Sage Publications, Inc. Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University
Sage Publications, Inc. Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University
Sage Publications, Inc. Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].
Sage Publications, Inc. and Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University are collaborating
with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Administrative Science Quarterly.
http://www.jstor.org
Consider organized anarchies. These are ventions of necessity. The third property is
organizations-or decision situations-char- fluid participation. Participants vary in the
acterized by three general properties.' The amount of time and effort they devote to
first is problematic preferences. In the organi- different domains; involvement varies from
zation it is difficult to impute a set of prefer- one time to another. As a result, the bounda-
ences to the decision situation that satisfies ries of the organization are uncertain and
the standard consistency requirements for a changing; the audiences and decision makers
theory of choice. The organization operates for any particular kind of choice change
on the basis of a variety of inconsistent and capriciously.
ill-defined preferences. It can be described These properties of organized anarchy
better as a loose collection of ideas than as a have been identified often in studies of orga-
coherent structure; it discovers preferences nizations. They are characteristic of any or-
through action more than it acts on the basis ganization in part-part of the time. They are
of preferences. particularly conspicuous in public, edu-
The second property is unclear technology. cational, and illegitimate organizations. A
Although the organization manages to sur- theory of organized anarchy will describe a
vive and even produce, its own processes are portion of almost any organization's activities,
not understood by its members. It operates but will not describe all of them.
on the basis of simple trial-and-error proce- To build on current behavioral theories of
dures, the residue of learning from the acci- organizations in order to accomodate the con-
dents of past experience, and pragmatic in- cept of organized anarchy, two major phe-
nomena critical to an understanding of an-
1 We are indebted to Nancy Block, Hilary Cohen, archy must be investigated. The first is the
and James Glenn for computational, editorial, and manner in which organizations make choices
intellectual help; to the Institute of Sociology, Uni-
versity of Bergen, and the Institute of Organization without consistent, shared goals. Situations
and IndustrialSociology, Copenhagen School of Eco- of decision making under goal ambiguity are
nomics, for institutional hospitality and useful dis- common in complex organizations. Often
cussions of organizationalbehavior; and to the Ford problems are resolved without recourse to
Foundation for the financial support that made our explicit bargaining or to an explicit price sys-
collaborationfeasible. We also wish to acknowledge
the helpful comments and suggestions of S0ren tem market-two common processes for de-
Christensen, James S. Coleman, Harald Enderud, cision making in the absence of consensus.
Ka'reRommetveit, and William H. Starbuck. The second phenomenon is the way members
1
of an organization are activated. This entails viewed conveniently as vehicles for solving
the question of how occasional members be- well-defined problems or structures within
come active and how attention is directed which conflict is resolved through bargaining,
toward, or away from, a decision. It is impor- they also provide sets of procedures through
tant to understand the attention patterns which participants arrive at an interpretation
within an organization, since not everyone is of what they are doing and what they have
attending to everything all of the time. done while in the process of doing it. From
Additional concepts are also needed in a this point of view, an organization is a collec-
normative theory of organizations dealing tion of choices looking for problems, issues
with organized anarchies. First, a normative and feelings looking for decision situations
theory of intelligent decision making under in which they might be aired, solutions look-
ambiguous circumstances (namely, in situa- ing for issues to which they might be the
tions in which goals are unclear or unknown) answer, and decision makers looking for
should be developed. Can we provide some work.
meaning for intelligence which does not de- Such a view of organizational choice fo-
pend on relating current action to known cuses attention on the way the meaning of a
goals? Second, a normative theory of atten- choice changes over time. It calls attention
tion is needed. Participants within an organi- to the strategic effects of timing, through the
zation are constrained by the amount of time introduction of choices and problems, the
they can devote to the various things de- time pattern of available energy, and the im-
manding attention. Since variations in behav- pact of organizational structure.
ior in organized anarchies are due largely to To understand processes within organiza-
questions of who is attending to what, deci- tions, one can view a choice opportunity as a
sions concerning the allocation of attention garbage can into which various kinds of
are prime ones. Third, organized anarchies problems and solutions are dumped by par-
require a revised theory of management. Sig- ticipants as they are generated. The mix of
nificant parts of contemporary theories of garbage in a single can depends on the mix
management introduce mechanisms for con- of cans available, on the labels attached to
trol and coordination which assume the exis- the alternative cans, on what garbage is cur-
tence of well-defined goals and a well-defined rently being produced, and on the speed
technology, as well as substantial participant with which garbage is collected and removed
involvement in the affairs of the organization. from the scene.
Where goals and technology are hazy and Such a theory of organizational decision
participation is fluid, many of the axioms and making must concern itself with a relatively
standard procedures of management collapse. complicated interplay among the generation
This article is directed to a behavioral of problems in an organization, the deploy-
theory of organized anarchy. On the basis of ment of personnel, the production of solu-
several recent studies, some elaborations and tions, and the opportunities for choice. Al-
modifications of existing theories of choice though it may be convenient to imagine that
are proposed. A model for describing deci- choice opportunities lead first to the genera-
sion making within organized anarchies is tion of decision alternatives, then to an exam-
developed, and the impact of some aspects of ination of their consequences, then to an
organizational structure on the process of evaluation of those consequences in terms of
choice within such a model is examined. objectives, and finally to a decision, this type
of model is often a poor description of what
THE BASIC IDEAS actually happens. In the garbage can model,
Decision opportunities are fundamentally on the other hand, a decision is an outcome
ambiguous stimuli. This theme runs through (1971), Olsen ( 1970, 1971), and Rommetveit
several recent studies of organizational (1971). The ideas, however, have a broader par-
choice.2 Although organizations can often be entage. In particular, they obviously owe a debt to
Allison (1969), Coleman (1957), Cyert and March
2 We have based the model heavily on seven re-
(1963), Lindblom (1965), Long (1958), March
cent studies of univers-ties: Christensen ( 1971), and Simon (1958), Schilling (1968), Thompson
Cohen and March (1972), Enderud (1971), Mood (1967), and Vickers (1965).
or interpretation of several relatively inde- Four basic variables are considered; each is
pendent streams within an organization. a function of time.
Attention is limited here to interrelations A stream of choices. Some fixed number, m,
among four such streams. of choices is assumed. Each choice is charac-
Problems. Problems are the concern of peo- terized by (a) an entry time, the calendar
ple inside and outside the organization. They time at which that choice is activated for de-
might arise over issues of lifestyle; family; cision, and (b) a decision structure, a list of
frustrations of work; careers; group relations participants eligible to participate in making
within the organization; distribution of status, that choice.
jobs, and money; ideology; or current crises A stream of problems. Some number, w, of
of mankind as interpreted by the mass media problems is assumed. Each problem is char-
or the nextdoor neighbor. All of these require acterized by (a) an entry time, the calendar
attention. time at which the problem becomes visible,
Solutions. A solution is somebody's product. (b) an energy requirement, the energy re-
A computer is not just a solution to a problem quired to resolve a choice to which the prob-
in payroll management, discovered when lem is attached (if the solution stream is as
needed. It is an answer actively looking for high as possible), and (c) an access struc-
a question. The creation of need is not a curi- ture, a list of choices to which the problem
osity of the market in consumer products; it has access.
is a general phenomenon of processes of A rate of flow of solutions. The verbal
choice. Despite the dictum that you cannot theory assumes a stream of solutions and a
find the answer until you have formulated matching of specific solutions with specific
the question well, you often do not know problems and choices. A simpler set of
what the question is in organizational prob- assumptions is made and focus is on the
lem solving until you know the answer. rate at which solutions are flowing into
Participants. Participants come and go. the system. It is assumed that either because
Since every entrance is an exit somewhere of variations in the stream of solutions or
else, the distribution of "entrances" depends because of variations in the efficiency of
on the attributes of the choice being left as search procedures within the organization,
much as it does on the attributes of the new different energies are required to solve the
choice. Substantial variation in participation same problem at different times. It is further
stems from other demands on the partici- assumed that these variations are consistent
pants' time (rather than from features of the for different problems. Thus, a solution co-
decision under study). efficient, ranging between 0 and 1, which
Choice opportunities. These are occasions operates on the potential decision energies
when an organization is expected to produce to determine the problem solving output (ef-
behavior that can be called a decision. Op- fective energy) actually realized during any
portunities arise regularly and any organiza- given time period is specified.
tion has ways of declaring an occasion for A stream of energy from participants. It
choice. Contracts must be signed; people is assumed that there is some number, v, of
hired, promoted, or fired; money spent; and participants. Each participant is character-
responsibilities allocated. ized by a time series of energy available for
Although not completely independent of organizational decision making. Thus, in each
each other, each of the streams can be viewed time period, each participant can provide
as independent and exogenous to the system. some specified amount of potential energy to
Attention will be concentrated here on exam- the organization.
ining the consequences of different rates and Two varieties of organizational segmenta-
patterns of flows in each of the streams and tion are reflected in the model. The first is
different procedures for relating them. the mapping of choices onto decision makers,
THE GARBAGE CAN the decision structure. The decision structure
A simple simulation model can be specified of the organization is described by D, a
in terms of the four streams and a set of v-by-m array in which dij is 1 if the ith
garbage processing assumptions. participant is eligible to participate in the
Access structure
All Unsegmented Hierarchical Specialized
Light 0.55 0.38 0.61 0.65
Load Moderate 0.30 0.04 0.27 0.60
Heavy 0.36 0.35 0.23 0.50
All 0.40 0.26 0.37 0.58
Mean Proportion
Mean decision Mean of choices
problem maker decision by flight
activity activity difficulty or oversight
Light 114.9 60.9 19.5 .45
Load Moderate 204.3 63.8 32.9 .70
Heavy 211.1 76.6 46.1 .64
lems to track each other through choices. ample, the effect of overall load, other phe-
Subject to structural restrictions on the track- nomena are much more dependent on the
ing, decision makers work on active problems particular combination of structures involved.
in connection with active choices; both deci- Although high segmentation of access struc-
sion makers and problems tend to move to- ture generally produces slow decision time,
gether from choice to choice. Thus, one for instance, a specialized access structure,
would expect decision makers who have a in combination with an unsegmented decision
feeling that they are always working on the structure, produces quick decisions.
same problems in somewhat different con- Sixth, important problems are more likely
texts, mostly without results. Problems, in to be solved than unimportant ones. Problems
a similar fashion, meet the same people which appear early are more likely to be
wherever they go with the same result. resolved than later ones. Considering only
Fourth, there are some important inter- those cases involving access hierarchy where
connections among three key aspects of the importance is defined for problems, the rela-
efficiency of the decision processes specified. tion between problem importance and order
The first is problem activity, the amount of of arrival is shown in Table 3. The system, in
time unresolved problems are actively at-
tached to choice situations. Problem activity TABLE 3. PROPORTION OF PROBLEMS RE-
is a rough measure of the potential for deci- SOLVED UNDER FOUR CONDITIONS OF CHOICE
sion conflict in the organization. The second AND PROBLEM ENTRY TIMES, BY IMPOR-
aspect is problem latency, the amount of time TANCE OF PROBLEM AND ORDER OF ARRIVAL
problems spend activated but not linked to OF PROBLEM (FOR HIERARCHICAL ACCESS)
choices. The third aspect is decision time,
the persistence of choices. Presumably, a Time of arrival
good organizational structure would keep of problem
both problem activity and problem latency Early, Late,
low through rapid problem solution in its first 10 last 10
choices. In the garbage can process such a High,
result was never observed. Segmentation of Importance first 10 0.46 0.44
the access structure tends to reduce the num- of Low,
ber of unresolved problems active in the problem last 10 0.48 0.25
organization but at the cost of increasing
the latency period of problems and, in most
cases the time devoted to reaching decisions. effect, produces a queue of problems in terms
On the other hand, segmentation of the deci- of their importance, to the disadvantage of
sion structure tends to result in decreasing late-arriving, relatively unimportant prob-
problem latency, but at the cost of increasing lems, and particularly so when load is heavy.
problem activity and decision time. This queue is the result of the operation of
Fifth, the process is frequently sharply the model. It was not imposed as a direct
interactive. Although some phenomena asso- assumption.
ciated with the garbage can are regular and Seventh, important choices are less likely
flow through nearly all of the cases, for ex- to resolve problems than unimportant
&tO0 / -
X) / ' Importantpeople,
C)n more time
With this specification, the garbage can schools have a moderate level of problem
model can be used to predict the differences activity, a moderate level of decision by reso-
expected among the several types of school. lution. In relation to their earlier state, how-
The results are found in Table 5. They sug- ever, large, rich schools are certainly de-
gest that under conditions of prosperity, prived. Problem activity and decision time
overt conflict (problem activity) will be sub- have increased greatly; the proportion of de-
stantially higher in poor schools than in rich cisions which resolve problems has decreased
ones, and decision time will be substantially from 68 percent to 21 percent; administrators
longer. Large, rich schools will be character- are less able to move around from one deci-
ized by a high degree of problem latency. sion to another. In all these terms, the relative
Most decisions will resolve some problems. deprivation of the presidents of large, rich
What happens to this group of schools un- schools is much greater, in the early stages of
der conditions of adversity-when slack is adversity, than that of administrators in other
reduced? According to earlier arguments, schools.
slack could be expected to affect each of the The large, poor schools are in the worst
organizational variables. It first increases net absolute position under adversity. They have
energy load, as resources become shorter and a high level of problem activity, a substantial
thus problems require a larger share of avail- decision time, a low level of decision maker
able energy to solve, but this effect is later mobility, and a low proportion of decisions
compensated by the reduction in market de- being made by resolution. But along most of
mand for personnel and in the relative attrac- these dimensions, the change has been less
tiveness of the school as an arena for prob- for them.
lems. The market effects also reduce the The small rich schools experience a large
differences in market demand for important increase in problem activity, an increase in
Outcome
Deci-
sion
style
propor- Deci-
Organi- tion sion Deci-
Type of school/ zational resolu- Problem Problem maker sion
type of situation type tion activity latency activity time
Large, rich universities
Good times 0200 0.68 0 154 100 0
Bad times, early 1110 0.21 210 23 58 34
Bad times, late 0111 0.65 57 60 66 14
Large, poor universities
Good times 1112 0.38 210 25 66 31
Bad times, early 2112 0.24 248 32 55 38
Bad times, late 1111 0.31 200 30 58 28
Small, rich colleges
Good times 0002 1.0 0 0 100 0
Bad times, early 1002 0 310 0 90 20
Bad times, late 0001 1.0 0 0 100 0
Small, poor colleges
Good times 1221 0.54 158 127 15 83
Bad times, early 2211 0.61 101 148 73 52
Bad times, late 1211 0.62 78 151 76 39
tions in which the preconditions of the gar- The following are ten summary statistics:
bage can process cannot be eliminated. In
some, such as pure research, or the family, 1. (KT) Problem persistence, the total
they should not be eliminated. The great ad- number of time periods a problem is acti-
vantage of trying to see garbage can phe- vated and attached to a choice, summed over
nomena together as a process is the possibil- all problems.
ity that that process can be understood, that 2. (KU) Problem latency, the total num-
organizational design and decision making ber of time periods a problem is activated,
can take account of its existence and that, to but not attached to a choice, summed over
some extent, it can be managed. all problems.
3. (KV) Problem velocity, the total num-
APPENDIX ber of times any problem shifts from one
Version five of the Fortran program for the choice to another.
garbage can model reads in entry times for 4. (KW) Problem failures, the total num-
choices, solution coefficients, entry times for ber of problems not solved at the end of the
problems, and two control variables, NA and twenty time periods.
IO. NA controls various combinations of free- 5. (KX) Decision maker velocity, the total
dom of movement for decision makers and number of times any decision maker shifts
problems. All results are based on runs in from one choice to another.
which NA is 1. Comment cards included in 6. (KS) Decision maker inactivity, the
the program describe other possibilities. The total number of time periods a decision maker
latter variable, IO, controls output. At the is not attached to a choice, summed over all
value 1, only summary statistics are printed. decision makers.
At the value 2, full histories of the decision 7. (KY) Choice persistence, the total num-
process are printed for each organizational ber of time periods a choice is activated,
variant. summed over all choices.
J A( I . J)=O
IF(JA&EO.I) GO ro 532
IF(JA.EQ.2) GO TO 534
JIAC .J)=t
GO TO 550
532 IF I ( I-Jb.GT.( 12)) GO TO 550
JIA.AJ)=1
I
GO TO 550
534 IF(I.NE.(2*J)) GO TO 550
JIA( I .JJ)=
JI A( I-I , J)=1
550 CONTINUE
560 CONTINUE
DO 590 1=I.NDM
DO 580 J=.NTP
XEA( I .J)-0.55
I F (JFE Qo I )GO TO 580
X X A= I
IIF(JE.EO.O)GO TO 570
XEA( I .J)=( 1I1 O-XXA)/1o0-
GO TO 580
570 XEA( I .J)=XXA/1O.O
580 CONTINUE
590 CONTINUE
C *** FINISH READ INITIALIZATION
DO 994 LT=I.NTP
1006 FOPMATC2X.6HCHOICE.2X,13.2X.6HACTIVE
C CHOICE ACTIVATION
DO 101 1-I.NCH
IF(ICH(I){NE-LT)GO TO 101
ICS( I )=1
101 CONTINUE
C PROD. ACTIVATION
DO 110 J=1.NPR
IF(JET(J).NE.LT)GO TO 110
JPS( J)=1
110 CONTINUF
C FIND MOST ATTRACTIVE CHOICE FOR PROBLEM J
00 120 J-l.NPR
IF (JPS(J).NEaI) GO TO 120
IF(NA.EQ.2)GO TO 125
IF(NA.EQ.4)GO TO 125
GO TO 126
125 IF(JF(J).NE.O)GO TO 127
126 S=10C0000
00 121 I=1.NCH
IF (ICS(I).NE.I) GO TO 121
IF(JIA(JI).EQ.0)GO TO 121
IF(JF(J).E.0)GO TO 122
IF(JF(J)*EO.I)GO TO 122
IF((xERP(J)*XERC(1)-XEE(1)).GE.S)GO TO 121
GO TO 123
122 IF((XERC(I)-XEE(I)).GE.S)GO TO 121
S=XERC( I )-XEE( I)
GO TO 124
123 S=XERP( J)+XERC( I )-XEE( I)
124 JFF(J)=I
121 CONTINUE
GO TO 120
127 JFF(J)=JF(J)
120 CONTINUE
DO 130 J=1NPR
131 JF( J)=JFF( J)
130 JFF(J)=O
LTT=LT-1
IF(LTEQ 1 )LTT=1
C FIND MOST ATTRACTIVE CHOICE FOR DMKR K
00 140 K=INDM
IF(NAoEOQ3)GO TO 145
IF(NA.EQa.) GO TO 145
GO TO 146
145 IF(KDC(K)eNEe0)GO TO 147
146 S=1000000
DO 141 1=1,NCH
IF (ICS(I).NE.1) GO TO 141
IF(IKA(IK)eEQe0)GO TO 141
IF(KDC(K).E(O0)GO TO 142
IF(KDC(K).EQ.I)GO TO 142
148 IF((XFRC(l)-XEE(l)-(XEA(K.LTT)*XSC(LTT)))eGE.S)GO TO 141
GO TO 143
142 IF((XERC(I)-XEE(I)).GE.S)GO TO 141
S=XERC( I )-XEE( I)
GO TO 144
143 S=XERC(I)-XEE(I)-XEA(KLTT)*XSC(LTT)
144 KDCW(K)=l
141 CONTINUE
GO TO 140
147 KOCW(K)=KDC(K)
140 CONTINUF
DO 150 K=1.NDM
151 KDC( K)=KDCW(K)
IF(KDC(K)oNEeO)GO TO 150
XR=XR( XEA(K*LT)*XSC(LT))
KS=KS+ 1
150 KDCW(K)=O
C ESTABLISHING THE ENERGY REQUIRED TO MAKE EACH CHOICE.
DO 199 I=1.NCH
IF( ICS( I )*EQOO )GO TO 199
XERC( I )=O-O
DO 160 J=19NPR
IF (JPS(J)*NE*1) GO TO 160
IF(JF(J)&NE.I)GO TO 160
XERC( I )=XERC( I )+XERP( J)
160 CONTINUE
DO 170 K=1NDM
IF(IKA(I9K)eEQO0)GO TO 170
IF(KnC(K)oNE.I)GO TO 170
XEE( I )=XEE( I )+XSC(LT)*XEA(KLT)
170 CONTINUE
199 CONTINUE
C MAKING DECISIONS
DO 299 1=INCH
IF (ICS(I).NE.1) GO TO 299
IF(XERC(I)oGToXEE(I))GO TO 299
XS=XS+XEE( I )-XERC( I)
ICS( I )=2
DO 250 J-1NPR
IF(JF(J).NEI)GO TO 250
JPS( J)=2
250 CONTINUE
IF(NA.EQ.3)GO TO 261
IF(NA*EQ.4)GO TO 261
GO TO 299
261 D0 262 K=1-NDM
IF(KDC(K).NE.I)GO TO 262
KDCW( K) =
262 CONTINUE
299 CONTINUE
DO 200 I=I.NCH
200 KADC(LT.I)=ICS(I)
DO 210 K=1.NDM
KaBBC( LT K )=KDC( K)
IF(KOCW(K).EQ.O)GO TO 210
KDC( K )=O
210 KDCW(K)=O
DO 220 J-1.NPR
KCBC( LT . J )=JF( J )
IF(JPS(J).EQ.o) GO TO 230
IF(JPS(J)EQo.l) GO TO 220
KC5C( LT. J )-1000
GO TO 220
230 KCBC(LTJ)=-I
220 CONTINUE
994 CONTINUE
C FINISH TIME PERIOD LOOP. BEGIN ACCUMULATION OF 10 SUMMARY STATISTICS.
KZ=O
KY=O
KX=O
KW=O
KV=O
KU=O
KT=o
DO 310 1=1lNTP
DO 320 J=1.NCH
IF(KABC(I.J)*NE.I)GO TO 320
KY=KY+I
IF(I.NE.NTP)GO TO 320
KZ=KZ+
320 CONTINUE
310 CONTINUE
00 330 1=2.NTP
D0 340 J=1.NDM
IF(K89C(l*J).EQ.K5BC(I-t J))GO TO 340
KX =KX*
340 CONTINUE
330 CONTINUE
D0 350 l=2.NTP
00 360 J-1.NPR
IF(KCDC(IJ).*E-O .)G0 TO 351
IF(KC9C(IJ)EQ*.-1) GO TO 360
IF(KC9C(IJ).EQ.1000) GO TO 352
KT-KT+ 1
GO TO 360
351 KU=KU+I
GO TO 360
352 IF(I.NE.NTP)G0 TO 360
KW=KW+ l
360 CONTINUE
350 CONTINUE
KW=NPR-KW
DO 370 1t2.NTP
00 380 J=1.NPR
IF(KCBC(I.J).EQ.KCBC(I-I.J))GO TO 380
KV=KV+I
380 CONTINUE
370 CONTINUE
C BEGIN WRITEOUT OF MATERIALS FOR THIS ORGANIZATIONAL VARIANT.
1000 FORMAT(IHI)
1019 FORMAT(2X.'LOAD='.II.' PR.ACC.='.1.' DEC.STR.='*II.' EN.DIST.'.
BI 1 .2X. 'STATS 1-10 ,3X.815, 1 X2F6.2/)
WRITE(6.1019)I8.JA.JDo.JEKZ.KY.KXKW.KV.KU.KT.KS.XR.XS
IF(IflEQ.1) GO TO 995
2000 FORMAT(' CHOICE ACTIVATION HISTORY.34X.'DEC.MAKER ACTIVITY HISTOR
BY',' 20 TIME PERIODSlO CHOICES*,33X.'20 TIME PERIODS,10 DEC. MAKE
CRS '/6 O- INACTIVE. =ACT IVE. 2=MADE * 33X. 'O=I NACTI VE. X=WORHI NG ON CHO
DICE X'//9X,' 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10.3OX,'81 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 100/)
WRI TEA 6.2000 )
2001 FORMAT( 5X.12.3X.I012*25X.I2.3X.10I21
WRITE(6.2001)(LT.(KABC(LTJ).J=1.NCH).LT.( KB8BC(LT.J).J=lNDM),
S LT=1.NTP )
2002 FORMAT(/' PROBLEM HISTORY:ROS=TIMECOLS=PRO8S.. -I=NOT ENTERED.,
BO-UNATTACHEDX=ATT oTO CHoX **=SOLVEDS/ lOX,
C' 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 201/)
WRITE(6. 2002)
2003 FQRMATC20(5X.I2.3X.20( IX.I2)/))
WRITE(6.2003)(LT,(KCBC(LT.J).J=1.NPR).LT=INTP)
WRI TE( 6.1000)
995 CONTINUE
996 CONTINUE
997 CONTINUE
998 CONTINUE
STOP
END
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
12345678901 234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890
008.005.006.007.004.009.002.010.003.001
1.000.900.700.300.100. 1OOo300.700.901 00
O. 600.o600.600600.600. 600. 600. 600. 600.60
009.005.008.007.010.003.003.001.007.009
006. 008 .005.002. 004. 002. 00401 0. 006.001
1 2