CATALOG 1952-1953 IN. 535.-Curriculum Symposium in Industrial Education. 3 or 6 credits. Prerequisite: IN. 506 and one graduate Education course in curriculum. Of- fered 3. A staff symposium concerning the industrial arts and vocational-industrial curriculum in its wider implications, comprising review of the current situation and advanced study and research of a projective nature, proceeding from basic educational concepts to spe- cifics of the field. IN. 553.-Industrial-Technical Resources. 3 or 6 credits. Prerequisite: IN. 506 or permission of the instructor. Offered 2, 3. A first-hand study of industrial-technical resources with reference to educational value and context; laboratory work conducted through visitation, observation, evaluation, and report. INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING Instructional Staff 1951-52 Martinson, E. P., Head; Cummings, R. J., Eshleman, S. K., Gregg, R., Hummel, J. 0. P. IG. 321.-Work Simplification and Standardization. 3 hours. 3 credits. Prerequisite: Upper Division classification. Offered 1. For students not majoring in Industrial Engineering. Process analysis, operation analysis, and time standardization procedures. Barnes, Motion & Time Study. IG. 322.-Plant Development and Operation. 3 hours. 3 credits. Pre- requisite: Upper Division classification. Offered 1. For students not majoring in Industrial Engineering. The factors affecting plant location, layout and operation. Hempel, Top Management Planning. IG. 370.-Job Evaluation. 2 hours. 2 credits. Prerequisite: Upper Division classification. Offered 1, 2, 3. Analysis of the mental and physical requirements, responsibilities and working con- ditions of jobs and the several systems of determining the relative worth of jobs. Wage determination. Job evaluation plan installation and maintenance. Patton and Smith, Job Evaluation. IG. 460.-Engineering Economic Analysis. 3 hours. 3 credits. Prerequi- site. Senior classification. Offered 1, 2. Special projects, lectures and the solution of problems. The economical aspect of technical projects; the importance of alternatives being studied by economic, intangible and financial analyses is stressed. "Will it pay?" and "Can it be financed?" questions are analyzed from the management viewpoint. Bollinger, Engineering Economic Analysis. IG. 463.-Specifications, Engineering Relations and Industrial Safety. 3 hours. 3 credits. Prerequisite: Senior classification. Offered 1, 2, 3. Specifications for materials and construction of engineering projects; advertising and letting contracts; agreements and contractual relations. Engineering ethics. Or- ganization of safety work in industry; accident causes and legal responsibility of em- ployer and employee. Heinrich, Industrial Accident Prevention. Crawford, Legal Phases of Engineering. The statement "Offered 1" means offered first semester; 2, second semester; 3, summer session.