The White Falcon - 22.07.1983, Side 4
4 THE WHITE FALCON/July 22, 1983
Navy Campus announces courses
Registration for the University of Mary-
land and Los Angeles Metropolitan College
will be held from August 8-12. Registra-
tion will be at the Navy Campus Office, lo-
cated in the Viking Mall. The office will
be open from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday and on Thursday evening,
August 11, from 6-9.
Pre-term counseling is available, by ap-
pointment only, July 25-August 5. All Navy
personnel planning to use tuition assistance
for the first time at Keflavik must sched-
ule an advisement appointment. Call 6226
or 7795 to make an appointment.
The Navy Tuition Assistance Office has
clarified the interpretation for use of 90%
tuition assistance. It is now established
that all active duty personnel eligible for
Navy tuition assistance, within the ranks
of E-4 to E-9 who have not reached their
15th anniversary date of active service are
eligible for the 90% amount. This can be
interpreted as 14 years, 364 days of active
duty. All others remain at 75%. This in-
terpretation will not be retroactive.
University of Maryland
Personnel Management (BMGT 360), The
course will analyze job contents, the mea-
surement of employee performance, and se-
lection, motivation and training techni-
ques. Students will study the legal en-
vironment in which personnel management
functions, management-labor relations, and
collective bargaining. These concepts will
be applied to case studies. BMGT or TEMN
credit. 3sh, Funkhouser, Mon./Wed., 6:30-
9:30.
Introduction to Basic (CAPP 105). Empha-
sizes the use of small/home computers, op-
erating systems and BASIC language. Pro-
grams will be written to accomplish output
formatting, array handling and sorting.
Provides a foundation for home use as well
as for further computer science courses.
Though not a formal prerequisite, students
will find CAPP 105 particularly helpful in
preparing for CMSC 110 and for IFSM 296.
3sh, Novitzki, Tue./Thu., 6:30-9:30.
Introduction to Writing (ENGL 101). This
course is designed to provide students with
an understanding of what constitutes good
writing, with an emphasis upon those writ-
ing skills necessary for successful ex-
planation of information and ideas. A re-
quired course for all students. Communi-
cations credit. 3sh, DeFessi. ENGL 101
will be held in two sections if enough in-
terest is shown. Each section must have
at least 15 students. Section One: Mon.
Tue./Wed./Thu., 11:45 a.m.-l p.m. Section
Two: Mon./Wed., 6:30-9:30.
Technical Report Writing (ENGL 293), In-
stitutions involved in management and
technology employ a variety of reports to
facilitate communications. This course is
designed to acquaint the student with such
writing. Although students may elect to
write about purely technical problems, the
course focuses upon the report writing in
both management and technology. Emphasis
is placed upon formats for memos and re-
ports, readability, clarity and simplicity.
Prerequisite ENGL 101. Application to the
Communications general education require-
ment. 3sh, DeFesi, Mon./Tue., Wed./Thu.,
5:10-6:25.
Vikings Legacy (HIST 319), This course
surveys the history, origin and culture of
the Vikings. 3sh, Haugseth, Tue./Thu.,
7-10. Humanities credit.
Modern Algebra (MATH 101). The first math
course in the sequence which fulfills the
requirements for math, science, engineer-
ing, and computer science majors. Course
includes polynomials, equations, graphs,
and fundamental operations of algebra.
This class will meet Wednesday, August 10,
from 6:30-9 allowing students to determine
if the class is at the required level. You
may attend before registering. The final
class will be given Monday, October 10,
from 6:30-9. 3sh, Whitkanack, Mon./Tue.
Wed./Thu., 5:10-6:15.
Analysis III (MATH 241). Calculus func-
tions of vectors; partial derivatives; mul-
tiple integration, surface integrals,
classical theorems of Green, Gauss, and
Stokes. Prerequisite is MATH 141 or its
equivalent. 4sh, Whitkanack, Sun./Tue.
Thu., 6:30-9:10.
On August 26, 27 and 28 there will be a
weekend seminar entitled Introduction to
the Use of the Digital Computer (CMSC-
100A. It is an introduction to the use
of FORTRAN for solution of simple computa-
tional tasks and the use of conversational
mode to simplify the process will be em-
phasized. Examples and problems will be
chosen appropriate to the background of
the students. lsh, Novitzki, Fri. from 6-
9, Sat. and Sun. from 9-noon and from 1-4.
A proposed course, entitled The Program-
mable Calculator, is scheduled for Septem-
ber 16, 17 and 18. A registration date
will be confirmed later. The objective of
the seminar is to instruct students in the
use of the basic functions of their calcu-
lators to adequately prepare them for
mathematics classes. The second objective
is to make them aware of the basic con-
cepts, while the third objective is to
provide applications, games and simula-
tions which explore the capabilities of
the calculator. Students should have ac-
cess to a programmable calculator for the
seminar, lsh, Whitkanack, Fri. from 6-9,
and Sat. and Sun. from 9-noon and from 1:30-
5.
Los Angeles Metropolitan College
Introduction to Business (BUS 001). A
survey of business, including forms of
business organization, finance, personnel
problems, marketing, managerial aids and
business-government relations. This course
is required for LAMC business and business
data processing majors. 3sh, Allison,
Tue./Thu., 6:30-9:30.
Principles of Business Data Processing I
Origin, development, philosophy and con-
stitutional basis of evidence; constitu-
tional and procedural considerations af-
fecting arrest, search, and seizure; kinds
and degrees of evidence and rules govern-
ing admissibility; judicial decisions in-
terpreting individual rights and case stu-
dies. This course is required for LAMC
administrative justice majors. ADM JUS 001
and ADM JUS 002 are recommended prere-
quisites. 3sh,Vogel . Mon./Wed. , 6:30- 9:30.
Political and Social History of the U.S.
II (HIST 012). The political, social and
constitutional history of the U.S. since
the Civil War. This course fulfills LAMC
hi story/political science requirement.
3sh, Murphy, Tue./Thu., 6:30-9:30.
Elements of Supervision (SUPV 001). Re-
sponsibilities of a supervisor in indus-
try, such as organization, duties, human
relations, grievances, training, rating,
promotion, quality-quantity control, man-
agement - employee relations. This course
fulfills LAMC general business and super-
vision majors. 3sh, Johnson, Tue./Thu.
6:30-9:30.
Beginning Photography (PHOTO 010). Basic
camera and laboratory photo techniques.
Students must have a camera with 1 ight con-
trol features that can be critically focus-
ed. This course fulfills humanities re-
quirement. Classes do not start until Aug-
ust 22. 3sh, lecture-lab, Riede, Mon. 6:30
to 9:30 at Hobby Center and Sat. morning
from 9 until noon.
Physical Geology (GEOL 001). The earth's
surface features and the geological princi-
ples explaining their origin and develop-
ment. This course fulfills LAMC natural
science requirement. 3sh, Lippincott, Mon.
Wed., 6:30-9:30.
(BUS DP 001).Principies of data process-
ing as used in business and industry, in-
cluding punched card data processing and
electronics computers and their applica-
tions to business systems. Elements and
capabilities of the new electronic comput-
ers, programming, and systems design and
flow charting. This course is required for
LAMC business data processing majors. 3sh
Sisson, Mon/Wed., 6:30-9:30.
General Psychology I (PSYCH 001). Princi-
ples of psychology, development of person-
ality, achievement of a fulfilling life
style, emotional patterns, mental health,
and illness; human relationships, the func-
tioning of intelligence, learning, problem
solving, motivation, and the physiological
basis of behavior. This course fulfills
LAMC general education elective. 3sh,
Swett, Mon./Wed., 6:30-9:30.
Legal Aspects of Evidence (ADM JUS 003),
General Iy» the college classes are held at the A.T. Mahan High School. Most of the classes are small. (Photo by J03 Jackson)