boost Efficiency 
of Freight Shipping, 10-27 

Lever Bros. Net Links Distribution, Sales 
& Manufacturing Sites, 10-25 

LEXIS: A Progress Report, 6-4 

LITE Newsletter, 2-22 

A Local Network, 5-7 

Long Range Planning for Teleprocessing, 
5-3 

A Look at Leasing, 7-12 


Magnetic-Stripe Credit Cards: Big 
Business In the Offing, 3-18 

The Maintenance Man Cometh, 6-18 

The Making of a Computer Auditor, 10-17 

Making Sense of Minicomputer Prices, 
2-14 


Making the Most of Distributed Data 
Processing, 11-16 

Making the Move to Structured 
Programming, 9-5 

Man-Machine Synthesis of Disaster- 
Resistarit Operations, 11-34 

Man-Oriented Aspects of Computer 
Aided Design, 11-30 

Management In the Computer Business, 
2-1 

The Management Information System is 
Going to Pieces, 10-18 

Management Information Systems, 8-21 

Management of Information Technology, 
7-18 

Management Roles in Computer 
Acquisition, 11-28 

Management's Role In Long Range 
Computer Planning, 5-16 

Managing Change, 9-4 

Managing Computer Performance with 
Control Limits, 9-2 

Managing Data Costs: Dealing With 
New Priorities, 12-18 

Managing the Data Center, 1-9 

Managing the Transition to Structured 
Programming, 7-9 

Manufacturer Goes Online with CRT’s 
to Move Orders Faster, 7-5 

Manufacturing By Priority, 6-8 

Manufacturing Management Systems: 
New Challenges and Profit 
Opportunities, 12-30 

Marian the Librarian Never Had It So 
Good, 10-16 

Marketing Executives Want More Help 
From the Computer, 6-11 

A Mathematical Approach to Large Scale 
Personnel Assignment, 8-20 

May Develops, Installs Its Own 
Interactive POS Terminal System, 1-6 

Measuring Response Time of Interactive 
Terminals, 10-10 

Mervyn’s Point-of-Sale Network, 12-15 

MICA At Sherman School (An Application 
of Computer Management Instruction), 
6-16 

MICROCOMPUTER DIGEST, 5-20 

Microcomputer Programming, 4-11 

Microcomputer Software Makes Its Debut, 
2-13 

Microeconomics and the Market for 
Computer Services, 10-15 

Microfilm and the Law, 6-4 

Microfilm Information Systems (MIS), A 
Data Base Alternative, 11-3 

Microprocessor and Microcomputer 
Survey, 3-1 

Microprocessors: A Few Picoacres of 
Silicon Rule the Future of Digital 
Control, 6-7 

Microprocessors: The Inevitable 
Technology, 4-13 

Microprogramming and Systems 
Architecture, 8-14 

Mini-Based Networks: Antidote To 
Spiraling Cost Of Health Care, 5-7 

Mini Handling For Maxi Working, 6-17 

Mini Update, 3-3 

Minicomputer Compatible Peripherals, 
3-4 


Minicomputer Does Private School's 
Accounting, 9-16 

Minicomputer Forum Conference 
Proceedings 1975, 8-15 

Minicomputer Group Set, 11-29 

Mini-Computers — A Big Part of the 
Future, 4-12 

Minicomputers! A Maturing Information 
Resource, 12-9 

Minicomputers in Hospital Use, 11-13 

Minis Move In a Rugged World, 6-7 

Mirads: A Generalized Data Management 
System, 4-10 

MIS Implications for Top Management, 
2-20 

MIS Necessity, 9-17 

Mock Trial Admissibility of Computerized 
Business Records, 8-21 

The Modern Bank Auditor in an EDP 
Environment, 7-13 

Modern Concepts of Internal Auditing, 
3-28 

Modern Logistics In 12 Months, 6-8 

Modern Programming: A Definition, 1-15 

Modes of EDP for the Small Business, 
10-30 

Monitors and Merriment, 11-24 

MoPac Control System Speeds Inventory 
and Movement, 3-14 

More About NACIS, 6-10 

Moving from the 370 to the 360, 12-3 

Multiple Minis for Information 
Management, 11-13 

The Mythical Man-Month, 3-6 


NACIS to Offer Account Monitor Service, 
12-18 

The National Center for Automated 
Information Retrieval and Its Role in 
Electronic Legal Research, 6-4 

National Distributor Uses Time Share Net 
For Centralized Billing, 

Needed: Business-Oriented Systems 
Analysts, 11-8 

Needed: Flexible CRT Systems, 7-4 

Negotiating a Programming Contract, 
8-16 

Neither Snow, Nor Rain, Nor Logic. . ., 
7-18 

Network Structures in an Evolving 
Operational Environment, 12-23 

New Autotransaction Market . . . Agent- 
Company Terminal Networks Planned 
for Insurance Industry, 12-15 

New Computer System Simplify Publishers 
Accounting, 2-7 

A New Concept in Impact Printing, 11-6 

New Format For Flowcharts, 4-11 

The New York Times Information Bank, 
5-10 

Nine Alternatives To a New Computer, 3-9 

1975 Canadian Salary Survey, 8-20 

1975 DP Budgets, 5-18 

1975 Salary Survey, 8-20 

Now It Can Be Told, 8-7 


Observers Put NIS Benefits & Advances 
Into Perspective, 4-14 

On and On with On-Line, 9-7 

On and On with On-Line: Part 2, 11-7 

Online At the Factory, 6-9 





On-Line CRT’s Speed Claims Processing, 
Cut Payment Time by 75%, 6-14 

On Scheduling with Ready Times and 
Due Dates to Minimize Maximum 
Lateness, 11-34 

On the Feasibility of Software 
Certification, 10-7 

Open Dialogue, 6-7 

Operating System Design with Security As 
an Objective, 9-13 

Operating System Principles, 12-31 

An Operational Audit Of EDP and a 
Review Of Internal Controls, 6-19 

Operations Research For Immediate 
Application: A Quick and Dirty 
Manual, 12-32 

Operations Research In the Insurance 
Industry: I. A Survey of Applications, 
1-16 

Opportunities For Data Base 
Reorganization, 5-4 

Optimizing Program Placement in Virtual 
Systems, 3-10 

Optimizing the Storage of Alphanumeric 
Data, 8-13 

Options Traders Meet Info Needs with 
Minis and Clustered CRT’s, 11-17 

Organized Program Maintenance, 4-3 

Organizing the Data Processing Function, 
2-18 

“Other Factors” in DBMS Selection and 
Implementation, 11-9 


Packaged Software Reports, 11-6 

Parallel Strategy For MIS, 5-3 

Paralled Simulation — A Technique for 
Effective Verification of Computer 
Programs, 7-10 

The Patient Medical Record As a 
Database, 3-20 

Patient Record System Coordinates Efforts 
Of Health Care Team, 4-17 

People: Hidden Asset Or Liability? 6-18 

People-Oriented Computer Systems, 7-20 

The People Side of Top-Down, 9-6 

Performance Evaluation for the Small 
User, 7-13 

Personal Computers, 7-3 

Personal Privacy Versus The Corporate 
Computer, 5-13 

Personnel Management Information 
Systems For State and Local 
Governments, 6-15 

The PFORT Verifier, 4-10 

The Place of Computer Graphics in the 
Business Community, 11-5 

The Place Of Computers In Medicine, 
4-17 

Planning for the Fourth Generation, 4-1 

Planning the Route System For Urban 
Buses, 5-20 

Plastic Money, Anyone? 6-20 

Plug-Compatibility For Minis: Crime or 
Disease? 2-14 

Pointers In Data Base Management, 4-11 

Police Department's Computer Security 
Kept Under Surveillance, 8-11 

POS Advantages May Not Include 
Cost-Effectiveness, 2-13 

P.O.S.: In the Independent Small Store, 
8-12 

POS/The Store Nervous System, 6-10 


The Price We Pay For Success, 6-13 

Pricing EDP Resources, 2-3 

Printing Plant Data Collection System, 
6-13 

“Prior Art” Search Essential To Maintain 
Validity Of Computer Patent, 6-5 

The Privacy Act of 1974, 11-19 

Privacy and Security In Computer Systems, 
6-1 

The Privacy Debate, 11-19 

The Privacy Issue, 7-15 

Problems For Computer Solution, 4-24 

The Problems Of Computer Security, 5-12 

Proceedings Of a Symposium On Very 
High Languages, 1-18 

Proceedings of Software 74, 6-5 

Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM/ 
SIGOPS Interprocess Communications 
Workshop, 10-20 

Proceedings of the International 
Conference on Reliable Software, 9-9 

Proceedings Of the Twelfth Annual 
Computer Personnel Research 
Conference, 5-23 

Productivity at Playtex, 9-5 

Productivity Reaches the Executive Suite, 
10-6 

Profit Control On a Daily Basis, 2-10 

Program Design — an Objective Method, 
10-8 

Program Management: A Structured 
Approach to Systems Development, 8-13 

Program Style, Design, Efficiency, 
Debugging and Testing, 3-26 

Programmable Remote Terminals 
Distribute Computer Power, 12-23 

Programmers Are Paid To Program: 
Enter Program Librarian, 3-7 

The Programming Development Process, 
Part I: The Individual Programmer, 
8-23 

Programming In Book Format, 1-15 

Programming Proverbs, 8-24 

Programming Proverbs for Fortran 
Programmings, 8-24 

Programming Time vs Running Time, 3-9 

Progress in Laser Graphics, 12-9 

Progress Toward International Data 
Networks, 3-24 

Project Search Incorporates, 2-24 

Protection of Information in Computer 
Systems, 12-13 

Protection Possible With Distributed 
Nets, 4-9 

Psychology and Program Design, 7-7 

Putting a Price On EDP Services, 5-15 

Putting the Computer To Work In 
Marketing Management, 3-16 


RBT Choice Rests on Price/ Performance 
and Data Throughput, 8-6 

Read All About It, 11-24 

A Real-Time Stereoscopic Small- 
Computer Graphics Display System, 
11-6 

A Real-Time System Design Methodology, 
11-6 

Rebuttal To “Equity Funding 
Implications,” 1-13 

Recent Developments in Machine- 
Independent Job Control Languages, 
12-12 


TITLES 


DECEMBER 1975 5 


Redactron Hypes Office Autotransaction 
as Typewriters Hit Terminal 
Proportions, 7-6 

Refuting the “Super-Salesman” Approach 
to Management, 5-27 

Reliable EDP Application Design, 12-31 

Requirements For Computerized Patient 
Monitoring Systems, 4-17 

The Responsibilities of the Simulation 
Project Manager, 8-19 

Restoring Systems Tarnished Charisma, 
1-10 

Retail EFTS Benefits Await Banks, 3-18 

Retail Inventory Shrinkage — Controllable 
Through EDP? 9-15 

Retail Service Gives POS Benefits to Users 
Without In-House CPU, 12-16 

Retailers Look Beyond POS To Meet Info 
Needs, 4-15 

Reuters Blends CATV & Computer Skills 
In News Retrieval System, 6-12 

A Ring Network, 5-6 

Rise and Fall of FEDNET, 12-22 

The Role of the Systems House, 11-9 

RPG for IBM Systems/360, 370, and 
System 3, 7-16 

RPG: with Business and Accounting 
Applications, 7-16 


SAFARI Revisited, 2-3 

Sales Prospecting via the Computer, 8-11 

Scheduling a Data Processing Center, 
11-23 

Science Dynamics: Pioneer In Medical 
Data Services, 3-20 

A School Finance Computer Simulation 
Model, 6-23 

Second Annual Survey of Performance- 
Related Software Packages, 3-6 

Security Problems In Computer 
Communications Systems, 5-10 

Selecting a Data Base System To Handle 
Marine Environmental Data, 5-2 

Service Firm Converts To Packet-Switched 
Net To Handle Growth, 1-3 

Setting Standards Can Be Illegal, 4-22 

Sharp Management Notes Performance, 
11-24 

Should Your Programmers Be Selected 
From Inside Or Outside Your Company? 
4-7 

SIGMETRICS Symposium 74, 6-17 

Simplified Financial Modeling Via Time 
Sharing, 6-22 

Simplifying the ABC’s, 9-11 

Simulation Using GPSS, 1-21 

Size Is No Barrier To EDP Sophistication, 
2-10 

Small Business Computers, 10-2 

Small Business Computers Will Change 
the ADP Landscape, 10-2 

Small Company MIS, 2-20 

Small Computers for Small Business, 11-2 

Small Scale Computing: It’s Like Doing 
Your Laundry, 7-6 

Smart CRT Terminals Serve Hospital’s 
Varied Needs, 4-15 

Smart Front End and Voice Response 
Upgrade Bank Datacomm Net, 1-7 

Smart Terminal Net Keeps Sporting 
Goods Supplier on the Ball, 7-5 





6 DATA PROCESSING DIGEST 


Smart Terminals Help British Airways 
Serve Customers Worldwide, 10-28 

SOFASIM — A Computerized Model of a 
Stock Life Insurance Company, 11-36 

Software Development Centers On 
Managing Network & Data Base, 2-12 

The Software Factory, 7-7 

Software Metrics, The Emerging 
Technology, 9-8 

Software Standards and CAMAC...A 
Realtime Demonstration, 6-5 

Software Techniques For Evaluating 
KarTrak System Performance, 5-9 

Software To Audit Computer Records, 3-5 

The Software Way to Mini Sales, 9-23 

Some Necessary Conditions for the 
Acceptance of Time-Sharing, 8-9; 9-21 

Some Thoughts On Standard Measures of 
Performance, 4-4 

Soon: Public Packet Switched Networks, 
4-18 

Source Data Entry Puts Burlington 
Northern on Track to Savings, 10-26 

Spending For Software and Services, 5-18 

Spotlight: Singer System Ten, 3-4 

Spotlight: User Ratings of Small Businesss 
Computer Systems, 12-10 

A Standardized Solution for Hospital 
Systems, 11-13 

Standards Program Pays Benefits, 12-17 

Stimulating Communications Systems, 1-2 

The Stock Exchange’s New Computer, 1-8 

Store Chain Profits from Tighter Control 
with POS Network, 10-26 

A Straightforward Model for Computer 
Performance Prediction, 11-34 

Strategy For Testing Data Entry, 4-5 

Structured Languages, 10-8 

Structured Programming, 8-13; 12-13 

Structured Symbols, 6-6 

Structured Top-Down Flowcharting, 7-9 

Structuring EDP Projects, 11-9 

Studies in Management Science and 
Systems, 9-20 

Studies in the Simulation of Computers, 
11-32 

Study Sees National EFTS Within Ten 
Years, 4-2 

Successful Data Processing Co-op Is 
Founded In Progressive Management, 
6-13 

Supermarket Trims Bad Check Losses via 
On-Line Authorization, 10-25 

A Survey of Current Work in Micro- 
programming, 11-2 

Survey On the Status Of Computerized 
Legal Research In the United States, 
November 3, 1975, 6-3 

Survival Of the Fittest, 2-22 

The Swedish Way To Data Privacy, 4-21 

SWIFT: Building an International 
Communications Network, 11-15 

Symposium on Structured Programming 
in COBOL — Future and Present, 11-7 

System Development Methodology, 12-30 

System Helps Deter Auto Theft in Calif., 
10-21 

Systems Deliver Payoff at the Tribune, 
11-18 

Systems Film Catalog, 11-8 


Tax Questions Get Answers with On-Line 
System, 8-11 

A Team Approach To Hardware Analysis, 
2-17 

Technical Approaches To Privacy, 4-10 

Technical Writing Weaving the Silk 
Purse, 2-24 

Techniques in Applying Generalized 
Audit Software, 11-26 

The Terminal Takeover, 8-5 

Testing + Refinement: Advanced 
Systems, 2-8 

These Cards Still Pack a Heavy Punch, 
3-12 

Thinking Big About Small Computers, 
10-3 

This Minicomputer System Requires Only 
a Brief Training Period, 9-16 

Time on Their Hands, 10-30 

Time Sharing, 11-28 

Time — to Share or Not to Share, 12-4 

Timesharing Speeds Entertainment 
Ticketing, 12-14 

Top-Down Progtammer Training, 5-17 

Toward a Creative Data Processing 
Environment, 7-12 

Toward Computer Networking — The 
Harvard Experience, 2-18 

Toward the Automated Office, 5-19 

Towards Creative Systems Design, 7-18 

Towards the Design of Secure Systems, 
12-11 

Training the Systems Information 
Specialist and the Information User, 
10-9 

Travels in Computerland, 7-18 

Trout Ficheing in America, 9-10 

Twelfth Annual Computer Programming 
Contest, 1-16 


The “Unbundling” of AT&T: Impli- 
cations and Opportunities, 12-24 

Understanding MIS Failures, 9-18 

Understanding the IBM 360 and 370 
Computers, 7-20 

Unionism In Data Processing, 1-11 

UNISIST Reference Manual for Machine- 
Readable Bibliographic Descriptions, 
9-17 ; 

U.S. Lines Speeds Cargo Handling with 
CRT-Based Network, 10-27 

United States v. IBM — What the Case 
Will Mean For the DP Industry — What 
Users Can Do, 12-24 

Universal Product Code Creates Retail 
Data Management Revolution, 11-10 

Update On Computer Leasing, 3-13 

Upgrading to a Smaller Machine, 7-4 

UPS Prevents Computer Downs, 4-5 

Use of Information Studied in California 
County, 10-21 

A User-Oriented Approach To 
Chargeback, 4-6 

Users Still Plan More Spending — Some 
Inflationary, Some Real, 3-25 

A User's View Of Security, 5-12 

Using a System Generator, 9-7 

Using Time Sharing to Evaluate 
Investment Plan Performance, 8-10 


The Validation of Simulation Models, 
12-30 


Vendors See New Life for the Old 
Workhorse, 8-6 

Verifying Citations by Computer at 
LCP/BW, 10-24 

A Virtual Channel Network, 5-5 

The Vocational Education Component of 
the Rhode Island MIS, 3-19 

Volatile Business World Makes MIS 
Invaluable Decision-Making Tool, 4-21 


Washington Slept Here, 2-8 

Weighing the Merits of Intelligence, 11-3 

Weighing Value of Packages for 
Datacomm Roles, 12-11 

What Data Cost to Process, 8-15 

The “What Ifs” of Branching Succumb to 
Computerization, 9-20 

What Law Enforcement Can Gain from 
Computer Designed Work Schedules, 
11-19 

What the Privacy Act of 1974 Can Mean 
to Computer People, 7-15 

What to Ask Before You Buy, 12-4 

What To Know About Modems, 5-6 

What Will the Fourth Generation be 
Like? 9-23 

What You Need to Know About DBMS, 
Part I, 8-2 

What You Need to Know About DBMS, 
Part II, 8-2 

What's Inside the Software Industry? 9-23 

What's New in Add-On Main Memory, 
8-15 

What's New in Data Entry, 9-11 

When Business Pressures Gang Up, 5-14 

When to Bill for Computer Services, 9-3 

Where Do DP Managers Go From Here? 
4-7 

Where We Stand in Data Terminal 
Technology, 8-4 

Which Departments Use the Computer 
Best? 2-19 

Who Needs a Computer? 2-6 

Why Big Companies Switched To 
Bureaux, 1-12 

Why Haven't Computers Been Used More 
Effectively In Purchasing? 1-3 

Why Information Systems Fail, 7-17 

Why Minis Mean Business, 10-1 

Why Pontiac Put a “Computer” on a 
$0-Ton Stacker Crane, 7-4 

Why Projects Fail, 3-6 

Why the Banks Are Cautious About Policy 
for an EFT System, 9-16 

Will You Outlive Your Computer 
Terminal System? 8-14 

A “Wise” Way To Choose Warehouse 
Sites, 6-22 

Word Processing: a Coming ADP 
Management Concern, 12-8 


Xebec’s Magic Pen, 9-11 





Author 


Abbott, H. Lawrence, 2-6 
Abbott, Robert, 3-7 
Abrahamson, Earl A., 9-15 
Adams, Donald L., 5-11; 12-19 
Adams, Elizabeth B., 7-18 
Allen, Brandt, 9-13 

Allen, K.J., 12-3 

Alusic, Donald, 11-10 
Alward, Sam A., 11-23 
Anderson, Howard, 12-24 
Anderson, R.J., 4-20 
Anderson, Roy H., 2-4 
Andrews, Wright H., 11-19 
Anglin, Leo, 6-16 

Appert, Richard H., 11-27 
Armer, Paul, 11-21 
Armstrong, Ron, 9-8 
Arnold, J.G., 6-9 

Arnst, Catherine, 10-21 
Aron, Joel D., 8-23 
Arrildt, William D., 5-16 
Ash, Andrew W., 8-20 
Ashenhurst, P.L., 5-6 
Azbell, Raymond A., 2-3 


Badders, Donald L., 7-15 

Bain, Ranald, 3-3 

Baird, Lindsay L. Jr., 1-10 

Baker, Doug, 12-4 

Baker, Geoff, 3-20 

Ball, John, 3-14 

Ballard, William P., 11-15 

Barezinski, Julie, 10-22 

Barker, R.E., 6-17 

Barkley, Brent, 8-14 

Barlow, George, 9-7; 11-7 

Barnard, John Q. Jr., 2-9 

Barr, David A., 2-6 

Bartolomeo, Paul A., 3-19 

Barzily, Z., 5-20 

Bates, Charles F., Jr., 12-5 

Batten, William T., 7-20 

Bearden, F.E., 6-5 

Beaumont, W.P., 11-32 

Beck, David C., 1-3 

Bedomme, C.J., 6-12 

Beere, Max P., 11-12 

Bell, T.E., 10-14 

Bell, Dr. Thomas E., 9-2 

Belzer, Jack, 8-25 

Bemer, Robert W., 2-23; 4-22 

Berlet, Hugo, 4-21 

Bernacchi, Richard L., 1-17 

Bethke, Frederick J., 2-24; 11-31 

Bevan, Mike, 11-9 

Bigelow, Robert P., 7-15; 11-19 

Blee, Michael, 4-7 

Bloom, Allan M., 7-8 

Bluestone, Morton D., 7-19 

Boardman, Gerald R., 6-23 

Bockelman, Melvin F., 8-11 

Boehm, B.W., 10-14 

Bomball, Mark R., 6-22; 8-19; 11-32; 
12-30 

Bossin, Benjamin A., 10-12 

Boulden, James B., 3-17 

Boyse, John W., 11-34 

Bratman, Harvey, 7-7 

Brennan, Peter J., 12-10 

Brez, Charles, 3-14 

Brooks, Frederick P. Jr., 3-6 


Brown, V.A., 10-24 
Browne, J.C., 9-2 
Browne, Peter S., 4-9 
Bruun, Roy J., 2-20 
Bryan, Bill, 7-9 

Buck, Merlin P., 7-4 
Bulow, Knut, 1-15 
Burch, John G.., Jr., 2-16 
Burnett, Gerald J., 7-1 
Burns, David C., 10-14 
Butterworth, Richard A., 6-6 


Cacciamani, E.R., 11-10 
Cann, Gary, 5-21 

Cantania, Salvatore C., 12-22 
Carlson, Dr. Gary, 10-10 
Carmichael, Donald L., 8-17 
Carren, Donald M., 11-13 
Carson, Gary L., 5-17 
Carter, Ciel, 12-27 
Cashman, Thomas, 2-24 
Cassell, Douglas A., 4-11 
Cassiday, Jerry, 3-14 
Caswell, Stephen A., 10-2 
Chadwick, H.A., 12-1 
Chanoux, Jo Ann, 3-14 
Chapin, Ned, 4-11 

Chesnut, John, 5-8; 9-16 
Chichester, Alfred D., 5-28 
Chow, John V., 8-2 

Clark, Frank J., 1-21 

Clark, Gary F., 3-5: 

Clark, James, 2-11 

Clark, Stephen J., 4-19 
Coates, H.N., 2-1 

Colbert, Douglas A., 8-23 
Cook, James D. Jr., 6-19 
Cooke, Lawrence H. Jr., 3-9 
Cooper, Kathy, 10-22 
Costrell, L., 6-5 

Cotton, Ira W., 7-2; 10-15 
Couger, J. Daniel, 2-20 
Court, Terry, 7-7 

Crawford, John S., 10-1 
Croisdale, D.W., 10-30 
Crow, Barry L., 6-18 
Crowe, Tom, 9-6 
Cummings, Joan Greenbaum, 12-25 
Cunningham, Peter, 4-14 
Curtice, Robert M., 6-6 


Daniel, Charles C., 4-10 
Danziger, James N., 12-6 
Darrow, Joel W., 4-23 
Davids, Thomas J., 9-20 
Dean, B.V., 9-20 
Demitriades, Paul B., 3-3 
Denning, Peter J., 1-15 
DesRoches, Brian, 5-7 
Devencenzi, Don, 12-15 
Devlin, Gerald W., 11-25 
Diehr, Della M., 5-15 
Dietrich, Douglas S., 1-5 
Dinter, Heinz, 4-24 
Doblin, Jay, 9-11 
Doebler, Paul D., 2-7; 4-8; 11-17 
Doll, Dr. Dixon R., 3-22 
Donaldson, Hamish, 10-9 
Donovan, J.J., 8-7 
Dorricott, Keith, 12-20 
Dorward, George, 8-22 
Dowst, Somerby, 12-16 


DECEMBER 1975 7 


Drazen, Erica, 4-17 

Dreyer, Jerome L., 11-21 
Duckenfield, Christopher J., 5-17 
Duggan, Michael, 10-32 

Duncan, John, 8-20 

Dunik, Stephen L., 2-9 

Dutton, William H., 12-6, 7 


Edwards, M.J., 6-17 
Effrain, Jack, 5-3 
Ein-Dor, Philip, 5-3 
Ellis, John W., 8-12 
Elser, Diana, 4-18 
Ensign, Richard B., 11-7 
Ernst, Martin L., 12-13 
Ewad, Elias M., 5-23 


Faaland, Bruce H., 11-34 
Fahnline, Richard H., 4-5 
Falk, Howard, 2-13; 6-21 
Falor, Ken, 8-11 
Fanning, John W., 2-4 
Farber, David J., 5-6 
Farbman, Daniel S., 2-17 
Farmer, James, 2-8 
Farr, Bob, 11-16 
Farr, Ralph M., 11-33 
Farrell, Jack W., 2-8; 3-15; 6-8 
Fassbender, P., 6-5 
Fearon, Harold E., 1-3 
Feidelman, Lawrence A., 2-15; 10-14; 
12-5, 12 
Ferderber, Charles J., 11-13 
Feuche, Michel, 10-3 
Feuerstein, Alan E., 5-22 
Flato, Linda, 2-8; 3-22 
Fleck, Robert A., Jr., 6-18 
Fletcher, John G., 1-14 
Florian, Michael, 11-34 
Fok, John S., 9-15 
Foote, S., 11-30 
Foreman, Charles L., 4-18 
Forrester, Alan M., 6-22 
Foss, W.B., 8-16 
Franklin, J. Thomas, 12-24 
Fraser, A.G., 5-5 
Freireich, Ira, 12-3 
Frielink, A.B., 8-17 
Frost, Alan, 10-24 
Frost, David, 3-10; 7-7 
Fujaros, R.G., 8-4 
Fusco, G.P., 4-14 


Galamaga, Donald P., 3-19 
Gallop, W.J., 8-16 

Gardiner, Sam, 3-20 
Gardner, Reed M., 4-17 
Gearing, Charles E., 5-21 
Gehner, Claus D., 2-11 
Geoffrion, Arthur M.., 6-21 
Giebink, Gerald A., 4-18 
Gilb, Tom, 9-8; 12-31 
Gildersleeve, Thomas R., 2-18 
Gilman, Leonard, 5-25 
Gilson, Milo, 6-2 

Glavitsch, Hans, 2-10 

Goetz, Martin A., 9-23 
Goldbeck, George, 4-12 
Goldstein, Robert C., 5-13; 12-20 
Gomaa, H., 1-9 

Goodrich, Michael, 3-14 
Goodridge, David, 2-3 





8 DATA PROCESSING DIGEST 


Gradwell, David, 3-20 

Greene, Robert J., 4-22 
Greenwald, B.M., 7-11 
Gregory, Francis M., Jr., 11-19 
Grillos, John M., 2-3 

Gross, J.M., 9-14 

Groves, Bill, 6-7 

Gruenberger, Fred, 12-30 
Guy, Jeffery R., 9-17 


Haavind, Robert C., 2-4 
Hagberg, Carl T., 1-4 
Hall, Carl L., 10-18 
Hall, Jeremy, 12-29 
Hallam, James A., 6-22; 8-19; 11-32; 
12-30 
Hallam, Stephen F., 6-22; 8-19; 11-32; 
12-30 
Hamacher, V.C., 11-6 
Hamilton, William F., 2-21 
Hammer, Glenn B., 10-11 
Harder, Donald, 12-3 
Hardy, C. Colburn, 6-20 
Harper, William L., 4-9 
Haseman, William D., 7-11 
Head, Robert V., 12-22 
Heard, Craig P., 9-18 
Heines, T.S., 12-31 
Hice, G.F., 12-30 
Hillegass, John R., 7-2 
Himsworth, Winston E., 5-4 
Hod, Nathan, 2-16 
Hodge, Bartow, 3-25; 6-18 
Holbrook, Fred K., 11-14 
Holderby, William S., 11-1 
Holloway, Charles A., 8-19; 11-35 
Holly, James H., 12-13 
Holton, John B., 7-9 
Holzman, Albert G., 8-25 
Hooper, Charles S., 8-10 
Hopkins, Robert H., 5-15 
Horn, Berthold K.P., 7-3 
Horn, Robert E., 4-7 
Horton, Forest W., Jr., 7-17 
Howard, Phillip C., 11-24 
Hunter, John J., 4-11 
Hurst, Leonard L., 4-18 
Hutchison, Gordon D., 8-11 


Ingerman, Donald, 1-2 
Irving, D.C., 5-22 
Irwin, J. David, 11-6 
Iverson, Kenneth, 9-10 


Jackson, Michael, 10-8 
Jancura, Elise G., 7-16 
Jarrett, Dennis, 6-18 
Jeffress, Charles, 9-19 
Jenkins, M.G., 9-10 

Jewell, William S., 1-16 
Johnson, James R., 4-3 
Johnson, Randall K., 10-23 
Johnson, Stephen C., 12-9 
Jones, Anita K., 12-11 
Jones, B.E., 3-20 

Jones, Edwin M., 6-4 
Jones, J.H., 9-6 

Jones, Louise H., 11-2 
Joslin, Edward O., 3-9; 11-28 
Jung, David C., 4-14; 5-18 


Katzaroff, Paul, 4-5 


Kaumeyer, Richard A. Jr., 5-3 
Keider, Stephen P., 3-6 
Keirstead, R.E., 10-7 
Kempner, Kenneth M., 10-31 
Kennedy, W.]J., Jr., 11-33 
Kent, Allen, 8-25 

Keys, William, 2-24 

Khtaian, George A., 10-12 
Klein, Charles E., 10-21 
Kleine, Henry, 1-15 

Klimbie, J.W., 9-12 

Kneitel, Arnold M., 12-4 
Knight, James R., 2-5 
Koekebakker, J., 2-14; 9-11, 16 
Koffeman, K.L., 9-12 

Koger, Thomas J., 8-14 
Kraemer, Kenneth L., 12-6, 7 
Krubeck, Ralph D., 10-9 
Kurzban, S., 12-31 

Kwon, Ik-Whan, 6-11 
Kyriazoglou, John, 3-11 


Labrum, Willard D., 11-33 
Landen, Wayne L., 9-16 
Larsen, Gerald H., i-17 
Larson, Harry T., 2-19; 11-27 
Larson, Richard C., 7-15 
Latiolais, Clifton J., 2-5 
Latta, Robert, 4-20 

Laube, Sheldon J., 11-9 
Laudon, Kenneth C., 4-23 
Lawlor, Reed C., 12-28 
Lazarus, Harold, 7-20 
Ledgard, Henry F., 8-24 

Lee, Robert D. Jr., 6-15 
Leonardo, Louis, 10-23 
Levin, Roy, 5-7 

Levine, David A., 2-9 

Lin, Wen C., 2-11 

Lite, Sheldon, 9-7 

Litecky, Charles R., 3-5 
Leobbecke, James K., 10-14 
Lohse, Wally, 1-12; 4-20; 8-17; 12-19 
Long, Maurice I. Jr., 2-20 
Long, Robert H., 4-2 
Loschetter, Richard F., 7-16 
Louderback, Peter D., 7-13 
Lucas, Henry C., 7-17, 18 
Lucianovic, William M., 6-15 


McCameron, Fritz A., 5-25, 26 
Macaskill, J.L.C., 11-52 
McCrory, Fred H., 11-16 
Macdonald, R. Fulton, 9-15 
McGrath, E.J., 5-22 
McGuinness, James, 5-17 
McLagan, Donald L., 5-14 
McLaughlin, Richard A., 4-22; 5-18 
McLean, Ephraim R., 3-17; 11-30 
McMahon, Graham, 11-34 
McReavie, K.S., 9-15 

Madnick, S.E., 8-7 

Mair, William C., 7-10 
Malabarba, Frank, 11-3 
Mallach, Efrem G., 10-11 
Mandell, Steven L., 10-18 
Martin, Claude R., Jr., 12-26 
Martin, Francis F., 1-9 

Mason, R.O., 11-30 

Massy, William F., 2-17 
Matthews, Victor, 7-4 
Matthies, Leslie and Ellen, 3-13 


Mattson, D.E., 5-19 
Mautner, Richard, 7-19 
May, Bryan J., 5-6 
Menkus, Belden, 8-15 
Miller, Edward F., Jr., 11-24 
Miller, Dr. Lionel, 6-4 
Miller, William A., 4-19 
Mitchell, Parry, 7-12 
Mooers, Calvin N., 7-10 
Mooney, John W., 4-3 
Moore, D. Larry, 1-3 
Moore, Richard A., 8-14 
Morgan, John D., 4-19 
Morris, Michael F., 4-5 
Morris, Paul H., 12-18 
Morris, Richard V., 1-15 
Morrison, Ralph J., 11-8 
Morrison, Tim, 12-17 
Moses, Michael, 2-21 
Munson, Barry R., 4-7 
Murchison, James M.., Jr., 11-30 
Murphy, Richard C., 8-18 
Murphy, William J., 4-2 
Myers, Stanley E., 7-16 


Naylor, Thomas H., 9-19 
Nelson, Rosser T., 8-19; 11-35 
Newton, Rita M., 5-20 
Nielsen, Craig B., 2-5 

Nitzan, D., 11-31 

Nolan, Richard L., 5-13; 7-1 
Nowak, Karl, 2-4 

Nutt, John, 9-17 


Oakley, Robert D., 2-14 
Oberlander, G., 7-11 
Oglin, Jerry L., 4-13 
Orkins, Matthew J., 12-21 
Orr, Kenneth T., 12-23 
Ostronic, Frank J., 8-13 
Ould, M.A., 3-20 


Paavola, Robert L., 6-8 
Paley, Edward, 9-5 
Palmer, Bruce, 6-13 
Palmer, Ian R., 8-4 
Parenteau, Roland, 6-12 
Parson, Oliver W., 8-8 
Passy, U., 5-20 

Pearson, Sigfrid, 12-6 
Pease, David L., 3-18 
Peers, John, 11-2 
Perreault, Harry J., 11-26 
Perry, Clyde, 3-16 

Perry, William E., 8-8; 10-13, 17; 12-18 
Persson, Lars, 2-2 

Peters, Lawrence, 7-9 
Peterson, Robert, 9-11 
Peterson, Thomas G., 1-10 
Phillips, A. Scott, 4-12 
Pinson, Lewis J., 11-6 
Plott, Herman H., Jr., 11-6 
Pomeranz, Joanna V., 7-4 
Poplawski, E.J., 2-21 
Popp, Walter G., 10-7 
Poppen, Jon C., 4-2 
Porter, Dennis, 2-11 
Porter, Marianna, 9-11 
Potts, Jackie S., 11-5 
Presser, Leon, 10-8 
Pryor, T. Allan, 4-19 
Puente, J.G., 11-10 
Purdy, J. Gerry, 9-20 





Ratner, Stanley, 10-23 
Ravenis, Joseph V., II, 8-20 
Rayner, D., 12-12 

Reagan, Fonnie H. Jr., 2-12 
Reiner, I.A., 2-21 

Reisman, David A., 2-23 
Richardson, Daniel R., 9-6 
Ridgeway, D.G., 12-23 
Ritchie, Robert O., 1-1; 5-1 
Rittersbach, George H., 10-30 
Rivas, J. Roberto, 11-34 
Roach, William R., 5-18 
Robbins, Clark, 11-12 
Roberts, Robert, 10-20 
Robertson, Stephen E., 8-18 
Robinson, Arthur L., 3-2 
Rosati, R.A., 4-19 

Rose, Allen J., 5-25 

Rose, Benjamin F., III, 8-14 
Rosen, C.A., 11-31 

Ross, Barry T., 11-14 
Rubin, Jerome S., 6-4 
Rudd, Dale R., 11-34 
Ryder, B.G., 4-10 

Ryder, K.D., 3-10 


Sadana, Ravi, 2-5 
Sanderson, Peter C., 5-24 
Sayers, A.P., 12-31 
Scaletta, Phillip, 3-14 
Schlink, Bernhard, 10-7 
Schneider, Ben Ross, Jr., 7-18 
Schneider, Jerry B., 2-11 
Schriber, Thomas J., 1-21 
Schroeder, W.J., Jr., 5-16 
Schroer, Bernard J., 4-10 
Schwab, Bernhard, 1-11 
Schwartz, Donald A., 7-4 
Scoma, Louis, Jr., 11-22 
Scott, Lawrence W., 8-20 
Scriven, Donald D., 6-22; 8-19; 11-32; 
12-30 
Scully, Thomas L., 2-11 
Seidman, H.A., 10-29 
Sevcik, K.C., 9-13 
Severino, Elizabeth F., 2-16 
Shaffer, Richard P., 2-13 
Sharman, Heather, 8-22 
Sharp, Duane E., 10-2 
Sheaks, Dennis, 3-11 
Sheppard, Robert, 12-14 
Sherwood, Henry F., 5-10 
Shneibaum, Toby, 10-21 
Shneiderman, Ben, 5-4 
Sias, Dr. Fred R. Jr., 5-7 
Silman, L.A., 5-20 
Simonette, Ilario, 10-5 
Singel, John B., Jr., 9-3, 12 
Smith, B.T., 11-30 
Smith, J.S., 12-15 
Smith, K. Ray, 12-17 
Smith, Ronald C., 1-13 
Smythe, Clare, 3-12 
Snyder, James E., 11-2 
Soden, Dr. John V., 9-18 
Sorenson, P.G., 11-6 
Squires, Burton, 5-11 
Starmer, C.F., 4-19 
Staropoli, George K., 12-4 
Statland, Norman, 9-3 
Stevens, Barry, 11-24 
Stiles, Fred, 9-3 


AUTHORS — SUBJECTS 


Stimler, Saul, 3-27 

Stratman, Arthur T., 9-14 
Strobin, Edward A., 6-10; 8-12 
Svanks, Maija I., 8-13 

Svigals, Jerome, 3-18 

Swanson, Huntington S., 12-32 
Swart, William W., 5-21 


Taplin, Janet M., 11-12 

Taylor, F.E., 10-29 

Testa, Charles J., 4-8; 11-9 

Theis, D.J., 3-1 

Thibodeau, John R., 1-4 

Thomas, D.R., 10-6 

Thomas, Pauline A., 8-18 

Thomas, Warren H., 5-20 

Thompson, Mark, 1-11 

Thomsen, Neal, 5-17 

Thornley, R.F., 11-22 

Tomeski, Edward A., 6-20; 7-20; 8-21; 
11-8 

Trippett, B.L., 11-10 

Trippi, Robert R., 8-20 

Tschinkel, John, 11-6 

Tsichritzis, D.C., 9-13 

Turn, Rein, 4-24; 5-10; 6-1; 11-20 


Van Tassel, Dennie, 3-26 
Var, Turgut, 5-21 
Vazsonyi, Andrew, 8-1 
Verderber, Wayne J., 5-21 
Villari, S.R., Jr., 12-12 
Vonderohe, R.H., 5-6 


Wade, Joseph F., 8-10 
Wadman, Laurence E., Jr., 11-15 
Waggener, Robert C., 1-10 
Waldo, Charles, 2-19, 6-11 
Walenius, Ronald M., 2-5 
Wallace, John B., 9-3 

Waller, Richard, 5-12 

Ward, Earl M., 5-19 

Ware, W.H.., 6-1 

Warman, E.A., 11-30 

Warn, David R., 11-34 
Warner, Homer R., 4-19 
Wasserman, Joseph, 1-11; 3-8 
Watkins, Shirley W., 7-2 
Weber, R. Jack, 8-9; 9-21 
Weber, Ron, 3-5 

Wechsler, Alfred, 4-17 
Wehrung, Donald, 8-19; 11-35 
Weiss, Harold, 1-13; 12-20 
Weiss, Stephan F., 12-21 
Welborne, John H., 2-3 
Wergin, Lawrence M., 2-20 
Wessel, Milton R., 1-16; 4-22 
Wewer, William, 9-22 
Whatton, Frank W., 6-13 
Whelan, W. James, 9-14 
Whinston, Andrew B., 7-11 
White, Harry L., 2-14 
Wiedmann, Clark, 8-24 
Wiener, Hesh, 2-8 
Wieselman, Irving L., 3-4 
Wiig, Karl, 4-17 

Williams, John W., 9-21 
Willoughby, Theodore C., 4-7 
Winer, Leon, 3-16 

Winkler, Larry, 11-23 
Winski, Donald T., 12-9 
Winston, Patrick H., 7-3 
Withington, Frederick G., 4-3 


DECEMBER 1975 9 


Wood, Michael D., 10-9 
Wood, Steven D., 7-12 
Woodard, Robin L., 6-4 
Wooddy, John C., 11-36 
Woolsey, Robert D., 12-32 
Wright, Norman H. Jr., 1-4 
Wulf, William, 5-7; 12-11 
Wyatt, Joe B., 2-18 


Yasaki, Edward K., 3-4; 5-19; 7-7 
Young, C.B., 8-5 
Yourdon, Edward, 3-7; 9-5 


Zaffarano, Joan, 12-7 

Ziegler, Herman A., 3-18 
Zeitlin, Michael P., 8-19; 11-35 
Zimmerman, Robert M., 4-15 
Zircher, James R., 11-26 
Zobrist, D.W., 6-5 


Subject 


abstracting manual, 9-17 

Account Monitor Service (AMS), 12-13 

accounting, 7-4; 8-12 

accounts receivable, 10-21 

acquisition of computers, 11-28 

Adam System, 11-2 

add-on memory, 8-15 

Addressograph Multigraph Corp., 12-8 

adversary computer analysis, 11-1 

advertising, 6-12 

advertising applications, 8-11 

AEDS programming contest, 1-16 

AEDS student contest, 11-37 

AFIPS, 2-21 

Agrawal, Inder, 9-11 

Ahuja, Hira, 12-14 

airline reservations, 10-27, 28 

alternatives to a 370/145, 12-3 

AMS, 2-15 

APL text, 5-25; 8-24 

application design, 12-31 

applications pay-off, 11-28 

applications software market, 9-9 

ASCII, 1-14 

Association for Systems Management, 11-8 

Association of Time-Sharing Users, 12-25 

AT&T law suit, 12-24 

audio visual course, 9-20 

audio-visual guide, 8-21 

audit control, 12-20 

audit programs, 7-11 

audit retrieval packages, 3-5 

audit review, 12-19, 20 

audit software, 3-5 

audit system, 5-8 

auditing, 6-19; 8-8, 17; 9-1, 2; 12-18 

auditing EDP, 1-12, 13; 3-8; 4-20; 7-13, 
16; 11-26 

auditing software, 11-26, 27 

auditing system performance, 5-14 

auditing the computer system, 2-21; 10-17 

auditor, 12-19 

auto theft, 10-21 

automated office, 5-19 

automated tape library, 10-16 

automatic car identification, 10-20 

automation and unemployment, 12-25 

automation predictions, 11-31 

autotransaction, 12-15 





10 DATA PROCESSING DIGEST 


back-off procedure, 9-4 

bank audit, 7-13 

bank site model, 9-20 

banking, 1-3, 4, 5, 7, 13; 3-17, 18, 19; 4-2 
6-18, 18, 20; 8-9, 10; 9-1, 16, 21; 
11-14, 15; 12-13, 14 

banking standards, 5-19 

bar codes, 7-7 

BASIC letterform, 9-11 

BASIC text, 5-24 

batch process control, 3-14 

batch processing, 1-8 

behavioral system design, 11-30 

betting systems, 2-9 

bibliography, behavior system design, 
11-30 

bibliography, computer performance 
evaluation, 11-24 

bibliography of teaching texts, 4-23 

bibliography on performance evaluation, 


billing, 2-5 

billing users, 9-3 

book format programming, 1-15 
book review rebuttal, 11-36 
book sales accounting, 2-7 
bound-and-scan algorithm, 11-34 
BTAM, 12-11 

budgeting model, 8-18 

bus routing, 5-20, 21 

Business Logical Machine, 11-2 
buying minicomputers, 12-4 


CAAS, 5-8 

CAMAC, 6-5 

CAMMP, 3-16 

car control, 12-17 

card input, 3-12 

Card Security Feature (CSF), 12-8 

career paths, 4-22 

carrier tariffs, 3-23 

cash flow, 2-3 

CATV, 6-12 

centralization, 7-1 

change in dp department, 7-12 

change management, 9-4 

chargeback, 5-15; 6-9; 7-12; 9-3; 10-13; 
11-23 

chargeback system, 4-6 

charging users, 2-3 

chunking, 7-7 

Clayton Act, 9-22 

cleaning disk cartridges, 9-5 

COBOL, 7-19; 11-7 

COBOL handbook, 3-27 

COBOL text, 5-26 

CODASYL DBMS, 8-2 

codes for bank systems, 5-19 

COM, 6-7; 9-10, 16; 11-3 

Committee on Computerized Research, 
Bar Assoc. of Baltimore City, 6-3 

common carriers, 3-22 

communication network, 10-27 

communication system, 10-28 

communication system simulation, 1-2 

communications processors, 12-12 

computer acquisition, 11-28 

computer-aided design, 11-30 

computer assisted auditing, 5-8 

computer auditor, 10-17 

computer-based planning system, 3-17 

computer center planning, 2-23 


computer-controlled production, 11-31 

computer design, 11-1 

computer fraud, 9-13 

computer graphics, 11-5, 6 

computer industry status, 5-18 

computer inefficiency, 11-27 

computer insurance, 12-1, 2, 3 

computer leasing, 3-13 

computer literature references, 12-27 

computer managed instruction, 6-16 

computer manager, 2-1 

computer market, 5-18 

computer networks, 7-2 

computer output microfilm, 6-7; 9-10, 16; 
11-3 

computer output systems, 3-4 

computer patents, 6-5 

computer performance, 9-2; 11-34 

computer performance evaluation, 10-14; 
11-24 

Computer Performance Measurement 
Evaluation, 9-3 

computer periodical, BOTTOMLINE, 
12-27 

computer periodical, BYTE, 12-28 

computer picture animation, 11-6 

computer professionals in future, 10-30 

Computer Program Exchange System, 
11-7 

computer program verification, 7-10 

computer replacement alternatives, 3-9 

computer room library, 10-17 

computer security group, 1-10 

computer service billing, 9-3 

computer services, 12-25 

computer services changes, 10-29 

computer services charges, 10-13 

computer services market, 10-15 

computer system measurement, 9-2; 12-5 

computer system performance 
measurement, 8-16 

computer system upgrading, 1-10 

computer text, 8-23 

computer threat to society, 1-16 

computer utilization, 2-16, 19 

computerized audit techniques, 12-20 

computerized business records, 8-21 

computerized freight rates, 3-15 

computerized legal research, 6-3 

computerized order system, 11-17 

computerized testing, 11-1 

computers and society, 2-23; 4-22; 6-20; 
7-20 

computers in small business, 9-18 

computers in Spain, 1-8 

computing industry outlook, 3-25 

contract negotiation, 8-16 

contracts, 6-5 

contracts in timesharing, 3-14 

control, 10-12 

control systems, 12-23 

conversion, 9-4 

copyright of software, 7-10 

co-op data center, 6-13 

corporate planning aids, 5-14 

corporate planning model, 2-21 

corporate planning model survey, 9-19 

cost control, 2-10; 9-14 

cost control of EDP, 4-19 

cost justification, 12-18 

costing EDP services, 5-15 

costs of data processing, 8-15 


county-city computer system, 2-10 

CPME, 9-3 

CPU architecture, 2-16 

credit approval, 11-16 

credit authorization, 1-6 

credit cards, 3-18 

credit checks, 10-25 

credit data, 7-4 

credit file applications, 12-13 

credit information system, 6-10 

credit records, 12-26 

crime prevention, 10-21 

crime reporting, 10-22 

CRT terminals, 2-14; 4-15; 7-4, 5; 8-14; 
10-5; 11-3, 4,5 

cryptography, 9-9 

CSPM, 8-16 

customer information file (CIF), 8-10 


danger to dp, 12-21 

data acquisition, 9-15; 11-18 

data bank privacy, 11-20 

data banks, 9-21 

data base administrator, 8-1, 3 

data base content, 11-30 

data base design, 11-9 

data base management, 1-5; 3-20; 10-5 

data base management conference, 9-12 

data base management course, 9-20 

data base management system, 4-8, 11 

data base reorganization, 5-4 

data base software, 2-12 

data base systems, 6-6; 7-11; 9-12 

data base user survey, 5-4 

data bases, 3-5, 19, 21, 22; 5-2; 8-1, 2, 
3,4 

data capture errors, 9-6 

data collection system, 6-13 

data communications, 1-1, 2, 3, 7; 3-22, 
23; 4-14, 15; 5-5; 7-3, 6; 8-6; 11-14, 
15; 12-16 

data communications industry, 5-4 

data communications system, 11-17 

data communications terminals, 8-5 

data compression, 8-13 

data control, 1-9 

Data Definition Language, 8-2 

data dictionary, 9-6; 10-6 

data edit, 9-6 

data entry, 7-7; 10-19 

data entry systems, 9-11; 10-3 

data logging, 11-18 

data management, 5-3 

data management service, 10-6 

data management system, 4-10 

data networks, 3-24; 8-5 

data processing budgets, 5-18 

data processing costs, 8-15 

data processing course, 9-20 

data processing education, 12-27 

data processing management, 1-9; 2-1; 
3-28; 4-7; 11-23 

data processing organization, 2-18 

data processing upgrading, 1-10 

data security, 1-11 

data security planner, 1-12 

data systems security, 12-20 

data terminals, 8-4 

data transmission, 11-10 

datacomm architecture, 2-16 

datacomm software, 2-12 

DATAMANAGER, 10-6 





DBMS), 4-8; 8-1, 2, 3, 4; 9-12; 10-5, 6; 
11-9 

deaf signs, 3-28 

decentralization, 7-1, 3 

“diary” system documentation, 9-8 

Digital Processes, 11-29 

directory of computer industry, 5-23 

disaster resistance, 11-34 

disenchantment in EDP, 1-16 

disk cartridge cleaning, 9-5 

disk cartridges, 5-19 

disk packs, 5-19 

distributed mini system, 6-14 

distributed processing, 2-8; 5-1; 10-9; 
11-11, 12, 16, 17; 12-23 

distributed systems, 1-6; 7-1, 6; 10-18, 19, 
20 

distribution application, 2-6 

distribution data system, 10-25 

distribution systems, 6-21, 22; 12-16 

DML’s, 8-2 

documentation, 8-8, 14; 9-8 

documentation language, 11-7 

documentation standards, 3-11 

documentor programs, 8-14 

downtime, 2-2 

DYNABOOK, 7-3 


economics of EDP, 8-17 

EDP auditing, 6-19; 8-8, 17; 9-1, 2; 11-26 

EDP auditing by IRS, 7-11 

EDP charges, 9-3 

EDP costs, 9-14 

EDP future, 4-24 

EDP in government, 4-23 

EDP managers, 12-5 

EDP market in Europe, 8-20 

education, 6-16, 23 

education computer system, 3-19 

education for EDP, 5-17 

educational EDP systems, 8-22 

educational film, 9-17 

educational minis, 7-14 

efficiency of computer system, 2-16 

EFTS, 3-18, 19; 4-2; 6-20; 9-16; 11-21; 
12-13, 14, 26, 27 

EFTS security, 12-8 

election reporting, 2-8 

electric power system control, 2-10 

Electronic Engineering Co., 8-3 

electronic funds transfer systems, 3-18, 19; 
4-2; 6-20; 9-16; 11-21; 12-13, 14, 
26, 27 

electronic pen, 9-11 

embezzlers, 9-13 

emergency service model, 7-15 

employee records, 10-23 

emulators, 10-11 

encryption devices, 9-9 

encyclopedia, 8-25 

entry data, 7-7 

environmental control, 7-6 

equipment profiles, 7-6 

equipment selection, 8-17 

errors, 9-6 

estimating, 3-16 

European EDP market, 8-20 

European journal, 11-29 

European standards work, 10-29 

evaluating computer systems, 3-27; 8-16 

evaluating data communications, 1-1 

evaluating software, 2-12; 12-11 


SUBJECTS 


evaluating systems functions, 5-15 
evaluation of EDP facilities, 12-5 


facilities evaluation, 12-5 

facilities management, 3-9; 4-20 
facilities planning, 2-23 

factor analysis of users, 5-17 
factory automation, 11-31 

factory production control, 6-9 
failure of MIS, 9-18 

Fair Credit Billing Act, 12-26 
fault detection, 11-1 

FCC decision re IBM, 9-22 
feasibility study, 4-20 

federal tax programs, 10-6 
FEDNET, 12-22 

film of deaf signs, 3-28 

film on information retrieval, 9-17 
finance model, 6-23 

financial information network, 6-12 
financial modeling, 6-22 

financial network, 11-15 

financial status of EDP, 5-18 
FINGERMATCH;, “42-10 
fingerprint identification system, 12-10 
fire reporting system, 9-7 

floppy disks, 4-13; 9-10; 10-2 
flow chart format, 4-11 
forecasting EDP, 4-24 

FORTRAN IV text, 5-25 
FORTRAN programming style, 8-24 
fourth generation, 4-1 

fraud, 6-3 

freight, 12-17 

freight car management, 8-10 
freight car reporting, 1-7 

freight handling, 10-27 

freight rate computerization, 3-15 
freight records, 10-25 

freight system, 6-8; 12-16 

front end processors, 11-11, 14; 12-12 
functional programming, 7-8 
future computer use, 12-26 

future computers, 6-21; 11-31 
future of EDP, 4-1, 2, 3 

future terminals, 12-8 


GENASYS, 9-7 

generality in programming, 3-10 

government and computers, 12-6, 7 

government EDP systems, 4-23; 8-17; 
11-35 

government guidelines for security, 1-12 

government shared systems, 8-17 

GPLAN, 7-11 

GPSS, 1-21 

graphics, 11-5; 12-9 


handprinted characters, 2-11 
handwritten data entry, 7-7 
hardware, 7-6 

hardware analysis, 2-17 

hardware maintenance, 2-14 
hardware monitors, 1-10; 11-24 
hardware/software monitors, 1-10 
health care systems, 4-18; 5-7; 12-15 
heirarchical network, 5-6 
heirarchical structure, 8-2 

HELP system, 4-19 

high languages symposium, 1-18 
high pay-off applications, 11-28 
high school students, 1-16 


DECEMBER 1975 1 3 | 


HIPO (Hierarchy plus Input- 
Process-Output), 9-5 

hiring EDP managers, 12-5 

hospital accounting, 10-23 

hospital application, 2-5 

hospital database, 3-20 

hospital staffing system, 11-14 

hospital systems, 11-13, 14 

hospitals, 4-15, 16, 17, 18, 19; 5-7; 
12-14, 15 

hotel accounting, 10-22 

hotel reservations, 6-13 

human factors in computer systems, 11-8 

HYDRA, 12-11 


IBM anti-trust suit, 12-24 

IBM future, 3-24 

IBM 360 and 370 text, 7-20 

IFIP '74 proceedings, 5-23 

impact printing, 11-6 

in-house time sharing, 9-9 

indexing manual, 9-17 

industrial disaster model simulation, 11-34 

inefficient EDP, 11-27 

information guide, 12-27 

information management, 4-8; 7-18; 
11-13 

information networks, 11-12 

information processing text, 2-24 

information retrieval, 12-28 

information retrieval film, 9-17 

information science, 11-30 

information specialist, 10-9 

information system design manual, 9-17 

information systems, 4-16; 12-18, 21, 29 

input/output, 8-4, 5, 6, 8 

instrumentation, 9-15 

insurance, 1-16; 5-8; 6-14; 12-15 

insurance applications, 2-3 

insurance claim control, 9-16 

insurance companies, 12-3 

insurance model, 11-36 

insurance policies, 12-1, 2, 3 

insurance policy processing, 6-15 

insurance processing, 10-24 

insurance system, 10-22 

integrity of operating system, 8-7 

intelligent terminals, 5-1; 7-4, 5, 6; 
10-19; 11-4, 5; 12-7 

interactive terminal response, 10-10 

internal auditing, 3-28 

internal control, 6-19; 10-14; 11-25, 26 

international networks, 3-24; 11-15 

interprocess communications, 10-20 

inventory, 8-12 

inventory control, 2-4, 7; 9-15 

investment evaluation, 8-10 

investment planning, 5-21, 22 

investment programs, 8-12 

IR system for legal firm, 2-3 

IRS audit programs, 7-11 

isochronous data transmission, 11-10 


Japan’s computer service industry, 12-28 
job control languages, 12-12 

job requirements, 5-17 

JUDITH, 10-7 


KarTrak, 5-9 
keyboard-to-disk, 2-15 
keyboard training, 11-5 
keyboards, 8-7 
keypunch, 1-8 





12 DATA PROCESSING DIGEST 


languages, 1-18 

large scale integration, 11-4 
laser graphics, 12-9 

law, 6-3, 4; 8-21; 10-7 

law and contracts, 1-17 

law citation system, 10-24 
law enforcement, 8-11; 10-21; 11-19 
law firm IR system, 2-3 

law research, 2-24 
Lawrence Livermore Lab standards, 1-14 
LCP, 2-15 

leasing, 3-13; 7-12 

leasing economics, 10-28 
leasing or buying, 9-14 

legal data base, 10-7 

legal research, 6-3, 4 

legal search, 2-24; 10-24 
LEXIS, 6-4 

librarian, 3-7 

library manual, 9-17 

library organization, 10-17 
library simulation, 8-18 
linear programming, 5-21 
LISP, 7-3 

list structures, 3-11 

LITE Newsletter, 2-22 
Little, Brown and Co., 1-17 
local government and EDP, 12-6, 7 
local network, 5-7 

logistics management, 12-16 
London stock exchange, 1-8 
long range planning, 5-16 
Los Angeles County, 1-1 
LSI, 11-4 


magnetic tape care, 12-17 

mail order system, 11-17 

maintenance, 6-18 

maintenance record-keeping, 2-9 
management accountant, 5-16 
management control of EDP, 10-12; 11-27 


management guide for computer selection, 


7-12 
management information systems, 2-20; 
3-13, 25; 4-21; 5-3; 8-21; 9-17, 18; 
10-18 
management of change, 9-4 
management of computer function, 2-19 
management of data processing, 1-9, 10 
management of data systems, 5-3 
management of EDP, 4-19 
management planning, 5-16 
management science texts, 9-20 
management vs system analyst, 5-27 
managers of EDP, 12-5 
managing the computer system, 2-1 
Manitoba Schools Computer Network, 
8-22 
manual writing, 2-24 
manufacturing information system, 12-21 
manufacturing systems, 12-30 
marine data, 5-2 
marketing applications, 8-11 
marketing data, 10-6 
marketing management, 3-16 
marketing system, 6-11 
material planning system, 12-16 
material requirements system, 6-8 
materials handling, 7-4 
materials requirements planning, 8-3 
math instruction, 6-16 
measurement, 6-17 


measuring computer systems, 9-2, 3 

measuring software, 9-8 

medical data services, 3-20 

medical information base, 4-19 

medical system, 5-7 

medicare claims processing, 6-14 

medicine, 4-15, 16, 17, 18, 19 

MEDS OCEAN, 5-2 

merchandising information systems, 9-15 

microcomputer software, 2-13 

microcomputer survey, 3-1 

microcomputers, 3-2, 4; 5-20; 9-9 

microeconomics, 10-15 

microfiche, 9-10; 11-3 

microfilm, 6-7 

microprocessor survey, 3-1 

microprocessors, 3-2; 4-12, 13; 6-7; 10-5; 
12-10 

microprogramming, 8-14; 11-2 

MICS, 3-25 

migration, 9-4 

mini-based system, 7-4 

minicomputer in education, 7-14 

Minicomputer Industry National 
Interchange, 11-29 

minicomputer market, 7-14 

minicomputer purchase, 12-4 

minicomputers, 2-14; 3-3, 4; 4-12; 6-7; 
7-1; 8-15; 9-16; 10-1, 2, 3, 4, 18; 
11-2, 12, 13; 12-9, 15 

MIS, 2-20; 3-13, 25; 5-3; 8-21; 9-17; 
10-18 

MIS failure, 9-18 

MIS for small business, 9-18 

modeling, 6-22, 23; 9-19, 20 

modems, 1-1; 5-6 

monitors, 1-10; 11-24; 12-12 

MUMPS, 5-7 


N & W Railroad, 10-20 

NACIS, 12-13 

National CSS, 1-3 

network communications, 10-27 

network for airline communications, 10-28 

network information services, 4-14 

network software, 2-12 

network structure, 8-2; 12-23 

networks, 1-3, 6, 7; 2-17, 18; 5-5, 6, 7; 
7-2; 8-5, 22; 10-19; 11-12, 15; 
12-15, 22 

networks in school systems, 8-22 

newspaper ads, 6-12 

newspaper data bank, 5-10 

newspaper system, 11-18 

NLETS, 6-12 

NUCLEUS, 11-6 

nurse schedule system, 12-14 


oceanography, 5-2 

on-line information systems, 10-27 

on-line processing, 9-7 

on-line retail system, 9-16 

on-line system auditing, 9-2 

on-line system implementation, 12-22 

on-line systems, 1-3; 7-5; 11-7 

operating system integrity, 8-7 

operating system security, 9-13 

operating systems, 12-31 

operations control, 1-9 

operations research, 1-16; 2-21; 5-20, 21; 
8-19, 20; 12-29, 32 

operations system, 5-3 


order entry, 1-6, 8 

order processing, 2-7, 8 

order processing system, 6-8 
organization of computer system, 2-18 
organizational development (OD), 12-4 


Packaged Software Reports, 11-6 

packet switched networks, 4-13 

packet-switching, 1-3 

pagination algorithm, 8-20 

parallel simulation, 7-10 

parts ordering, 2-6 

patent laws, 6-5 

patents on programs, 7-11 

patient information, 2-5 

patient monitoring system, 4-17 

payroll, 10-23 

PEACH, 12-16 

PEARL, 12-16 

performance evaluation, 3-13, 27; 5-14; 
7-13, 8-16; 9-2, 3; 10-14; 11-24; 12-5 

performance evaluation costs, 10-16 

performance management, 9-2 

performance measurement, 4-4, 5; 6-17 

performance related software, 3-6 

performance review, 8-16 

peripherals, 3-4 

personal computers, 7-3 

personnel, 6-18 

personnel assignment model, 8-20 

personnel management, 12-4 

personnel research, 5-23 

personnel selection, 10-18 

physically handicapped users, 12-10 

planning systems, 3-17 

plug-compatibles for minis, 2-14 

point-of-sale, 1-5, 6; 2-13; 4-15; 6-10; 
8-12; 12-15, 16 

police computer system, 8-11 

police reporting, 10-22 

policies in government EDP, 12-7 

POS, 1-5, 6; 2-18; 4-15; 6-10; 8-12; 
12-15, 16 

POS network, 10-26 

POSSUM system, 12-10 

postal regulations on EDP materials, 7-13 

power supply, 4-5 

preventive maintenance, 5-7 

pricing EDP, 2-3 

PRIDE, 2-15; 11-9 

printers, 11-6 

printing store labels, 11-16 

privacy, 4-10, 21; 5-13; 6-1; 8-21; 9-21; 
11-21; 12-20 

privacy law, 7-15 

privacy legislation, 11-19, 29 

privacy protection, 11-20 

problem solving in OR, 12-32 

proceedings, SIGMETRICS symposium, 
6-17 

process control, 3-14 

production control, 1-4; 3-12; 6-9; 7-5; 
8-11 

profit/cost control, 2-10 

program code audit, 12-19, 20 

program design, 7-7; 10-8 

program librarian, 3-7 

program maintenance, 4-3 

program management, 8-13 

program patents, 7-11 

program productivity, 9-5 

program simulation, 7-10 





program verification, 7-10 
programmer incompetence, 1-9 
programmer job analysis, 2-21 
programmer selection, 4-7 
programmer training, 5-17 
programming, 1-14; 3-10; 11-2 
programming contest, 1-16; 11-37 
programming contracts, 8-16 
programming definition, 1-15 
programming development, 8-23 
programming evaluation, 3-9 
programming languages, 1-18 
programming magazine, 5-23 
programming manuals, 2-24 
programming style, 8-24 
programming style manual, 3-26 
programming text, 7-16, 19 
project control, 1-4 
project management, 11-9 
project scheduling, 3-6 
protection mechanisms, 12-11 
Protection of Information in Computer 
Systems, 12-13 
publisher accounting, 2-7 
publishing order system, 11-17 
punch cards, 3-12 
purchasing, 12-16 
purchasing application, 2-4 
purchasing function, 1-3 
purchasing mini systems, 12-9 
purchasing minicomputers, 12-4 


qualifications for EDP managers, 12-5 
Qtam, 12-11 
queuing model, 7-15 


racetrack computers, 2-9 

rail car control, 8-10 

railroad accounting, 10-26 

railroads, 1-7; 2-5, 21; 3-14; 4-15; 5-9; 
10-20 

RAPID, 8-11 

ratings of small business computers, 12-10 

real-time inquiry, 8-11 

records center, 10-17 

REDCAP, 12-17 

reliable software, 9-9 

remote batch processing, 7-2 

remote batch terminals, 8-6 

remote job entry, 2-6; 3-3; 8-6 

remote terminals, 12-23 

requirements planning, 2-4 

requirements planning system, 6-8 

reservations system, 4-15 

resource allocation, 1-9 

response time measurement, 10-10 

retail, 1-5, 6, 7; 2-13; 3-18, 19; 4-2, 15; 
8-12; 11-10, 16; 12-15, 16 

retail POS, 6-10, 10-26 

retailing, 9-15 

retailing system, “Reality”, 9-16 

Reuters information system, 6-12 

Rhode Island Dept. of Education, 3-19 

ring network, 5-6 

risk assessment, 12-3 

RPG, 7-16 

RTS writing system, 11-6 

RUDIL, 11-6 


SAFARI, 2-3 
safety data bank, 10-23 
salary survey, 4-22; 5-17; 8-20 


SUBJECTS 


salary survey, Canada, 5-17 

sales/advertising applications, 8-11 

satellite network, 11-10 

savings and loan system, 10-21 

savings bank computer system, 3-17 

scheduling, 11-19 

scheduling algorithm, 11-34 

scheduling computer use, 11-23 

scheduling software, 3-16 

scheduling workers, 12-14 

school accounting, 9-16 

school boundary model, 11-35 

school boundary problem, 8-19 

school registration system, 8-22 

SEARCH, 2-24 

security, 1-10, 11, 12; 2-21; 4-9; 5-10, 
11, 12, 13; 6-1; 9-13; 11-21, 22; 
12-13, 18, 21 

security manual, 2-21 

security of access, 9-9 

security of computer systems, 8-11 

security of EFTS, 12-8 

security of operating system, 8-7 

security policies, 12-11 

security system, 1-7 

Select-A-Seat Corp., 12-14 

selecting computer systems, 7-12 

selecting software packages, 12-11 

semi-conductor technology, 11-2 

service bureau control, 10-14 

service bureau for hospitals, 12-15 

service bureaus, 1-3, 12; 7-13; 12-4, 16 

shipping, 10-27; 12-17 

simplex solution, 11-34 

simplified keyboard, 8-7 

simulation, 1-2, 21; 5-22; 6-22, 23; 8-18; 
9-20; 11-36; 12-16, 30 

simulation models, 11-32 

simulation of computers, 11-32 

simulation of transit system, 2-11 

simulation project manager, 8-19 

simulation survey, 9-19 

simulation, traffic signals, 11-33 

simulator trainer, 11-5 

Singer System 10, 3-4 

small business computers, 7-1; 9-18; 
10-2, 3; 11-2, 29; 12-10 

small computer companies, 2-22 

small computers, 7-6 

small-user performance evaluation, 7-13 

social aspects of EDP, 8-21 

social implications, 2-23; 4-22 

social implications of computers, 7-20 

social responsibility, 6-20 

society, 1-16 

SOFASIM, 11-36 

software, 12-12 

software certification, 10-7 

software companies, 11-9 

software conference, 9-9 

software copyrights, 7-10 

software development, 2-12 

software evaluation, 12-11 

software for microcomputers, 2-13 

software/hardware monitors, 1-10 

software index, 1-16 

software metrics, 9-8 

software modification, 10-13 

software monitors, 11-24 

software packages, 11-8; 12-12 

software production, 7-7 

software reliability, 9-9 


DECEMBER 1975 13 


software scheduling, 3-6 

software selection, 1-13 

software symposium, 6-5 

Southern Pacific Railway, 5-9 

Spain, 1-8 

Spring Mills program maintenance, 4-3 

standard practices, 10-13 

standards for bank EDP, 5-19 

standards in computer industry, 4-22 

standards in dp, 12-17 

standards in programming, 1-14 

standards in system development, 11-9 

standards work in Europe, 10-29 

Stanford Research Institute, 10-7 

stereoscopic display system, 11-6 

stock exchange, 1-8 

stock exchange network, 11-17 

store security, 1-7 

structured languages, 10-8 

Structured Program Design Technique, 
10-8 

structured programming, 1-15; 7-8, 9; 
8-13; 9-5, 6; 11-7; 12-13 

structured system design, 12-23 

SUPER-ZAP, 10-13 

supermarket credit system, 10-25 

supermarket, S & L system, 10-21 

survey of government executives, 12-6, 7 

survey of small business computer users, 
12-10 

Swedish privacy laws, 4-21 

SWIFT, 11-15 

system analyst incompetence, 1-9 

system building, 2-15 

system design, 5-1; 7-3, 17, 18; 8-7; 
10-20; 12-19, 31 

system design inadequacy, 1-9 

system development, 12-30 

system documentation, 9-8 

system evaluation, 9-2 

system generator, 9-7 

system maintenance, 6-18 

system planning, 4-9 

system study, 10-9 

System/32, 4-13 

systems analysts characteristics, 11-8 

systems development, 8-13 

Systems Film Catalog, 11-8 

systems houses, 11-9 

systems network processing, 4-14 

systems training, 3-13 


tariff, 12-16 

tax inquiry system, 8-11 

Team, 12-11 

telecommunications, 9-22 

teleprocessing, 4-14; 5-3 

teleshopping, 12-26 

terminal network, 7-5 

terminals, 8-4, 5, 6, 14; 12-7, 8, 15 

testing, 11-1 

testing data entry, 4-5 

testing microcomputers, 9-9 

testing programs, 9-5 

text processing, 12-8 

textbooks, 2-24; 5-23 

threaded & inverted list structures, 3-11 

370’s, 12-3 

360’s, 12-3 

ticketing system, 12-14 

time-sharing, 7-2, 3; 8-10; 9-21; 11-28; 
12-4, 15 





14 DATA PROCESSING DIGEST 


time-sharing companies’ status, 10-30 
time-sharing contracts, 3-14 
time-sharing costs, 10-11 
time-sharing in banking, 8-9 
time-sharing users, 12-25 

top-down programming, 7-9; 9-5, 6 
top management responsibility, 2-19 
Touch-Tone terminals, 12-8 
TRACS, 2-5 

traffic management, 8-10; 12-17 
traffic programs, 11-7 

traffic records, 10-23 

traffic simulation, 11-33 

Train II, 1-7 

training, keyboard, 11-5 

transfer pricing, 5-15 

transportation control, 3-14 
transportation model, 2-11 
transportation planning, 6-8 
trucking, 6-8; 10-27 

trust and will information retrieval, 1-3 
trust department function, 1-4, 5 
TSO (Time Sharing Option), 9-5 


typeface “BASIC”, 9-11 
typewriter keyboard, 8-7 


unbundling, 12-24 
unemployment, 12-25 
uninterruptible power supply, 4-5 
unions in EDP, 1-11 

United Kingdom, 2-22 

Universal Product Code, 11-10 
UPC, 11-10 

urban information systems, 11-35 
Urban Information Systems (URBIS), 12-6 
URBIS, 12-6 

US vs IBM, 12-24 

usage charges, 11-23 

user billing, 9-3 

user classification, 5-17 

user education, 5-17 

user experience, 7-18 

user service charges, 2-3; 6-9; 7-12 
user-supplier relations, 1-9 

users’ meeting, 1-3 

uses of EDP in government, 12-6 


utility application, 2-3 
utility programs, 12-18 
UTRANS, 2-11 


variance reduction, 5-22 
vendor evaluation, 10-12 
video display terminals, 11-3 
virtual channel net, 5-5 
virtual machine monitor, 8-7 
virtual systems, 3-10 

voice response, 1-7 

voting, 2-8, 9 

Vtam, 12-11 


warehouse computerization, 3-16 
warehouse control, 6-17 

warehousing, 6-21, 22; 7-4 

Western Electric, 8-7 

will and trust information retrieval, 2-3 
word processing, 7-6; 12-8 

world computer use, 7-14 

world-wide network, 11-15 


Reference List 


YIELD, 8-10 


The staff of Data Processing Digest regularly monitors more than 180 computer, trade, and 
management periodicals for appropriate articles to digest each month. Every June issue and 


December Index Supplement includes all the publishers’ addresses for your convenience. During 
other months of the year, only the periodicals referenced in that issue are given. We ask you to 
please request copies of originals from the publisher of the periodical, rather than write to Data 
Processing Digest, as we do not copy or reprint, and your request would be delayed. Books 
should be ordered from their publishers or from a local technical book store. 


Administrative Management, 51 Madison Ave., New York, NY 
10010 

Advanced Management Journal, 135 W. 50th St., New York, NY 
10020 

AEDS Journal, Association for Educational Data Systems, 1201 
16th St. NW, Washington, DC 20036 

AEDS Monitor, Association for Educational Data Systems, 1201 
16th St. N.W., Washington, DC 20036 

AIIE Transactions, 25 Technology Park/Atlanta, Norcross, GA 
30071 

American City & County, Berkshire Common, Pittsfield, MA 
01201 

American Gas Association Monthly, 1515 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, 
VA 22209 

American Laboratory, International Scientific Communications, 
Inc., 808 Kings Highway, Fairfield, CT 06430 

American Scientist, $45 Whitney Ave., New Haven, CT 06511 

Annals of Economic and Social Measurement, Dept. of Economics, 
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL $2601 

Armed Forces Comptroller, Box 68, Arlington, VA 22210 

Arthur Young Journal, 277 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017 

Australian Computer Journal, P.O. Box 147, St. Leonards, NSW 
2065, Australia 

Automatic Data Processing Newsletter, Management Science Pub- 
lishing, The Diebold Group, Inc., 480 Park Ave., New York, 
NY 10022 

Automation, Penton Publishing Company, Penton Plaza, 1111 
Chester Ave., Cleveland, OH 44114 

Autotransaction Industry Report, International Data Corp., P.O. 
Box 915, Waltham, MA 02154 

Bank Administration, 303 S$. Northwest Highway, P.O. Box 500, 
Park Ridge, IL 60068 

Bank Automation Newsletter, Warren, Gorham & Lamont, Inc., 
89 Beach St., Boston, MA 02111 

Bank Systems & Equipment, Gralla Publications, 1515 Broadway, 
New York, NY 10036 

Bankers Monthly, 601 Skokie Blvd., Northbrook, IL 60062 

Banking, 350 Broadway, New York, NY 10013 


Bell Laboratories Record, 600 Mountain Ave., Murray Hill, NJ 
07974 

Best's Review (Life & Health; Property & Liability), Columbia 
Turnpike, Box 232, Rensselaer, NY 12144 

Bottomline, International Computer Programs, Inc., 1119 Key- 
stone Way, Carmel, IN 46032 

Bulletin of American Society for Information Sciences, 1155 16th 
St. NW, Suite 210, Washington, DC 20036 

Burroughs Clearing House, P.O. Box 418, Detroit, MI 48232 

Business Graphics, 7373 N. Lincoln Ave., Chicago, IL 60646 

Business Horizons, Graduate School of Business, Indiana Uni- 
versity, Bloomington, IN 47401 

CA Magazine, Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants, 250 
Bloor St., Toronto M4W 1G5, Ontario, Canada 

California Management Review, 350 Barrows Hall, University of 
California, Berkeley, CA 94720 

Canadian DataSystems, Maclean-Hunter Ltd., 481 University 
Ave., Toronto, Ontario M5W 1A7, Canada 

Chain Store Age Executive, Lebhar-Friedman Inc., 2 Park Ave., 
New York, NY 10016 

CIPS Computer Magazine, Canadian Information Processing 
Society, Whitsed Publishing Ltd., 212 King St. W., Suite 501, 
Toronto, Ontario M5H 1K5, Canada 

Cities & Villages, 41 S High St., Suite 105, Columbus, OH 43215 

Columbia Journal of World Business, 408 Uris Hall, Columbia 
University, New York, NY 10027 

Commerce Today, U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Superintendent of 
Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 
20402 

Communications, 1900 W. Yale St., Englewood, CO 80110 

Communications of the ACM, Association for Computing Ma- 
chinery, 1133 Ave. of the Americas, New York, NY 10036 

Computer, IEEE Computer Society, 5855 Naples Plaza, Rm. 301, 
Long Beach, CA 90803 

Computer Bulletin, The British Computer Society, Ltd., 29 Port- 
land Pl., London W1N 4HV, England 

Computer Communication Review, SIGCOMM (ACM), 1133 Ave. 
of the Americas, New York, NY 10036 





Computer Decisions, 50 Essex St., Rochelle Park, NJ 07662 

Computer Design, 221 Baker Ave., Concord, MA 01742 

The Computer Journal, The British Computer Society, c/o Wm. 
Dawson & Sons, Ltd., Cannon House, Folkestone, Kent, England 

Computer Law and Tax Report, Warren, Gorham & Lamont Inc., 
210 South St., Boston, MA 02111 

Computer Personnel, SIGCPR (ACM), 1133 Ave. of the Americas, 
New York, NY 10036 

Computers & Operations Research, Pergamon Press, Head- 
ington Hill Hall, Oxford OX3 OBW, England 

Computers & People, Berkely Enterprises, Inc., 815 Washington 
St., Newtonville, MA 02160 

Computers & Society, Association for Computing Machinery, 1133 
Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10036 

Computerworld, 797 Washington St., Newton, MA 02160 

Computing (Europe), British Computer Society, Haymarket Pub- 
lishing Ltd., Craven House, Fouberts Place, London W1A 2HG, 
England 

Computing Newsletter, Cragmor Road, Colorado Springs, CO 
80907 

Computing Surveys, ACM, 1133 Ave. of the Americas, New York, 
NY 10036 

Conference Board Record, P.O. Box 908, F.D.R. Station, New 
York, NY 10022 

Control Engineering, 222 S. Riverside Plaza, Chicago, IL 60606 

Coopers & Lybrand Journal, 1251 Ave. of the Americas, New York, 
NY 10020 

Cost & Management, Society of Industrial Accountants of Canada, 
Box 176, Hamilton, Ontario L8N 3C3, Canada 

Credit & Financial Management, 475 Park Ave. So., New York, 
NY 10016 

The Credit World, International Consumer Credit Association, 
$75 Jackson Ave., St. Louis, MO 63130 

Data Base, SIGBDP (ACM), 1133 Ave. of the Americas, New York, 
NY 10036 

The Data Communications User, DataComm User, Inc., 60 Austin 
St., Newtonville, MA 02160 

Data Entry Awareness Report, Management Information Corp., 
140 Barclay Center, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034 

Data Exchange, Diebold Europe S.A., 55a Catherine Place, Lon- 
don SW1 E6DY, England 

Data Management, Data Processing Management Assoc., 505 
Busse Highway, Park Ridge, IL 60068 

Data Processing, IPC Electrical-Electronic Press, Ltd., Dorset 
House, Stamford St., London SE1 9LU, England 

Data Processor, 1133 Westchester Ave., White Plains, NY 10604 

Data Systems, Embankment Press Ltd., Hutton House, Hutton St., 
London EC4, England 

Database Journal, 322 St. John St., London EC1V 4QH, England 

Datamation, 1801 S. La Cienega Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90035 

Datapro Research Corporation, 1805 Underwood Blvd., Delran, 
NJ 08075 

Department Store Economist, 48 E. 43rd St., 4th Floor, New York, 
NY 10017 

Dimensions NBS, Supt. of Documents, U.S. Gov't Printing Office, 
Washington, DC 20402 

Dun’s Review, 666 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10019 

Editor and Publisher, 850 Third Ave., New York, NY 10022 

EDP Analyzer, 925 Anza Ave., Vista, CA 92083 

EDP Auditor, 10964 Stuart Mill Road, Oakton, VA 22124 

EDP Europa Report, IDC Europa Ltd., 140-146 Camden St., 
London NW1 9PF, England 

EDP Industry Report, 214 Third Ave., Waltham, MA 02154 

EDP Performance Review, Applied Computer Research, 8808 N. 
Central Ave., Suite 298, Phoenix, AZ 85020 

EDPACS, Automation Training Center, 11250 Roger Bacon Dr., 
Suite 17, Reston, VA 22090 

Electronics, 1221 Ave. of the Americas, New York, NY 10020 


DECEMBER 1975 15 


REFERENCES 


FDT, SIGMOD, ACM, 1133 Ave. of the Americas, New York, NY 
10036 

The Federal Accountant, 727 S. 23rd St., #120, Arlington, VA 
22202 

Finance, P.O. Box G, Lennox Hill Station, New York, NY 10021 

Forbes, 60 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10011 

Government Data Systems, United Business Publications, Inc., 750 
Third Ave., New York, NY 10017 

Government Executive, Executive Publications, Inc., 1725 K St. 
N.W., Washington, DC 20006 

Graphic Arts Monthly, 222 S. Riverside Plaza, Suite 1500, Chicago, 
IL 60606 

Graphic Communications Weekly, Technical Information Inc., 
P.O. Box 775, So. Lake Tahoe, CA 95705 

Harvard Business Review, Soldiers Field Station, Boston, MA 
02163 

Hospital Administration, 840 N. Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, IL 
60611 

Hospital Progress, 1438 S. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63104 

Hospitals, 840 N. Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60611 

IBM Journal of Research and Development, Armonk, NY 10504 

IBM Systems Journal, Armonk, NY 10504 

IEEE Spectrum, 345 E. 47th St., New York, NY 10017 

IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, 345 E. 47th 
St., New York, NY 10017 

IMC Journal, International Micrographic Congress, Information 
and Records Management, Inc., 250 Fulton Ave., Hempstead, 
NY 11550 

Industrial Design, One Astor Plaza, 1515 Broadway, 39th Floor, 
New York, NY 10036 

Industrial Engineering, 25 Technology Park, Norcross, GA 30071 

Industrial Research, 222 S. Riverside Plaza, Chicago, IL 60606 

INFOR, P.O. Box 2225, Station D, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada 

Information and Records Management, 250 Fulton Ave., Hemp- 
stead, NY 11550 

Information Retrieval and Library Automation, Lomond Systems, 
Inc., Mt. Airy, MD 21771 

The Information Scientist, Journal of the Institute of Information 
Scientists, 657 High Road, Tottenham, N17 8AA, England 


Infosystems, Hitchcock Bldg., Wheaton, IL 60187 

Infotech Ltd., Nicholson House, High St., Maidenhead, Berkshire, 
England 

Installation Management Review, SIGCOSIM (ACM), 1133 Ave. 
of the Americas, New York, NY 10036 

Instrumentation Technology, 400 Stanwix St., Pittsburgh, PA 
15222 

Instruments & Control Systems, Chilton Company, Chilton Way, 
Radnor, PA 19089 

Interface, Xerox Data Systems, 701 S. Aviation Blvd., El Segundo, 
CA 90245 

Interfaces, Bulletin of The Institute of Management Sciences, 146 
Westminster St., Providence, RI 02903 

Interpreter, Insurance Accounting & Statistical Association, 406 
W. 34th St., Kansas City, MO 64111 

Journal of Accountancy, 1211 Ave. of the Americas, New York, NY 
10036 

Journal of ACM, Association for Computing Machinery, 1133 Ave. 
of the Americas, New York, NY 10036 

Journal of American Society for Information Science, 1140 Con- 
necticut Ave. N.W., Suite 804, Washington, DC 20036 

Journal of Bank Research, 303 So. Northwest Hwy., P.O. Box 500, 
Park Ridge, IL 60068 

Journal of Business, School of Business, University of Chicago 
Press, 5801 Ellis Ave., Chicago, IL 60637 

Journal of Business Education, 4000 Albemarle N.W., Suite 302, 
Washington, DC 20016 

Journal of Documentation, 3 Belgrave Sq., London SW1 X8PL, 
England 

Journal of Educational Data Processing, P.O. Box 2995, Stanford, 
CA 94305 





16 DATA PROCESSING DIGEST 


Journal of Micrographics, 8728 Colesville Rd., Suite 1101, Silver 
Spring, MD 20910 

Journal of Quality Technology, 161 W. Wisconsin Ave., Mil- 
waukee, WI 53203 

Journal of Systems Management, Association for Systems Man- 
agement, 24587 Bagley Rd., Cleveland, OH 44138 

Jurimetrics Journal, 1155 E. 60th St., Chicago, IL 60637 

The Larbridge Letter, P.O. Box 855, Tustin, CA 92680 

Law & Computer Technology, World Peace Through Law Center, 
839 17th St. N.W., Hill Bldg., Washington, DC 20006 

Law Office Economics and Management, Callaghan & Co., 6141 
N. Cicero Ave., Chicago, IL 60646 

Management Accounting, National Assoc. of Accountants, 919 
Third Ave., New York, NY 10022 

Management Accounting (G.B.), Inst. of Cost and Management 
Accountants, 63 Portland Place, London W1N 4AB, England 

Management Controls, Peat, Marwick & Mitchell, 345 Park Ave., 
New York, NY 10022 

Management Datamatics, Academic Book Services, P.O. Box 66, 
Groningen, Holland 

Management Science, TIMS, 146 Westminster St., Providence, RI 
02903 

Manufacturing Engineering, Society of Manufacturing Engineers, 
20501 Ford Road, Dearborn, MI 48128 

Minicomputer News, Benwill Publishing Corp., 167 Corey Road, 
Brookline, MA 02146 

Modern Data, P.O. Box 369, 5 Kane Industrial Dr., Hudson, MA 
01749 

Modern Materials Handling, 221 Columbus Ave., Boston, MA 
02116 

Modern Railroads, Cahners Publishing Co., 5 South Wabash Ave., 
Chicago, IL 60603 

Nation's Cities, National League of Cities, 1620 Eye St. N.W., 
Washington, DC 20006 

Nation’s Schools Report, 230 W. Monroe St., Chicago, IL 60606 

NZ Data Processing, 4th Estate Publishing Co., P.O. Box 1449, 
Wellington, New Zealand 

The Office, Office Publications, Inc., 1200 Summer St., Stamford, 
CT 06904 

Omega, International Journal of Management Science, Pergamon 
Press Ltd., Headington Hill Hall, Oxford OX3 0BW 

On-Line, Computer Industry Association, 1911 N. Ft. Meyer Dr., 
Suite 801, Rosslyn, VA 22209 

Operating Systems Review, SIGOPS (ACM), 1133 Ave. of the 
Americas, New York, NY 10036 

Operations Research, ORSA, 428 E. Preston St., Baltimore, MD 
21202 

Optimum, Bureau of Management Consulting, Room 636, Journal 
Bidg., Place de Ville, Ottawa K1A OT5, Ontario, Canada 

Payment Systems Newsletter, 90 Park Ave., New York, NY 10016 

Performance Evaluation Review, SIGMETRICS (ACM), 1133 Ave. 
of the Americas, New York, NY 10036 

Personnel Journal, 1131 Olympic Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90404 

Perspective, Laventhol & Horwath, 1845 Walnut St., Philadelphia, 
PA 19103 

Popular Computing, Box 272, Calabasas, CA 91302 

The Practical Lawyer, 4025 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, PA 19104 

Price Waterhouse Review, 1251 Ave. of the Americas, New York, 
NY 10020 

Public Personnel Management, International Personnel Manage- 
ment Assoc., 1318 E. 60th St., Room 240, Chicago, IL 60637 

Public Power, 2600 Virginia Ave. N.W., Suite 212, Washington, 
DC 20037 

Publishers’ Weekly, 1180 Ave. of the Americas, New York, NY 
10036 


Purchasing, Cahners Building, 221 Columbus Ave., Boston, MA 
02116 

Quality Progress, American Society for Quality Control, 161 W. 
Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53208 

Railway Age (formerly Railway System Controls), 350 Broadway, 
New York, NY 10013 

Records Management Journal Quarterly, Assoc. of Records Man- 
agers and Administrators, Inc., P.O. Box 4259 Grand Central 
Station, New York, NY 10017 

Retail Control, National Retail Merchants Assoc., 100 W. 31st St., 
New York, NY 10001 

Savings and Loan News, 111 E. Wacker Dr., Chicago, IL 60601 

Science, American Assoc. for Advancement of Science, 1515 Mas- 
sachusetts Ave., N.W., Washington, DC 20005 

Scientific American, 415 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10017 

SIGPLAN Notices, ACM, 1133 Ave. of the Americas, New York, 
NY 10036 

Simulation, Society for Computer Simulation, P.O. Box 2228, La 
Jolla, CA 92038 

Simulation in the Service of Society, P.O. Box 994, La Jolla, CA 
92037 

Simulation Today, P.O. Box 2228, La Jolla, CA 92037 

Sloan Management Review, Sloan School of Management, Massa- 
chusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139 

Small Business Computer News, Management Information Corp., 
140 Barclay Center, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034 

Software Practice & Experience, John Wiley & Sons Ltd., Baffins 
Lane, Chichester, Sussex, England 

Software World, $22 St. John St., London EC1V 4QH, England 

Stores, National Retail Merchants Assoc., 100 W. 3lst St., New 
York, NY 10001 

System/3 World, Informatics Inc., 21050 Vanowen St., Canoga 
Park, CA 91303 

Systems, Technology & Science for Law Enforcement and Security, 
Lomond Systems, Inc., Mt. Airy, MD 21771 

Technology Review, M.I.T., Room E19-430, Cambridge, MA 
02139 

Telecc ications, Horizon House, 610 Washington St., 
Dedham, MA 02026 

Thruput, Association of Computer Programmers and Analysts, 
P.O. Box 95, Kensington, MD 20995 

Tooling and Production, Huebner Publications, Inc., 5821 Harper 
Road, Solon, OH 44139 

Traffic Engineering, 1815 N. Ft. Meyer Dr., Suite 905, Arlington, 
VA 22209 

Traffic Management, Cahners Publishing Co., 205 E. 42nd St., 
New York, NY 10017 

Trusts & Estates, 461 Eighth Ave., New York, NY 10001 

UNISIST Newsletter, Division of Scientific and Technological In- 
formation and Documentation, UNESCO, 7, Place de Fontenoy, 
75700 Paris, France 

U.S. News & World Report, 2300 N St., N.W., Washington, DC 
20037 

Visible Language, The M.I.T. Press, Cambridge, MA 02142 














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