MASTER C.Op) SPeCIAL PA061W4~
Uniyersity of Washington
BULLETIN
TIME SCHEDULE
AUTUMN QUARTER 1968
Classes begin Monday, September 30 Final Examinations begin Thursday, December 12
Quarter ends Thursday, December 19
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON BULLETIN
General Series No.1 058 APRIL 1968
Published semimonthly in August, September, and October and monthly the balance of the year at Seattle, Washington, by the University of Washington. Second-class postage paid at Seattle, Washington 98105.
CHANGES IN UNIVERSITY REGULATIONS
The University atzd its colleges a1Zd schools reserve tlte righe to c/za1Zge the fees, rules, and calendar regtllatittg admission alld registrati01t, itlstruction itt, and graduatiotJ from the University and its various divisions, a7Zd to change any other regulatiolzs affecting the student body. Chattges shall go into force whenever the proper authorities so determine, and shall apply 1Z0t ollly to prospective students btlt also to those who at that time arc matricttlated itt lhe University. The University also reserves the right to withdra~lJ courses at any lime.
A gradtlate stude1t! mllst satisfy the reqrdreme1Zts for an advattCed degree which are in force at the time the degree is to be awarded.
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GENERAL REGISTRATION DIRECTIONS See each quarter's registration poster for exact dates and deadlines.
It is the University's expectation that a student will follow University rules and regulations as they are stated in the General Catalog. In instances where no appeal procedure is spelled out and the student is persuaded that a special set of circumstances makes appeal reasonable, he may appeal the application of specific rules or regulations to the Office of the Dean of the School or College in which he is enrolled in the case of an academic matter, or to the Office of Student Affairs in the case of a nonacademic matter. These offices will either render a decision on the appeal or refer the student to the proper office for a decision.
1. All matriculated students currently in school who plan to register for the following quarter (Summer Quarter excepted) must register by Advance Registration: and pay fees by the stated deadline or be subject to a $15.00 Service Charge to register InPerson, except: a. Students initially entering the Schools of Den
tistry, Law, or Medicine, and those initially granted Graduate or Unclassified-5 status.
b. Students on scholastic probation who are prohibited from participating in Advance Registration by their academic deans, and who present an adviser-approved waiver (orange IB NI card) of the $15.00 Service Charge to Sections before the close of Advance Registration.
c. Students whose Advance Registration is cancelled when they are dropped for low scholarship, and who are subsequently reinstated and permitted to reregister.
d. Graduate students registering in absentia, with the approval of the Dean of the Graduate School.
e. Students who withdraw during the current quarter prior to the end of Advance Registration who may elect either Advance or In-Person Registration.
2. All nonmatriculated students currently in school who plan to register for the following quarter must obtain an appointment and register in person. All former matriculated and nonmatriculated students not currently registered must make application by the deadline and register in person. (For information call 543-5920.) All new entering students must apply by the deadline and register in person. An In-Person appointment will be mailed with the Notice of Admission. (For information call 543-5890.)
3. It is your responsibility to plan and select the required courses for your degree objective. Check your General Catalog for degree requirements.
4. Note the following University requirements. a. Every student who has not satisfied the three
quarter lower-division Physical Education Activity graduation requirement is held responsible for including a Physical Education Activity on his Official Program each quarter until this requirement is satisfied.
b. The Selective Service requires full-time registration to maintain student status.
c. Students registering for more than 13 credits must select an afternoon class meeting at 12 :30 p.m. or after, if one is available. Only a daily class or two 2-hour laboratories, except lower-division
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ROTC and Physical Education Activity, will satisfy this afternoon class requirement. vVaiver of the afternoon class requirement must be approved by your dean or his authorized representative.
d. Immigration students with undergraduate status must register for a minimum of 12 credits per quarter; with graduate status, 8 credits.
e. Veterans: Minimum full-time load exclusive of lower-division ROTC and Physical Education activity: P.L. 815 and 894 (Disabled Veterans), 15 credits. Veterans under P.L. 815 or 894 must have their Official Programs approved by their training officer each quarter. P.L. 358 (Veterans Act of 1966),14 credits. P.L. 634 (Children of Deceased and Totally Disabled Veterans), 14 credits. ~ifinill1um requirement to use P.L. 634, 7 credits. Graduate and Summer Quarter students should consult with the Veterans Division regarding minimum credits to be a full-time student.
f. New students and students returning after an absence of one calendar year are required to submit results of a medical examination by a private physician on the University's Health History and Medical Examination form prior to initial registration.
5. Obtain an Official Program at your adviser's office.
6. Print with a BLACK LEAD PENCIL on your Official Program. a. Fill in all personal information, including your
Permanent Student Number and your signature. b. Enter courses and credits in the space provided,
but do not enter secti011S and/or hOllrs. If you have work, transportation, or other activities that \\'ill affect the arrangement of your schedule, note them in the area provided.
c. Print an "R" before required courses and an "E" before elective courses in the column provided.
d. Check to be certain that you have the prerequisites, as indicated in the General Catalog, for the courses you select.
e. List alternate courses which can be substituted in case courses on your original schedule are closed. Indicate whether these alternates are required or elective. The listing of alternate courses may prevent a change of registration.
f. Obtain course permission signatures where indicated in this time schedule. If you are registering for a course out-of-quarter, obtain the reqmred permission form at your advisory office.
g. If you have a known conflict of hours, obtain written permission for the conflict from the departments concerned. Authorization signatures must appear in the course permission area of the Official Program.
h. Take your Official Program to your adviser for his signature.
1. All courses offered within the College of Arts and Sciences which have an Honors designation (excluding English 101H and 103H) require an ASPH permission stamp.
ADVANCE REGISTRATION ONLY
7. a. Take your adviser-approved Official Program to the Administration Building lobby (Engineers go to 208 Guggenheim).
b. Follow posted instructions.
c. In Advance Registration, programs are accepted by class, with graduates and seniors first; then juniors, sophomores, and freshmen. Every effort is made to comply with your requests. If a course is closed an approved alternate course will be substituted.
d. You will be mailed a fee card, a copy of your scheduled Official Program with additional registratiton instructions, and two Information Cards. Read the etlclosed instructions CAREFULLY.
e. Mail your fee card, fee payment, and your two Information Cards to the Cashier in the envelope provided, before the due date indicated. Return your fee card and your I nformation Cards, 'without excepti01t, even though no cash payment may be required.
f. If the above items are received by the date specified on your fee card, your registration will be complete.
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If you find a conflict in hours or an error in credits, pay your fees by the due date anyway. Report to Sections at your earliest convenience for an adjustment of your schedule. You need not wait for the change of program period.
IN·PERSON REGISTRATION ONLY
8. On the day and time of your appointment:
a. Present your approved Official Program and your appointment card or Notice of Admission at the Registration Window in the Administration Building lobby to obtain a Registration Packet.
b. Take the Registration Packet and your Official Program to Sections, 101 Administration Building (Engineers go to 208 Guggenheim Hall).
c. As soon as you are scheduled and receive a copy of your Official Program, report to the Cashier's Office and pay your fees.
CHANGE OF PROGRAM
1. Obtain a Change of Program card at your advisory office and have it approved by your adviser. Obtain permission signatures, where indicated in this Time Schedule, for any courses that you plan to enter. All changes involving Freshman English Composition must be authorized in writing by the Freshman English Department, Padelford Hall. All changes in undergraduate chemistry courses must be cleared at 139 Bagley Hall.
2. Present the Change of Program card at Window 2 in the Administration Building lobby where you will be given an appointment for Sections.
3. A service charge of $5.00 is made for Change of Program.
INDEX AND CODES The University's course and section offerings are printed in the Time Schedule in the sequence below, which,
in general, is in alphabetical order \vithin colleges. The major exceptions are ROTC courses, which appear after the College of Engineering, the Graduate School divisions, and Dentistry and l\1edicine.
The quarterly COURSE CHANGES, and REQUIRED PERlVIISSION SIGNATURES, are also listed in this sequence.
ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING- 256 PRE MAJOR COLLEGE CODE: B 258 PRE MED
ARCH 51 ARCHITECTURE 259 PRE OCCUP THERAPY BT&A 52 BUILDING TECH & ADMIN 260 PRE PHYS THERAPY LARC 53 LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 261 PRE MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY URBP 56 URBAN PLANNING PSYCH 262 PSYCHOLOGY
PMED 263 PREVENTIVE MEDICINE ARTS AND SCIENCES-COLLEGE CODE: C ROMANCE LANGUAGES & LIT
ANTH 102 ANTHROPOLOGY ROM 264 ROMANCE LINGUISTICS & LIT ART 105 ART CATA 266 CATALAN ASTR 107 ASTRONOMY FREN 268 FRENCI-I ATMS 108 ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES ITAL 270 ITALIAN BIOL 112 BIOLOGY PORT 272 PORTUGUESE BOT 115 BOTANY PROV 274 PROVENCAL CHEM 117 CHEMISTRY RMN 275 ROMANIAN
CLASSICS SPAN 276 SPANISH CLASS 118 CLASSICS SCANDINA VI AN LANGUAGES & LIT GRK 119 GREEK SCAND 283 SCANDINAVIAN LAT 120 LATIN DAN 285 DANISH CLAR 121 CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY NORW 289 NORWEGIAN CLLI 122 CLASSICAL LINGUISTICS SWED 291 SWEDISH NE 123 NEAR EAST SOC 293 SOCIOLOGY ARAB 124 ARABIC SPCH 295 SPEECH HEBR 125 HEBREW ZOOL 297 ZOOLOGY PERSN 127 PERSIAN TKISH 128 TURKISH CMU 129 COMMUNICATIONS BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION-ADV 130 ADVERTISING SCHOOL CODE: E JOUR 131 JOURNALISM ACCTG 301 ACCOUNTING RTV 133 RADIO·TELEVISION AORG 302 ADMINISTRATIVE THEORY AND CLIT 134 COMPARATIVE LIT ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR DANCE 135 DANCE (DRAMA) BCMU 306 BUSINESS COMMUNICATIONS DRAMA 136 DRAMA B ECN 307 BUSINESS ECONOMICS DR AR 137 DRA~IA ARTS BG&S 308 BUS. GOVERNMENT & SOCIETY ECON 139 ECONo~ncs BPOL 309 BUSINESS POLICY ENGL 142 ENGLISH-FRESHMAN BACJ 314 BA-CONJOINT ENGL 142 ENGLISH FIN 316 FINANCE FARE 144 FAR EASTERN AND I BUS 324 INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
RUSSIAN INST MKTG 326 MARKETING FAR E & SLAVIC LANGUAGES o MGT 328 OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
BULGR 145 BULGARIAN PERS .130 PERSONNEL AND CHIN 146 CHINESE INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS CZECH 148 CZECH QMETH 332 QUANTITATIVE METHODS HDUR 149 HINDI-URDU 334 UNDECLARED BA HUNGR 150 HUNGARIAN UD 340 URBAN DEVELOPMENT INDIC 151 INDIC RINS 341 RISK AND INSURANCE JAP 152 JAPANESE TRANS 344 TRANSPORTATION KOR 153 KOREAN 349 GRAD-BA MONG 154 MONGOLIAN POLSH 155 POLISH
EDUCATION-COLLEGE CODE: H ROMN 157 ROMANIAN RUSS 159 RUSSIAN EDUC 351 EDUCATION & GRAD SNKRT 160 SANSKRIT EDUCATION SERC 161 SERBO·CROATIAN 353 ANTHROPOLOGY SLAV 162 SLAVIC 354 ART THAI 163 THAI 355 BIOLOGY TAMIL 164 TAMIL 356 BUSINESS EDUCATION TIB 168 TIBETAN 357 CHEMISTRY TKIC 170 TURKIC 359 DRAMA VIET 172 VIETNAMESE 360 ECONOMICS INDN 173 INDIAN 363 ENGLISH
GENERAL EDUCATION 364 FAR EASTERN HUM 178 HUMANITIES 365 FRENCH SOCS 182 SOCIAL SCIENCE 366 GEOGRAPHY GST 185 GENERAL STUDIES 367 GEOLOGY GENET 186 GENETICS 368 GERMAN GEOG 188 GEOGRAPHY 369 HEALTH EDUCATION GEOL 191 GEOLOGY 370 HISTORY GERM 193 GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LIT 371 HOME ECONOMICS HIST 196 HISTORY 372 INDUSTRIAL EDUCATIOX HEC 198 HO~IE ECONOMICS 373 JOURNALISM LA 200 LIBERAL ARTS 374 LATIN LING 203 LINGUISTICS 375 MATHEMATICS MATH 206 MATHEMATICS 376 MUSIC MICRO 216 MICROBIOLOGY 377 PHYSICAL EDUCATION-MEN MUSIC 217 MUSIC 378 PHYSICAL EDUCATION-WOMEN OCEAN 219 OCEANOGRAPHY 379 PHYSICS PHIL 221 PHILOSOPHY 380 POLITICAL SCIENCE PEM 223 PHYSICAL EDUCATION-MEN 382 PRE EDUCATION DANCE 224 DANCE-M 385 PSYCHOLOGY HED 225 HEALTH EDUCATIO~-MEN 386 RUSSIAN RED 227 RECREATION EDUCATION- 387 SPANISH
MEN 388 SOCIOLOGY PEW 229 PHYSICAL EDUCATION- 389 SPEECH EDUCATION
WOMEN 390 SPEECH & HEARING THERAPY DANCE 230 DANCE-W 391 NORWEGIAN HED 231 HEALTH EDUCATION- 392 SWEDISH
WOMEN RED 233 RECREATION EDUCATION- ENGINEERING-COLLEGE CODE: J
WOMEN AA 402 AERONAUTICS AND PHYS 239 PHYSICS
POLS 244 POLITICAL SCIEr\CE ASTRONAUTICS 245 PRE BA CH E 406 CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 246 PRE OCEANOGRAPHY CE 408 CIVIL ENGINEERING 247 PRE DENT EE 410 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 249 PRE DENT HYG GE 414 GENERAL ENGINEERING
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HSS IE ME CERE MTLE METE
416 HUMANISTIC-SOCIAL STUDIES 418 INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING 419 ~IECHANICAL ENGINEERING 420 CER:UlIC ENGINEERING 421 MATERIALS ENGINEERING 422 ~IETALLURGICAL
ENGINEERING MIN E 426 ~IINING ENGINEERING NUC E 428 NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING PROGRAM AS 442 AEROSPACE STUDIES M SCI 444 MILITARY SCIENCE N SCI 446 NAVAL SCIENCE
FISHERIES-COLLEGE CODE: K FISH 452 FISHERIES FD SC 453 FOOD SCIENCE
FOREST RESOURCES-COLLEGE CODE: L FOR R 502 FOREST RESOURCES
NURSING-COLLEGE CODE: N NURS 552 NURSING
556 NURSE AFFILIATES
PHARMACY-COLLEGE CODE: P PHARM 610 PHARMACY PH CH 612 PHARl\IACEUTICAL ClIEM PHCOG 614 PHARMACOGNOSY
RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING PROGRAM (See section directly after the College of Engineering.)
INDEX AND CODES DENTISTRY-COLLEGE CODE: U
D HYG 800 DENTAL HYGIENE D 1\IAT 802 DENTAL MATERIALS DSL 804 DENTAL SCIENCE AND
DENT DTCJ EXDO FPD ODTP
LITERATURE 805 DENTISTRY 807 DENTISTRY-CONJOINT 808 ENDODONTICS 809 FIXED PARTIAL DENTURES 812 ORAL DIAGNOSIS AND
TREATMENT PLANNING OPER 814 OPERATIVE DENTISTRY ORAL B 816 ORAL BIOLOGY OS 818 ORAL SURGERY ORTHO 821 ORTHODONTICS PEDO 824 PEDODONTICS PERIO 826 PERIODONTICS PROS 832 PROSTHODONTICS
LAW-COLLEGE CODE: X LA W 852 LA W
MEDICINE-COLLEGE CODE: Y ANEST 906 ANESTHESIOLOGY BlOC 908 BIOCHEMISTRY n STR 909 nIOLOGICAL STRUCTURE BI liS 910 llIOl\IEDICAL HISTORY CONJ 911 CONJOINT EXP A 912 EXPERIMENTAL ANIMAL MED ~IED l' 913 ~IEDJCAL PRACTICE ~IED T 914 MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY
SOCIAL WORK-(See Graduate School for )Iajor [Master's Only].)
GRADUATE SCHOOL*-COLLEGE CODE: R
1\IED 915 ~IEDICINE :'oIICRO 916 :'olICROnrOLOGY N R 917 NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY on GY 919 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY 651 GRADUATE VISITING
652 GRADUATE UNASSIGNED GPHY 653 GEOPHYSICS
654 PHYSIOLOGY-PSYCHOLOGY 655 RADIATION BIOLOGY 656 BIOMATHEMATICS
RAD S 657 RADIOLOGICAL SCIENCE
o T 920 OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY OPHTH nl OPHTHALMOLOGY ORTHP 922 ORTHOPEDICS OTOL 923 OTOLARYNGOLOGY PATH 924 PATHOLOGY PEDS 925 PEDIATRICS
658 GENERAL & COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY PHCOL 926 PHARMACOLOGY C SCI 659 CO~IPUTER SCIENCE PM&R 928 PHYS 1\IED & REHAB Q SCI 680 QUANTITATIVI': SCIENCES Ii\' FOR. FISH,
& WILD LIFE P T 930 PHYSICAL THERAPY P BIO 932 PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOPHYSICS
LIBR 702 SCHOOL OF LIBRARIANSHI P P ~IED 934 PREVENTIVE 1\IEDICIXE P AFR 740 SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS PSYC 936 PSYCHIATRY PB AD 741 PUBLIC AD~IINISTRATION RADGY 938 RADIOLOGY PB PI. 742 PUBLIC POLlCY SURG 941 SURGERY SOC W 752 SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK UROL 946 UROLOGY
*If majors are the same as undergraduate majors in other colleges or schools, the same major code is used, but is identified as a major in the Graduate School by the College Code.
BUILDING ABBREVIATIONS
Used on Official Programs
AMY ARMORY FRR FINE ARTS BUILDING NX2 NURSING ANNEX 2 AND ANDERSON HALL GCR GOLF COURSE OBS OBSERVATORY ARA ARCHITECTURE ANNEX GDR GOLF DRIVING RANGE OCB OCEANOGRAPRYBARGE ARC ARCHITECTURE HALL GEB GENERAL ENGINEERING OCE OCEANOGRAPHY BUILDING ART ART BUILDING BUILDING OCX OCEANOGRAPHY ANNEX ATA ATMOSPHERIC SCI ANNEX GRH GREENHOUSE PAR P ARRINGTON HALL ATS A TMOSPHERIC SCI BLDG GTH GUTHRIE HALL PCH PURCHASING BLDG BAG BAGLEY HALL GUG GCGGENHEnr HALL PDL PADELFORD HALL BLM BALMER HALL HAG HENRY ART GALLERY PHY PHYSICS BUILDING BNS BENSON HALL HEP HIGH ENERGY PHYSICS LAB PH3 PHYSICS ANNEX 3 CDR CONDON HALL HMH HOME MANAGEMENT HOUSE PLH GLENN HUGHES PLAYHOUSE CHS COACH HOUSE HSB HEALTH SCIENCES BLDG PRI FARRINGTON ANNEX 1 CLK CLARK HALL HUB STUDENT UNION BUILDING PRA PARRINGTON ANNEX A CL8 CLINIC 8 HUT HUTCHINSON HALL PRB FARRINGTON ANNEX B CNH CANOE HOUSE HYD HARRIS HYDRAULICS PTH PENTHOUSE CMU COMMUNICATIONS BLDG L.f\BORATORY RAI RAITT HALL CRH CRE\V HOUSE ICD INSTITUTE OF CHILD ROB ROBERTS HALL CYB CYCLOTRON BUILDING DEVELOPMENT SAV SAVERY HALL DEN DENNY HALL (PSYCH DEV LAB) SHB SHOWBOAT DQH DRAMA QUONSET HUT Ii'.IA I:\TRAMURAL ACTIVITIES S)'H SMITH HALL DRG DRUG LABORATORY BUILDING SPC SPEECH CLINIC DTV DRAMA-TV BUILDING JHN JOHNSON HALL TGB TUBBY GRAVES BUILDING ECB ENGINEERING CLASSROOM
BUILDING LIB SVZZALLO LIBRARY THO THorvrsoN HALL EDP EDMUNDSON PAVILION :MEB 1IECHANICAL ENGIKEERli'\G UPB UNIVERSITY PRESS BLDG EEB ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING BUILDING UWH UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL
BUILDING MKZ ).IACKENZIE HALL \VCL WILSON CERAMIC EGA ENGINEERING ANNEX 1[LR 1IILLER HALL LABORATORY EGL EAGLESON HALL AfOR MORE HALL \VFS WINKEN\VERDER FOREST FIS FISHERIES CENTER MRN 1IARTNE SCIENCE BUILDING SCIENCE BUILDING FPL FOREST PRODUCTS MUS 1JL'S~C BUILDING WIL WILSONIAN BALLROOM
LABORATORY NRB NUCI~EAR REACTOR WSM WASHINGTON STATE FRH FRIDAY HARBOR BUILDING MUSEU1I
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COURSE CHANGES The following pages describe:
1. NEW COURSES. These courses have been added to the University curriculum since publication of the 1967-69 General Catalog.
2. COURSE NUIVIBER CHANGES. Descriptions of these courses are found in the 1967-69 General Catalog under the former number, which is indicated here. Use the ne'w course number on your Official Program.
Courses listed here are those formally approved as of April 4, 1968.
COLLEGE OF ARCIDTECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING
ARCIDTECTURE CHG 150 Replaces 100
eHG 151 Replaces 101
NEW 152 Environmental Design Professions (3)
Survey of professional role in shaping physical environment.
CHG 300,301,302 Introduction to Design-Lab-
oratory (4,4,4) Replace 124, 125, 126
Laboratory in design theories and processes: the technological, social-behavioral, and visual-aesthetic determinants of design, involving methods of programming, systems analysis, and visual communication. Prerequisite, permission.
eHG 305,306,307 Introduction to Design (1,1,1)
Replace 124, 125, 126
Lectures in design theories and processes: the technological, social-behavioral, and visualaesthetic determinants of design, involving methods of programming, systems analysis, and visual communication. Prerequisite, permission.
eHG 310,311,312 Introduction to Design
Graphics (1,1,1) Replace 124,125,126
Lectures in theories and processes of graphic communication for designers: lettering, drafting, photography organization for communication, multi-view drawing, sketching, media, etc. Prerequisite, permission.
eHG 320 Introduction to Structural Theory I (3)
Replaces 276
Vectors, equilibrium of forces, graphic and analytical study of force systems, load tracing in buildings. Prerequisite, Mathematics 125.
CHG 321 Introduction to Structural Theory II (3)
Replaces 277
The nature of structural materials, their reactions to forces and force systems, their strengths and elastic properties. Methods of
designing and joining structural members. Prerequisite, 320.
eHG 322 Introduction to Structural Theory III (3)
Replaces 278
Simple building structural elements and systems. Beams and posts. Trusses. Introduction to lateral force and vertical force-resisting systems. Prerequisite, 321.
NEW 330 Introduction to Building Methods,
Materials and Assemblies I (2) Introduction to the requirements for the development of the built environment; a survey of the built environment's response to human physiological needs, natural and unnatural physical phenomena.
NEW 331 Introduction to Building Methods,
Materials and Assemblies II (2)
Introduction to the life systems of the built environment; a survey of man's fundamental concepts and methods for the control and modification of the natural physical environment. Prerequisite, 330.
NEW 332 Introduction to Building Methods,
Materials and Assemblies III (2)
Introduction to the physical structuring of the built environment; a survey of man's fundamental concepts and methods for building, the conversion of raw material into building components, the assembly process, the maintenance of the built environment. Prerequisite, 331.
CHG 340 Environmental Awareness: Ecosystems
(3) Replaces 110
Introduction to general concepts of systems and an interdisciplinary development of concepts and problems of human and physical ecology.
NEW 341 Environmental Appreciation (3)
Survey of the sensory and intellectual qualities of the environment. Prerequisite, 340.
NEW 342 Environmental Awareness: Prognostics
(3)
The future of the environment-forces and problems, techniques and tools, the environmental design professions and emerging alternutive environments.
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NEW 350 Survey of Environmental Arts I (3)
A survey of city form, landscape architecture, and architecture from earliest times to circa 1150.
NEW
351 Survey of Environmental Arts II (3)
A survey of the city form, landscape architecture, and architecture from circa 1150 to 1750. Prerequisite, 350.
NEW 352 Survey of Environmental Arts III (3)
Survey of city form, landscape, and architecture from circa 1750 to the present. Prerequisite, 351.
eHG 380 Materials and Their Uses (3) Replaces
330
eHG 400,401,402 Introduction to Architectural
Design Laboratory (1,1,1) Replace 224, 225, 226
Laboratory in architectural theories and processes: the technological, social-behavioral, and visual-aesthetic determinants of architecture, treated as components of design synthesis. Prerequisite, 302.
CHG 405, 406, 407 Introduction to Architectural
Design (1,1,1) Replace 224, 225, 226
Lectures in architectural theories and processes: the technological, social-behavioral, and visual-aesthetic determinants of architecture, treated as components of design synthesis.
CHG 410,411,412 Architectural Graphics (1,1, 1)
Replace 224, 225, 226
Lectures in theories and processes of architectural graphics: perspective and axonometric drawing, rendering, light and shadow, sketching, computer graphics, etc. Prerequisite, 312.
CHG 420 Structural Design I (4) Replaces 376
Design of complete building frames in timber, laminated wood, and steel, considering earthquake resistance, building response, continuity, and the structural design process. Prerequisite, 322.
CRG
421 Structural Design II (4) Replaces 377
Development of basic reinforced and prestressed concrete design process, and design of continuous structures in reinforced concrete, employing beams, girders, and slabs. Prerequisite, 420.
CRG
422 Structural Design III (4) Replaces 378
Design of concrete structures: including flat slabs and plates, columns, footings, shear walls, and retaining walls. Prerequisite, 421.
NEW
430 Environmental Control Systems I (3)
Investigation and evaluation of methods of analysis, established theories for environmental control; climate control systems, illumination and daylighting systems, sound control systems, mechanized and unmechanized circulation systems, safety systems, communication systems, waste removal and discharge systems. Prerequisite, 332.
NEW
431 Integrated Building Systems I (3)
Investigation and evaluation of the integrated building process; components, subassemblies, structural systems, environmenta,l control systems, integrated structural environmental control systems. Investigation and evaluation of material for building. Prerequisite, 430.
NEW
432 Integrated Building Systems II (2)
Investigation and evaluation of the integrated building process; production, fabrication, assembly, post-assembly evaluation. Investigation and evaluation of materials for building. Prerequisite, 431.
CRG
434 Mech8nical Equipment of Building.<tPlumbing and Sanitation (2) Replaces 235
CHG
435 Mechanical Equipment of BuildingsElectrical (2) Replaces 236
CHG
436 Mechanical Equipment of BuildingsHeating and Ventilating (2) Replaces 237
CHG
450 Replaces 400
CHG
451 Replaces 303
Prerequisite, 352.
CHG
452 Replaces 333
Prerequisite, 352.
CHG
453 Architecture of the Ancient World (3) Replaces 200
Architecture of the ancient and classical cultures from earliest times through the time of Constantine. Prerequisite, 352 or permission.
CHG
454 Romunesquc and Gothic Architecture (3) Replaces 201
Architecture of Western Europe from the decline of the Roman Empire through the fifteenth century. Prerequisite, 352 or permission.
CHG
455 Renaissance and Baroque Architecture (3) Replaces 202
Architecture of Western Europe from circa 1350 to 1750. Prerequisite, 352 or permission.
eHG
460 Replaces 360
Prerequisite, 352 or permission.
NEW
470 Production Management I (2)
Investigation and evaluation of office production management methods; production development, production drawings, contract documents, construction administration, construction cost control, post construction evaluation. To be taken concurrently with 432.
CHG
480,481,482 Contract Drawings (3,3,3) Replace 430, 431, 432
CHG
500,501 Architectural Design Laboratories (6,6) Replace 324, 325
Theories and processes in architectural design, with emphasis on development of professional skills in architectural synthesis. Prerequisite, 402.
CHG
502 Architectural Studies Options (6) Replaces 326
A group of advanced architectural studies courses and sequences in general architectural synthesis and in special projects, examining particular architectural determinants in detail. Prerequisite, permission.
CHG
503, 504, 505 Architectural Studies Options (6. 6, 6) Replace 424, 425, 426
A group of advanced architectural studies courses and sequences in general architectural synthesis, in special projects examining particular architectural determinants in detail, and in architectural research. Prerequisite, permission.
CHG
506 Advanced Visual Design (2) Replaces 414
Prerequisite, 302 or permission.
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CRG
507 Graphic Representation and Simulation (2) Replaces 415
Representation of objects and space employing traditional, figurative, and abstract idioms. Prerequisite, 302 or permission.
CHG
508 Replaces 416
Prerequisite, 302 or permission.
NEW
510 Design Graphics I (3)
laboratory work in observation and monochromatic freehand drawing of geometric and non-geometric form in direct media. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
511 Design Graphics II (3)
laboratory work in monochromatic drawing of geometric and non-geometric form in varied media. Prerequisite, 510.
NEW
512 Design Graphics III (3)
Laboratory work in freehand polychromatic representational drawing of geometric and non-geometric form in transparent and opaque color. Prerequisite, 511.
NEW
513 Design Communication I (3)
Historical survey of design illustration and work in application to current design solution explanation. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
514,515 Design Communication II, III (3,3)
Survey of contemporary professional practice in design and solution presentation; field trips to current design presentation events. Individual research projects in graphic drawing, photography scale models, advanced photography, mechanical and electronic aids towards a synthesis of design solution communication. Prerequisites, 513 for 514; 514 for SIS.
CHG
520 Advanced Structural Design (3) Replaces 476
Identification and study of the basic mechanisms of resistance to forces of all structural types; building case studies emphasizing the fundamental design approach. Prerequisite, 422.
CHG
521 Structural Design Through Model Studies (3) Replaces 477J
Theory of models, dimensional analysis, direct model analysis; studies employing specific materials, techniques of testing and measurement.
CHG
522 Skin-Resistant Structures (3) Replaces 478
Resistance mechanisms, structural systems employing plates, folded plates, shells, and membranes, with applications to the structural design process. Prerequisite, 422.
NEW
523 Industrialized Building Systems (3)
Consideration of the evolution of prefabrication, building products, components, construction methods, and building systems through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
530 Environmental Control Systems II (3)
Detailed studies in building equipment systems. Simulation of comparative conditions, experiment and investigation of contemporary practices and standards, extrapolations; heating, ventilating, and air conditioning systems, water and energy supply systems, waste removal and discharge systems. Prerequisite, 430.
NEW
531 Environmental Control System~ III (3)
Detailed studies in building equipment systems. Simulation of comparative conditions, experiment and investigation of contemporary practices and standards, extrapolations; illumination systems, sun control systems, acoustical control systems, communication systems, mechanical circulation systems. Prerequisite, 430.
NEW
532 Integrated Building Systems III (3)
Detailed studies in integrated building systems. Simulation of comparative conditions, experiment and investigation of contemporary practices and standards, extrapolations; integrated structural or environmental control systems, and materials for building. Prerequisites, 432, 470. To be taken concurrently with 570.
CHG
535 Replaces 338
Prerequisite, 432.
CHG
536 Replaces 339
Prerequisite, 432.
NEW
550, 551 Graduate Seminar: Environmental Design Issues (1-3, max. 3 each)
Seminars concerning a wide variety of issues in the area of environmental design. Each seminar focuses on a different specific topic and is directed by a seminar leader who is an authority in his field. Prerequisite, graduate standing or permission.
NEW
570 Production Management II (3)
Investigation and development of advanced office production management methods; schematic development, design development, construction documents, construction administration, post construction evaluation. Prerequisites, 402, 432, 470. To be taken concurrently with 532.
eRG 571 Replaces 370
Prerequisite, 470.
CHG
572 Specifications and Contracts (3) Replaces 369
Construction documents-detailed organization and composition of contracts, specifications, and related contract documents. Prerequisite, 470.
CHG
573 Professional Practice (3) Replaces 468
Introduction to the architectural office, business operation, and professional practice. Prerequisite, 470.
CHG
575,576,577 Replace 531, 532, 533
NEW
578 Computer Applications in Architecture (3)
Studies of feasibility and the application of computer programs and automated systems for the building design process. Prerequisite, permission.
URBAN PLANNING NEW
490 Urban Planning Policies and Programs (3)
Urban planning policies and programs. Goals, processes of policy formulation, methods of planning, effectuation, and related problems. Community, regional, state, and national programs. Prerequisite, 480 or permission.
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
ANTHROPOLOGY NEW
205 Principles of Archaeology (5)
Introduction to the aims of archaeology and methods of reconstructing prehL"tory. Significance of various methods of food collection and food production, of domestication of plants and animals, and of agricultural systems. Technique of dating archaeological remains.
NEW
225 Community Development and Action (3)
The use of concepts and examples of directed culture change to analyze community action and community development. Lectures will be supplemented by case studies, films, and discussions with those who are actually working with directed culture change.
NEW
281 Afro-Americans: Social Biology of the American Negro (3)
African source areas, distribution, and biology of negroes in the Americas, with special emphasis on the United States. Race mixture, racial laws, and negro reactions. Racial composition, growth patterns, body build, climatic stresses, and disease susceptibilities. Prerequisite, sophomore standing.
9
NEW
282 African Origins: Human Biology of Sub-Saharan Africa (3)
Origin and biologiCal nature of the peoples of Africa south of the Sahara, with emphasis upon the influences of ecology, disease, and nutrition. Race mixture, growth, and development, physique, heat stress physiology, and genetics. Prerequisite, sophomore standing.
NEW
301 Human Nature and Culture (3)
The sources of variation in the physical type, customs, values, and beliefs of human groups. Appraisal of the anthropological notion of "cultural relativism."
CHG
303 Replaces 203
CHG
304 Replaces 273
CHG
313 Replaces 213
NEW
316 South Asia (3)
Major cultural features of the Indian and Pakistan subcontinent.
CHG
321 Replaces 211
CHG
322 Replaces 215
NEW
343J Art of the Northwest Coast Indian (3)
Northwest Coast Indian art, with emphasis on the structure and style of two-dimensional art of the northern tribes. Offered jointly with Art.
NEW
3441 Art of the Northwest Coast Indian (3)
Three-dimensional art of the Northwest coast culture area, with emphasis on aesthetic principles, techniques, cultural functions. Offered jointly with Art.
NEW
345J Art of the Northwest Coast Indian (3)
Northwest Coast Indian art as related to drama and dance, with special attention to the Southern K wakiut1. Offered jointly with Art.
NEW
401 West African Societies (3)
Detailed analysis of social and cultural features, including the Western Sudan area. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
NEW
402 Societies of Eastern and Southern Africa (3)
The historical background and contemporary life of cultural groups in eastern and southern Africa, with special study of selected cases of political and economic organization and culture change. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
NEW
404 Mainland Southeast Asian Societies (5)
Intensive treatment of the kinship systems, religious institutions, ecology, and socio-political systems of the people of mainland southeast Asia. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
NEW
405 Comparative Social Anthropology of Malay Peoples (4)
A seminar for advanced undergraduates and for graduate students involving a comparison of the social institutions and ethnohistory of Malay peoples in western Austronesia. The problem of identifying, and accounting for, possible structural continuities and variations involving two approaches: (1) Specific analyses of social institutions as described in the anthropological literature. (2) Analysis of ecological, historical, and ethnohistorical data. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
NEW
408 New Guinea Societies (5)
Indigenous peoples of coastal and interior New Guinea. Aboriginal cultures and modern development in historical perspective. Intensive study of selected general problems of ethnographic method and ethnological and sociological interpretation, based on principal monographic literature. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
NEW
409 Western Austronesian Societies (3)
Comparative social anthropology of the social systems of Micronesia, Polynesia, and the eastern islands of Melanesia, with special attention to the small communities inhabiting low coral atolls. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
CHG
416 Replaces 210
NEW
418 Meso-American Society (3)
Analysis of the social and cultural features of Meso-America. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
NEW
426 Peasant Culture and Society (5)
Survey of current methodological and theoretical approaches to the study of peasant society and culture. Comparative analysis of selected cases illustrating the relationship of peasant societies to other types of social systems. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
NEW
429 Expressive Culture (5)
An anthropological view of the expressive aspects of culture: plastic-graphic arts, myth and folktale, music, dance, humor and tragedy, play and games. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
NEW
430 Music: An Anthropological View (3)
Consideration of music in its social context, change and continuity in music traditions, and basic structure in music, with some consideration of problems of field work in ethnomusicology. Prerequisite, 202 or permission. Offered alternate years.
NEW
431 Primitive Literature (3)
Mythology and folktales of nonliterate peoples. Theories of interpretation or oral literature as they apply to theories of culture growth and diffusion.
NEW
436 Social Anthropology of ReUgion (5)
A comparative social anthropological study of religious systems. Deals with the major theoretical approaches derived from the cultural evolutionists and from Marx, Freud, Durkheim, and Weber. Substantive discussions and interpretations of various aspects of comparative religion: ritual, myth, rites of passage, magic, witchcraft and sorcery, mana and taboo, sacrifice, religious specialists, etc. Problems of definition, method, and theory. Prerequisite. 202 or permission.
NEW
439 Primitive Law and Social Control (5)
Juridical activities in preliterate societies. Relation of law to religion, politics. and social structure. Prerequisite. 202 or permission.
CHG
456, 457, 458 Basic Swahili (5, 5, 5) Replace 466, 467, 468
NEW
459 Types and Techniques of TranscripHon (3)
Analysis of aims and problems in the written symbolization of structured data. Emphasis on field transcription of human movement, music. and languages. Prerequisite, 202 or permission.
NEW
461J Morphology and Syntax (3)
Study of the structuring of meaningful clements in language; practical experience with a wide variety of languages; taxonomic and generative views of grammar; field techniques. OITered jointly with Linguistics. Prerequisitc. Linguistics 400 (may be taken concurrently) or permission.
10
NEW
464 Bantu Linguistics (2)
A general survey of the development of Bantu linguistics with special emphasis on comparative Bantu phonology, morphology, and syntax. Prerequisite, permission of instructor.
NEW
466,467,468 Intennediate Swahili (3,3,3)
Reading of more complicated material from prose to traditional poetry. Emphasis on acquiring an ability to manipulate ideas in Swahili orally and written. Review of structure. Prerequisites, 456. 457, 458 (formerly 466, 467,468).
NEW
469 Special Studies in Anthropology (3)
The delineation and analysis of a specific problem or related problems in anthropology. To be offered occasionally by visiting faculty. May be repeated for credit by permission. Prerequisite, permission of departmental advisers.
CHG
473 Replaces 417
CHG
480-481 Primate Anatomy: Structure and Function (5-5) Replace 480, 481
NEW
483 Primate and Human Growth (5)
Genetics of growth and growth and maturation in experimental primates and man. Emphasis is on effect of the total environment upon growth processes, with special reference to non-Western human societies. Laboratory. Prerequisite, 20 I or Zoology 111-112, or permission.
NEW
484 Primate and Human Variation (5)
Discussion of the morphological, physiological, and genetic variability of living primate and human populations, with special reference to adaptation. Adaptive responses to selective pressures engendered by the total environment are stressed. Prerequisites, 201 or Zoology 111-112, or permission.
CHG
485 Primate and Human Evolution (3) Replaces 380
Discussion of living forms and the fossil record with reference to the nature of primate evolution. Morphological, genetic, and behavioral data are used to appraise taxonomy of living primates and their phylogenie implications. Special emphasis is placed on the evolution of the hominids and their cultures. Prerequisites, 201 or Zoology 111-112. or permission.
NEW
490 Problems in Social Structure (3)
Selccted current problems in the study of social structure. Prerequisites. 202 and 20 additional credits in anthropology.
NEW
492 Data Analysis in Anthropology (3)
An introduction to elementary manual and semi-automated techniques for the processing, organization, and analysis of typical anthropological data. Lectures, demonstrations, class projects. Prerequisites, 202, 20 additional credits in anthropology, and permission.
NEW
493 Advanced Topics in Expressive Culture (3)
Analyses of special domains of aesthetic expression, such as plastic and graphic arts, oral literature, dance, and humor among nonWestern peoples. Prerequisites, 202, 229, 450 (or 453J), and permission.
NEW
494 Problems in the Sodal Anthropology of ReUgion (3)
Selected current problems. Prerequisites, 202, 436, 15 additional credits in anthropology, and permission.
NEW
495 Advanced Problems in Ethnology (3)
One or more current problems in ethnology. Seminar format. Prerequisites, 25 credits in anthropology and permission.
CHG
496 Replaces 443
NEW
497 Theory and Method in Archaeology (3)
Examination of theoretical contrasts in the analysis of archaeological data. Terminology, typology, and interregional comparisons. Prerequisites, 205, 20 additional credits in anthropology, and permission.
NEW
498 Advanced Topics in Physical Anthropology (3, max. 9)
A series of seminars on different aspects of physical anthropology. Prerequisite, permission of instructor.
NEW
579 Seminar in Undenvater Archaeology (3)
Seminar on problems and practice of archaeology under water. Includes world survey of types of sites, problems of working in underwater environment, methods, principles, what has been accomplished to date, and possible projects in Northwest America. Prerequisites, 270, 370, 371, 571, or permission.
NEW
583 Topics in Growth and Development (3, max. 9)
Seminar dealing with various topics of child growth and development. Topics to change from quarter to quarter. Prerequisite, 483 or permission.
ART NEW
250 Design and Materials: Textiles-Printing and Dyeing (3)
Printing and dyeing of textiles. Techniques include block printing, batik, tie and dye, discharging. Prerequisites, 107, 110, 129.
NEW
251 Design and Materials: Glass (3)
Fusing, forming, laminating, and surface treatments of glass. (Glass-blowing excluded.) Prerequisites, 107, 110, 129.
NEW
252 Design and Materials: Plastics (3)
Forming, joining, and casting of plastics. Prerequisites, 107, 110, 129.
NEW
253 Design and Materials: Wood (3)
Shaping and forming of wood. Lamination and fabricating techniques. Usage of hand and power tools. Prerequisites, 107, 110, 129.
NEW
254 Design and Materials: Metal (3)
Basic techniques in manipulation and construction of metals. Visual, tactile, and aesthetic aspects. Prerequisites, 107, 110, 129.
NEW
255 Design and Materials: Textile Construction (3)
Knotting, hooking, stitching, and other nonwoven constructional techniques with a variety of textile fibers. Prerequisites, 107, 110, 129.
NEW
258 Painting (3)
Beginning painting. Prerequisite, 257.
NEW
307,308 Intermediate Painting (3,3)
Intermediate painting. Prerequisites, 258 for 307; 307 for 308.
CHG
319 Baroque and Rococo Art (5) Replaces 494
The arts and architecture of Europe from the end of the sixteenth century to the latter half of the eighteenth century. Prerequisite, sophomore standing or permission.
NEW
328 The Film as Art (2)
The historical development of film as an aesthetic medium with an emphasis on pivotal film makers and their unique contribution to the art of film.
NEW
335, 336 Metal Casting (3, 3)
Introduction to foundry techniques as applied to fine arts casting of nonferrous material. Prerequisites, 274; 335 for 336.
11
NEW
337,338 Welding (3,3)
The study and application of welding methods as a sculpture technique-making use of oxyacetelyne, electric arc, and heliarc. Prerequisites, 274; 337 for 338.
NEW
339 Film Making (5, maximum 15)
Fundamentals of camera techniques: lens, lighting, meter reading, filming, speeds, film types, cinematic movement, camera movement. Fundamentals of film editing, splicing and timing, sound recording and synchronizing. Prerequisite, junior standing in art or instructor's approval.
NEW
343J Art of the Northwest Coast Indian (3)
Northwest Coast Indian art, with emphasis on the structure and style of two-dimensional art of the northern tribes. Offered jointly with Anthropology.
NEW
3441 Art of the Northwest Coast Indian (3)
Three-dimensional art of the Northwest coast culture area, with emphasis on aesthetic principles, techniques, cultural functions. Offered jointly with Anthropology.
NEW
345J Art of the Northwest Coast Indian (3)
Northwest Coast Indian art as related to drama and dance, with special attention to the Southern Kwakiutl. Offered jointly with Anthropology.
NEW
405 History of American Art: Colonial Period (3)
A survey of architecture, town design. painting, sculpture, and the decorative arts in the United States from original European settlement to the Revolutionary War. Prerequisite, junior standing.
NEW
416 Art in France: Henri IV-Louis XVI (3)
Architecture, painting, sculpture, decoration. The classic ideal: formation, zenith, extinction around 1700, and rebirth in the later eighteenth century. Main points: Versailles, Watteau, the decorators of the rococo, and tendencies of the period after 1750. Prerequisite, 319 or permission of the instructor.
NEW
417 Dutch Painting of the Golden Age (3)
The genesis, development, and decline of painting in the United Province, from their independence in 1581 to the end of the seventeenth century. Emphasis upon the anti-mannerist reaction in Utrecht, Frans Hale, Rembrandt, and the origins of Dutch genre traditions. Prerequisite, 319 or permission of the instructor.
NEW
418 Masters and Monuments of Counter-Reformation Rome (3)
The works and impact of the major architects, sculptors, and painters active in Rome from the death of Michaelangelo to the death of Bernini (1564-1680). Concentration upon Caravaggio, Bernini, Pietro da Cortona, Poussin, and Borromini. Prerequisite, 319 or permission of the instructor.
NEW
429 Early Chinese Painting: T'ang to Yuan (3)
A study of the changing styles and attitudes accompanying the development of painting (particularly landscape painting) in China from earliest times. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW
430 Later Chinese Painting: Yuan Through Ch'ing (3)
Chinese painting from a time when the study of individual masters becomes the main task at hand. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW
431 Early Japanese Painting: Twelfth to Sixteenth Centuries (3)
Yamato-e and the art of the illustrated handscroll of Heian and Kamakura times, and the ink landscape tradition associated with Shubun and Sesshu. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW
432 Later Japanese Painting: Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries (3)
A survey of later Japanese painting with emphasis on the art of the Kano, Sotatsu-Korin, Shijo-Maruyama, and Nanga schools. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW
433 Buddhist Painting of China and Japan (3)
A survey of Buddhist painting in China and Japan from the fifth century until circa 1300. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW
434 Buddhist Sculpture of China and Japan (3)
A survey of Buddhist sculpture in China and Japan from the fifth century until circa 1300. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW
435 Chinese and Japanese Architecture (3)
Religious and secular architecture of China and Japan, with emphasis on Japanese temples and shrines. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW
469 Early Renaissance Sculpture (3)
The sculpture of the late thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries in the Florentine tradition. Prerequisites, 212 and 213, or equivalent background.
NEW
478 Sixteenth-Century German Painting (3)
The leading masters of sixteenth-century German art including Durer, Grunewald, Lucas, Cranach, and their followers.
NEW
483 Art in Provence (5)
Monuments in and around Avignon. Emphasis upon Roman and Romanesque architecture and sculpture, later medieval French painting, great works of all periods and countries in regional museums, and the Provencal landscape of Cezanne, Van Gogh, and Gauguin. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
488 Romanesque Art I (3)
The history of early medieval art (architecture, sculpture, painting, the decorative arts), from Carolinian times through the twelfth century. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW
489 Romanesque Art II (3)
Intensive study of the high Romanesquc style, including the art, architecture, and related monuments of the pilgrimage roads to Compostela. Prerequisite, 488.
NEW
578 Seminar in North European Art (3, max. 9)
Problems of style and iconography of the northern European masters of the fourteenth through fifteenth centuries. Prerequisite, permission of the instructor.
NEW
594 Seminar in Baroque Art (3, max. 9)
Iconographic and stylistic problems of the art of the Baroque period with emphasis on the principal research methods, theories, and types of literature dealing with the art of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in Europe. Prerequisite, 494.
ASTRONOMY
NEW
503 Seminar on Planetary Atmospheres (2)
NEW
561 High Energy Astrophysics (3)
Observed properties of Supernovae, X-ray stars, radio sources, quasars. Theories explaining such objects. Origin of cosmic rays.
NEW
597 Topics in Obsen'ationaI Astrophysics (1-5)
NEW
700 Thesis (*)
Prerequisite, permission.
12
ATMOSPHERIC SCmNCES
NEW
510J Physics of Ice and Snow (3)
Structure of the water molecule. Crystallographic structures of ice. Electrical, optical, thermal, and mechanical properties of ice. Growth of ice from the vapor and liquid phases. Physical properties of snow. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
StU Glaciology I: Formation of Snow and Ice Masses (3)
Snow climatology. Transport of snow by wind. Transfer of radiative, sensible, and latent heat at the surface of snow and ice. Freezing of natural water bodies. Heat and mass budget of ice masses. Theories of ice ages. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisite, 510J or permission.
NEW
512J Glaciology II: Structural Glaciology (3)
Heat and mass transfer in snow and ice. Metamorphism. Effects of heat conduction, vapor diffusion, radiation, solid impurities, brine inclusions. Petrography of snow and ice. Flow structures. Bulk physical properties of natural snow and ice. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisite, 5111 or permission.
NEW
513J Glaciology III: Dynamic Glaciology (3)
Flow laws of ice, steady laminar flow. Sliding on bedrock. Kinematic waves, glacial surges. Snow and avalanche dynamics. Deformation and drift of sea ice. Relation of structures to deformation. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisite, 512J or permission.
NEW
514 Field Glaciology (6)
Structure and metamorphism of snow cover. Energy exchange at melting snow and ice surfaces. Deformation and flow of glaciers. Climatology and mass budgets. Glacier features. Emphasis on instrumentation, field techniques, and data analysis. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisites, 5111, 512J, or permission.
NEW
534 Weather Sensing by Satellites (3)
Flight characteristics of spacecraft. Physical laws of remote sensing, using micro-, infrared, and visible waves. The importance of surface parameters (temperature, emissivity, sea state). The inversion principle of atmospheric sounding. Comparison of weather analysis from earthbound and from satellite data. Prerequisites, 431 Hnd 531, or permission.
NEW
539J Structure and Dynamics of Upper Atmosphere (3)
Properties of the ionosphere, electromagnetic wave propagation, the dynamics of the ionosphere. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisite, 542 or permission.
NEW
545 The General Circulation of Atmospbere (3)
Requirements of the global angular momentum heat, mass, and energy budgets upon atmospheric motions as deduced from observations. A study of the physical processes through which these budgets are satisfied. Prerequisite, 442 or permission.
BIOLOGY
NEW
440 Topics in Modem Biology (2, max. 6)
A televised lecturer-seminar, with presentation by research scientists of new concepts, methods, and results in biology. Major areas will be covered in different series of lectures, with emphasis in the first series on molecular and developmental biology. Prerequisites, two quarters college biology and two quarters college chemistry; genetics recommended.
BOTANY
NEW
480 Plant Cytology (3)
Analysis of structure and function of plant cells. Emphasis will be placed on the ultrastructure of plant cells and cell components. Prerequisites, 15 credits in biological science and permission.
NEW
480L Plant Cytology Laboratory (2)
Bright-field and phase-contrast microscopy; cytochemical methods; demonstration of optical equipment; individual projects. Prerequisite, 480.
NEW
525 Topics in Plant Ecology (2, max. 10)
Selected topics from various phases of plant ecology. Prerequisite, permission of instructors.
CHEMISTRY
NEW
147H General Chemistry Honors Laboratory (3)
Introduction to quantitative chemistry. Honors course paralleling 151 or 146. Prerequisites, concurrent registration in 145H and permission.
NEW
157H General Chemistry Honors Laboratory (4)
Laboratory work in elementary physical and quantitative chemistry. Honors course to follow 147H. Prerequisites, 147H, 155H concurrently.
NEW
165H General Chemistry (3)
Honors course paralleling 160. Prerequisite, A or B grade in 155H or permission.
NEW
167H General Chemistry Honors Laboratory (3)
Elementary physical, quantitative, and qualitative chemistry laboratory (to follow 157H). Prerequisite, 157H.
NEW
412 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory (3)
Preparation and characterization of typical inorganic substances. Prerequisite, 457, which may be taken concurrently.
NEW
414 Systematic Inorganic Chemistry (3)
The elements and their compounds in relation to the periodic system. Prerequisite, 351 or 457.
NEW
436 Spectral Methods in Structural Chemistry (4)
An introduction to the theory, instrumentation, and application of spectroscopic methods in organic and inorganic chemistry. Laboratory provides experience in actual instrumental operation. Prerequisites, 351 or 457, or permission.
NEW
508 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (3)
Synthesis, reactions, and structure of coordination compounds. Applications of NMR, isotope replacement phenomena, magnetic susceptibility, and the Mossbauer Effect. Prerequisites, 415, 416.
CLASSICS
ARABIC
NEW
499 Undergraduate Research (3-6, max. 18)
NEW
600 Research (3-6, max. 18)
NEW
700 Thesis (*)
GREEK
NEW
426 Attic Orators (3)
CHG
449 Replaces 420
HEBREW
NEW
101-102, 103 Elementary Hebrew (5-5,5)
Introduction to classical Hebrew, emphasizing elements of grammar and reading of various styles found in the Hebrew Bible.
13
NEW
201,202,203 Intennediate Hebrew (5,5,5)
Selections from Biblical prose, Rabbinical texts, and medieval prose and poetry. Prerequisites, 103 for 201; 201 for 202; 202 for 203.
NEW
490 Supervised Study (3-6, max. 18)
Prerequisite, 203.
NEW
499 Undergraduate Research (3-6, max. 18)
LATIN
NEW
423 Cicero and SaUust (3)
NEW
447 Roman Lyric (3)
NEW
449 Roman Elegy (3)
NEW
459 Roman Pastoral (3)
NEAR EAST (FORMERLY NEAR EASTERN LITERATURE)
CHG
210, 420, 422, 424, 430, 432, 434, 440 Replace Near Eastern Literature 210, 420, 422, 424, 430, 432, 434, 440
NEW
210 Introduction to Islamic Civilization and Culture (5)
Background and foundations of Islam; development of Islamic culture, with emphasis on the intellectual, literary, aesthetic, and associative aspects; the impact of the West and resulting modern problems.
NEW
440 Persian Literature in EngUsh (3)
A survey of Islamic Persian literature from its origins to modern times, with representative readings.
NEW
450 The City of Cairo: History, Topography, and Monuments (3)
A survey of the physical development, and the economic and social organization of an Islumic city, as exemplified in the history of Cairo, from the first establishment at Fustat to the present day. Consideration of the major styles of Islamic architecture as represented in existing monuments of Cairo.
NEW
520 Seminar in Near Eastern Civilization and Thought (3, max. 27)
NEW 530 Seminar in Near Eastern Literature
(3, max. 27)
Prerequisite, reading knowledge of Arabic, Persian, or Turkish.
NEW 600 Research (3-6, max. 18)
NEW 700 Thesis (*)
PERSIAN
NEW 101.102,103 Elementary Persian (5.5,5)
Beginning course in pronunciation, conversation, grammar, and graded reading.
NEW 201,202,203 Intermediate Persian (5,5,5)
Introduction to Persian literature, with continuing emphasis on grammar and syntax. Prerequisites, 103 for 201; 201 for 202; 202 for 203.
NEW 490 Supervised Study (3-6, max. 18)
Special work in literary texts for graduates and undergraduates. Prerequisite, 203 or equivalent.
NEW 499 Undergraduate Research (3-6, max. 18)
TURKISH
NEW 101.102,103 Elementary Turkish (5-5,5) Introduction to modern Turkish. Pronunciation and conversation, grammar and composition, graded reading. Latin characters used throughout.
NEW 201,202,203 Intermediate Turkish (5,5,5)
Introduction to modern Turkish literature. Prerequisites, 103 for 201; 201 for 202; 202 for 203.
NEW 401,402,403 Ottoman Turkish (5,5,5)
Readings from the historians and poets of the Ottoman period. Texts written in Arabic characters will be used. Prerequisites, 203 for 401; 401 for 402; 402 for 403.
NEW 490 Supervised Study (3.6, max. 18)
Special work in literary texts for graduates and undergraduates. Prerequisite, 203.
NEW 499 Undergraduate Research (3-6, max. 18)
COMMUNICATIONS
COM MUNICA TiONS
NEW 150 The Mass Media (5)
Organization, operation, and control of the mass media in America; social functions of mass communication; characteristics of media audiences. (May be substituted for 202, 203, 226, and Radio-Television 250 in Communications degree program, but duplicate credit cannot be earned.)
CHG
220 Replaces 320
NEW 500,501 Theory of Communication (5,5)
Introduction to the major points of viewgeneral semantics, persuasion and effects, and communication systems; examination of communication concepts in the theoretical literature. Prerequisite, 508.
CHG
508,509 Replace 408, 409, 410
NEW 516 Seminar in Comparative Communication
Systems (3)
The analysis and comparison of communication systems. Directed research in comparative systems and into the role of communications in national development. Prerequisite, 415.
NEW 550·551 Advanced Communication Methods
(3-3)
Directed individual projects in the design and organization of a complex mass communication, of a level of accomplishment suitable for professional quality print or broadcast media. Advanced techniques of research and production analyzed and appJied. Prerequisite, bachelor's degree in a communications major or equivalent.
NEW 581 Seminar in International
Communications (3)
The analysis of international communications. Directed research in intercultural communication. Prerequisites, 480, 580.
NEW 597 Practicum in Communication Research
(1-5. max. 10)
Individual participation by a qualified graduate student in an on-going research project under the direction of a faculty member. Prerequisites, 501, 509.
RADIO-TElEVISION
NEW 454. 455 Television News Film Techniques
(2,2)
Development of skills in the use of the motion picture camera; a study of the use of fiJm in news and public affairs programming; empha-
14
sis on writing for film purposes and developing editorial judgment. Prerequisite, 376 or permission.
NEW 456,457,458 News Broadcasting (2.2,2)
Preparation and presentation of news broadcasts; progression from editing radio news programs to use of visuals and performance in television newscasts. (Replace 476.) Prerequisite, 376.
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
NEW 415 The Comic in Literature (5)
Study of masterpieces of comic literature (Bergson, Freud, Ludovici, and others), emphasizing various modes and uses of the comic. Prerequisites, junior standing and at least 10 credits of literary study.
NEW 496 Special Studies in Comparative
Literature (5, max. 10)
To be offered occasionally by visitors or resident faculty.
NEW 515 Recent Trends in Liternry Criticism (3)
Study of some of the recent trends in literary criticism; in particular, structural and philosophical approaches. Prerequisites, advanced graduate standing and facility in reading French.
NEW 535 Poetic Forms (3·5, max. 15)
Seminar concerned with the evolution, dissemination, and function of metrical and stanzaic forms in various literatures. Course will change so consult department each quarter for specifics. Prerequisite, reading knowledge of one foreign language.
NEW 540 Eighteenth-Century European Aesthetics
(3)
Analysis of important works of eighteenthcentury aestheticians in England, France, and Germany. Prerequisite, facility in reading either French or German.
NEW 545 Studies in Renaissance and Baroque
Epic Poetry (3)
Study of renaissance and baroque epic poetry, including works of Ariosto, Tasso, Spenser, Milton, and others. Prerequisite, reading knowledge of either French, Italian, Spanish, or Portuguese.
NEW 550 European Realism (3)
Seminar study of works of European Realism (Balzac, Flaubert, Turgenev, Dostoevski, Tolstoy, the representative Victorians, and the writers of "poetic realism") in connection with various aesthetic doctrines and subsequent critical appraisals. Prerequisite, graduate standing.
NEW 555 Studies in Irony (3)
Seminar to examine irony in literary, philosophical, and satirical masterpieces from the classical period to contemporary literature. Prerequisite, graduate standing.
NEW
560 Classical Rhetoric and Literature (Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries) (3)
Seminar to explore the influence and the importance of classical rhetoric in European literary works of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Texts and examples to be chosen in English, French, Italian, and German literatures. Prerequisite, reading knowledge of French, Italian, or German.
NEW
565 Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature (3.5, max. 15)
Seminar examining various aspects of nineteenth-century European literature. Course will change so consult department each quarter for specifics. Prerequisite, reading knowledge of one foreign language.
NEW 570 Studies in the Novel (5, max. 15)
Two two-hour seminars comparing two or more novels of varying national literatures. Course will change so consult department each quarter for specifics. Prerequisite, reading knowledge of one foreign language.
NEW 575 Intercultural Relationships in Sixteenth
and Seventeenth-Century European Literature (3-5, max. 15)
Seminar or seminars examining the intercultural relationships of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century European literature. Course will change so consult department each quarter for specifics. Prerequisite, reading knowledge of one foreign language.
NEW 580 I.iterary Relations (3-5, max. 15)
Seminar which will examine relationships or parallels between two or among more than two important writers from different national literatures. Course will change so consult department each quarter for specifics. Prerequisite, reading knowledge of one foreign language.
NEW 596 Special Studies in Comparative
Uterature (3-5, max. 15)
To be offered occasionally by visitors or resident fncutty.
DANCE
280 Basic Movement for Theatre Disciplines (1, max. 3)
Basic body actions, unified through structure and improvisation; foundation for coordinated, articulate physical requirements in
theatre disciplines; preliminary to period movement and manners studies. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW 290 Structure of Music in Relation to Dance
(2-5, max. 5)
Study of structural parallels between organized sound and organized movement; emphasis on time-space relationships. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
490 Special Studies in Dance (1-3, max. 15)
Special studies in dance: specialized areas within the body of knowledge known collectively as the art of ballet. Prerequisite, permission.
DRAMA
NEW 121,122,123 Movement for the Actor
(2,2,2)
Movement for the actor based on Lecoq techniques. 121: improvisation for development of sensory-motor skills; 122: re-education of muscular efforts and coordination; 123: use of masks for characterization. Prerequisite, acceptance for Experimental Drama program.
NEW
141,142,143 Voice Training for the Actor (3,3,3)
141: relaxation, limbering, and centering of the voice; 142: vocal dramatic styles (Elizabethan and medieval texts); 143: vocal dramatic styles (Greek and medieval texts). Prerequisite, acceptance for Experimental Drama program.
NEW 155,156,157 Acting (5,5,5)
Acting for the professionally-oriented student. 155: improvisation, the fundamentnls of acting theory, practice; 156: acting styles, Greek; 157: acting styles, medieval. Prerequisite, acceptance for Experimental Drama program.
NEW
181,182,183 Play Analysis for the Actor (2,2,2)
Play analysis from the point of view of the actor; 181: principles of method and their imaginative integration for the actor; 182: application of analysis method to Greek plays; 183: application to medieval plays. Prerequisite, acceptance for Experimental Drama program.
NEW
184 Play Analysis for the Actor (2)
Application for analysis method to Greek and Elizabethan plays. Prerequisite, acceptance for Experimental Drama program.
15
NEW 221,222,223 MOl'ement for the Actor
(2,2,2)
Movement for the actor based on Lecoq techniques: 221: movement with character masks; 222: choral movement; 223: Commedia del Arte techniques. Prerequisite, acceptance for Experimental Drama program.
NEW 241,242,243 Voice Training for the Actor
(3,3,3)
241: vocal styles-Jacobean and Elizabethan; 242: vocal styles-Restoration; 243: vocal styles-French and Italian seventeenth century. Prerequisite, acceptance for Experimental Drama program.
NEW 255, 256, 257 Acting (5, 5, 5)
Acting for the professionally-oriented student: 255: acting styles-Elizabethan and Jacobean; 256: acting styles-Greek and Jacobean; 257: acting styles-seventeenth-century Restoration and Commedia. Prerequisite, acceptance for Experimental Drama program.
NEW
271,272 Seminar in Theatre and Drama (2,2)
Prerequisite, acceptance to Experimental Drama program.
CHG
477,478,479 Replace 475
NEW
490A,B,C, Special Studies (l-5, eadl, max. 15)
A. Acting-directing; B. Design-technical; C. Children's drama. (Course may be repeated to a limit of 5 credits in any emphasis area.) Prerequisite, permission.
ECONOMICS
NEW
513 Mathematical Economics: Activity . Analysis (3)
Mathematical theory of linear programming: Linear inequaJities, existence theorems, simplex method, duality. Transportation problem. Elements of game theory. Kuhn-Tucker conditions. Economic applications. Prerequisites, 412, 500, or permission.
NEW
519 Mathematical Economics: Selected Topics (3)
Seminar will cover selected topics in mathematical economics; theory of general equilibrium analysis. Prerequisite, permission of instructor.
ENGLISH
NEW
160 Intensive English (15)
An intensive course specifically intended to prepare the foreign student for the corning academic year. Oral and written work. This course will satisfy the foreign student English requirement.
NEW
323 English Drama, 1660-1800 (5)
Restoration and eighteenth-century English drama. Dryden, Etherege, Wycherley, Congreve, Goldsmith, Sheridan, and others. Alternates with 322. Prerequisite, upper-division standing or permission.
NEW
483 Special Topics in English for Teachers (1-3, max. 5)
NEW
492H Major Conference for Honors (5)
Individual study (reading, papers) by arrangement with the instntctor. Required of, and limited to, seniors in the English Department's College Honors Program.
NEW
535 Comparative Grammars (5)
A study in detail of one or more systems of grammar besides traditional grammar.
FAR EASTERN AND RUSSIAN INSTITUTE
FAR EASTERN
CHG
210 Replaces HO, 310
CHG
290J Replaces 290
NEW
336J Regional Geography of China (5)
A study of the geographic foundations, the pattern of the cultural and economic developments, and the interrelationships among the major regions of China with special emphasis on the role of the key agricultural and manufacturing areas in the economic growth of the country. Offered jointly with Geography. Prerequisite, 100 or permission.
NEW
401, 402 Marxism-Lenini.,m in Modem Intellectual History (5, 5)
401: Teachings of Marx and Engels in the nineteenth century. Amllysis of Marxism as a doctrine. 402: Marxism-Leninism in the twentieth century. Reference to Lenin and Stalin. Prerequisite, modern European, German, or Russian history, or political thought, or permission.
NEW
406,407 Revolutionary Movements in . Eastern Europe (3, 3)
Historical analysis of the ideological and social character of revolutionary movements, chiefly nationalist and communist, in eastern Europe from 1848 to World War II.
NEW
431 Tibetan History (3)
A survey of the history of Tibet from earliest times to the present, with emphasis on the
status and relations of Tibet in Asian affairs and the evolution of the political institutions of a "lama-ruler" state.
NEW
438J Soviet Regions and Regionallzation (3 or 5)
An evaluation of prerevolutionary and Soviet efforts to determine a basis for subdividing Russia into regions, together with an analysis of contemporary Soviet regions and their economic development. Lectures, 3 credit.,; independent study, 2 additional credits, with permission of instructor. Offered jointly with Geography. Prerequisite, 333J or permission.
NEW
464 Tibetan Buddhism (3)
A survey of the development of Buddhist philosophy and its amalgamation with the teachings of Bon, the pre-buddhist shamanism in Tibet. The resulting doctrines and phenomenology of Tibetan Buddhism are examined in depth.
NEW
469,470 History of Korea (5, 5)
A survey of Korean history from earliest times to the modem period. Prerequisite, permission of instructor.
NEW
504J Seminar on the Modernization of Japan (5)
Historical and theoretical approach to social, political, economic, and psychological problems of modernization in Japan. Offered jointly with Political Science 504J and with History 509J. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
532J-533J Seminar in Political Institutions of Contemporary China (3-3)
Advanced research on structures and functions of political institutions in post-1949 China. Offered jointly with Political Science. Prerequisite, permission; reading knowledge of Chinese desirable.
NEW
567J-568J-569J Seminar in Korean History (3-6)-(3-6)-(3-6)
Selected topics in Korean history and historiography. Offered jointly with History. Prerequisite, permission of instructor.
FAR EASTERN AND SLAVIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE
CHINESE
NEW
311 Genres in Chinese Literature (5)
Depth study of works from the major Chinese literary genres and analysis of their characteristic features. Examination of the relationship between similar genres in Chinese and Western literary traditions. Works will be read in translation. Chinese 320 recommended but not required.
16
NEW
551 Seminar on the Book of Changes (3)
An examination of the textual problems of the Book of Changes and of its place in the history of Chinese thought. Prerequisites, 524 or equivalent, and permission.
CZECH
NEW
451,452,453 Advanced Czech (5,5,5)
Continuation of 401, 402, 411 to provide an introduction to Czech literature through selected readings from the main works of Czech authors of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The course also reinforces and extends the student's basic knowledge of Czech grammar and vocabulary through daily discussions in the language. Prerequisites, 411 for 451; 451 for 452; 452 for 453.
HINDI-URDU
101-102,103 Elementary Hindi-Urdu (5-5,5)
Introduction to the spoken language. Oral drills emphasizing pronunciation and clementury conversation. Grammatical and syntactical exercises. Introduction to the two writing systems in 103.
INDIAN
NEW
321 Modem Indian Literature in English (3)
A general survey of the contemporary Indian literature with special attention to the fusion of modernistic trends with tradition. No knowledge of an Indian language is required.
JAPANESE
NEW
424 Tokugawa Literary Tradition (5)
A survey course in Japanese literature covering the period between 1600 and 1867 when the rise and development of popular literature and theater among the common people had reached the highest peak through men like Chikamatsu, Saikaku, and Basho. Readings and discussion of representative works in prose, poetry, and drama up to the beginning of the Meiji period.
KOREAN
NEW
499 Undergraduate Research (3-5, max. 15)
For Far Eastern majors. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
700 Thesis (*)
POLISH
NEW
570 Seminar in Polish Literature (5)
Selected topics in Polish literature. Prerequisite, reading knowledge of ])olish.
RUSSIAN
CHG
426, 427, 428 Replace 426, 427
NEW 463 Introduction to Russian Literature (3)
Prerequisites, Russian 461, 462.
NEW 571 Stylistics of Modem Russian Poetry (3)
An examination of'~he linguistic aspects of poetic style in selected works of modem Russian poetry. Prerequisites, 451, 452, and 6 credits in Russian literature courses, or permission.
NEW 588·589 Russian literature, 1750 to the
Present (5-5)
Survey of Russian Literature for first-year graduate students. Prerequisite, graduate standing.
SERBO-CROATIAN
NEW 451,452, 453 Adl'anced Serbo-Croatian
(5,5,5)
Continuation of 401-402, 411 to provide instruction and practice designed to reinforce the basic grasp of the language, and to enlarge both vocabulary and command of grammatical patterns. Prerequisite, 411.
SLAVIC
NEW 321,322,323 Slavic Literature In English
(3,3,3)
A survey of East European literatures. Treated in detail are Polish, Czech, Serbian, Croatian, Bulgarian, and Ukrainian literatures. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
CRG 550 Replaces 450
NEW 554 The History of the South Slavic
Languages (3)
Designed to acquaint majors in Slavic linguistics with the details of the historical development of the phonological and morphological structure of the South Slavic languages. Prerequisites, 450, 552, 553.
NEW 557 Seminar in Slal'ic Linguistics (2)
Seminar designed to permit the investigation and discussion of special topics in Slavic linguistics. (May be repeated for credit.) Prerequisites, 554 and Russian 551.
TAMIL
NEW 301-302,303 Introduction to Tamil (5·5,5)
An intensive introduction to the modern spoken language. Transformation drills will be emphasized. The writing system and literary dialect will be introduced at a suitable stage.
NEW 401·402,403 Intermediate Tamil (5.5,5)
Intensified use of the modern spoken language, beginning with moderately difficult conversation and drills, and working up to more advanced materials, including radio plays. Continuation of work with written language, Prerequisite, 303.
TIBETAN
NEW 700 Thesis (*)
Prerequisite, permission,
TURKIC
NEW 301,302,303 Yakut (3,3,3)
Phonological, morphological, and syntactical analysis of Yakut as a representative Turkic language, Reading and translation of selected texts.
VIETNAMESE
NEW
150 Accelerated Vietnamese (15)
Introduction to the structure of modern spoken and written North Vietnamese, with additional exposure to southern Vietnamese dialects, Recommended for students wishing to acquire familiarity with the language in a short time, with the objective of further study and usage in Vietnam. Prerequisite, permission.
GENERAL STUDIES
NEW 492 tatin-American Studies Seminar (5)
A proseminar, primarily for Latin-American Studies majors, involving readings and research on a broad topic concerning Latin America. Prerequisite, senior in Latin-American Studies major or permission.
GEOGRAPHY
300 Advanced Regional Geography
The region viewed as a major concept in geography. An intensive examination of major physical and biotic regions seen in the light of human occupance patterns. Prerequisite, 100 or upper-division standing.
NEW
336J Regional Geography of China (5)
A study of the geographic foundations, the pattern of the cultural and economic developments, and the interrelationships among the major regions of China, with special emphasis on the role of the key agricultural and manufacturing areas in the economic growth of the country, Offered jointly with the Far Eastern and Russian Institute. Prerequisite, J 00 or permission.
17
NEW 438J Soviet Regions and Regionalization
(3 or 5)
An evaluation of prerevolutionary and Soviet efforts to determine a basis for subdividing Russia into regions, together with an analysis of contemporary Soviet regions and their economic development. Lectures, 3 credits; independent study, 2 additional credits, with permission of instructor. Offered jointly with Far Eastern and Russian Institute. Prerequisite, 333J or permission.
NEW
449 Geography of Ocean Transportation (3 or 5)
Geographic analysis of ocean trade routes, cargo and passenger flows, and port activi· ties. Evaluation of the role of the transportation carrier in international trade. Lectures, 3 credits; independent study, 2 additional credits. Prerequisite, 201 or permission.
NEW 478 Urban Spatial Patterns (3)
Analysis of intra-urban land-use patterns and structure; particular attention to Iocational theories pertaining to population, land-use linkages, rents, gradients, and normative spatial relationships. Prerequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW 491 The United States (8)
Summer Institute in the geography of the United States for fifth-grade teachers and elementary supervisors. For Institute participants only. Prerequisite, undergraduate or graduate standing.
NEW
492 The USSR (6)
Summer Institute in the geography of the Soviet Union for secondary school teachers. For Institute participants only. Prerequisite, undergraduate or graduate standing.
NEW 55lJ Regional Planning Seminar (3)
Regional planning and development theories and methodologies. Critical evaluation of regional planning in selected "economically advanced" and "lesser developed countries." Offered jointly with Urban Planning. Prerequisites, 4511 and graduate standing.
GEOLOGY
CRG 308 Replaces 208
NEW 311 Origin of Landforms (3)
Erosional processes and products; theories of landform evolution; characteristic landforms of the tropics, and semi-arid regions, polar and alpine regions, and humid-temperate regions; coastal and marine landforms. Prerequisite, 101.
CHG
320 Replaces 220
NEW
321,322 Petrology I, II (5, 5)
Description, classification, and origin of igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks. Laboratory includes hand specimens and microscopic study of rock specimens. Prerequisites, 320 for 321; 321 for 322.
NEW
406J General Seismology (3)
Ray theory analysis applied to an inhomogeneous earth; travel time analysis; observational seismology, instruments, quantitative measurement of earthquakes; properties of earth's interior; tectonic significance of earthquakes. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisite, 405J or permission.
CHG
411 Replaces 411J
NEW
416 Glacial Geology (4)
Interpretation of glacial history through study of sediments and land forms, with emphasis on climatic implications, chronology, and correlation. Prerequisite, senior standing.
NEW
417 Quaternary Stratigraphy (4)
History of climatic changes during the Quaternary Period as revealed by physical and biological data. Global chronology and correlation of Quaternary sediments. Prerequisite, senior standing.
CHG
461 Replaces 361
NEW
486 Nonmetallic Ores and Fuels (3)
Description and origin of nonmetallic ore deposits, fuels, and water resources, and their importance in world affairs. Prerequisite, senior standing or permission.
NEW
501 Quaternary Climatic Change (1-3, max. 6)
A seminar to critically evaluate criteria of Quaternary climatic change from the viewpoint of different disciplines. Prerequisite, permission of the instructor.
NEW
55lJ Potential Theory and Application (3)
Newtonial fields; integral theorems; harmonic functions; geopotential, mass, moment, shape of the earth; theory of analysis of gravity and magnetic anomalies. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisite, Mathematics 428 or Aeronautics and Astronautics 568, or permission.
NEW
552J Theoretical Seismology (3)
Wave motion in uniform and layered elastic solids, dispersion, surface waves, modal analysis; inhomogeneous and anisotropic media; effects of anelasticity, gravity, and curvature eigenvibrations of the earth. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisite, Aeronautics and Astronautics 546.
553J Physical Properties of Earth Material (3)
Composition of rocks; mechanical, thermal, magnetic, and electrical properties of rocks; tensor properties of crystals; measurement of rock properties at high pressures and temperatures. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisite, Aeronautics and Astronautics 567 or permission.
NEW
580 Research in Sedimentology (*)
Advanced studies and research in sedimentology. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
58U Analysis of Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks (5)
Methods of analysis of sediments and sedimentary rocks, and statistical evaluation, presentation, and interpretation of data. Offered jointly with Oceanography. Prerequisites, 423, Mathematics 281, or permission.
NEW
582 Seminar In Sedimentology (2)
Lectures, discussions, and readings on selected problems of current interest. Prerequisite, permission.
CHG
585 Replaces 580
NEW
587 Advanced Studies In Ore Deposits (3)
Origin of metallic ores with emphasis on geochemistry and isotopic geology, four- to fiveday field trip to neighboring mining region. Prerequisites, 472 or equivalent, and 487. Offered odd-numbered years.
GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE
NEW
123,124,125 German for the Elementary . School (3,3,3)
Training in basic German grammar, pronunciation, and intonation with practical techniques for using German in the elementary classroom; organization of stucfy units, songs, dialogues, and dramatizations. Open to those with little or no background in German.
NEW
230 Conversational German (5)
Intensive. For participants in the Living-Language Group Program only. Prerequisite, 103 or equivalent.
18
NEW
580,581,582 Seminar in the Modern Period . of German Literature (1-5), (1-5), (1-5)
Prerequisite, permission.
HISTORY
NEW
238 Survey of the Muslim Near East (5)
Survey of the history of the Near East (the Arab countries, Turkey, Iran, and Afghanistan) from the emergence of Islam in 622 to the present. The various aspects of history (culture, economics, politics, etc.) will be discussed.
NEW
290J History of China (5)
From earliest times to the present; emphasis on development of Chinese society. Offered jointly with the Far Eastern and Russian Institute.
CHG
311 Early Middle Ages (5) Replaces 411
CHG
312 Central Middle Ages (5) Replaces 412
CHG
313 Late Middle Ages (5) Replaces 413
NEW
407 Medieval Italy (5)
Italy, from the barbarian invasions to the Renaissance, considered in the framework of European and Mediterranean cultures.
CHG
419 Replaces 419J
CHG
438, 439 Replaces 438-439
NEW
440 Htlltory of the Near East Since 1789 (3)
The history of the Near East since the introduction of western-inspired reforms into the Muslim World. The emergence of the modern Arab states and the transformation of Turkey and Imn in the last 150 years will be covered in their various aspects.
CHG
445A, 445B Replace 445
CHG
445C Replaces 446
NEW
488 The River Plate Republics and Chili, Colonial Period to the Present (5)
The course will analyze political history, economic development, social change, and intellectual trends in Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Chile; it will also consider the relations of these countries with the United States and Europe, and with each other.
NEW
498 Senior Seminar (3-5, max. 15)
Each seminar will examine a different subject or problem. Students must have the permission of the instructor of the seminar in which they plan to enroll. A list of the seminars offered is available in the office of the History Department. Prerequisite, permission of the instructor.
NEW
509J Seminar on the Modernization of Japan (5)
Historical and theoretical approach to social, political, economic, and psychological problems of modernization in Japan. Offered jointly with Political Science 504J and with the Far Eastern and Russian Institute 504J. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
567J-568J-569J Seminar in Korean History (3-6)-(3-6)-(3-6)
Selected topics in Korean history and historiography. Offered jointly with the Far Eastern and Russian Institute. Prerequisite, permission of instructor.
NEW
570 Ottoman History (3-6)
This field course will introduce the student to the major periods and problems of Onoman history, 1300-1914, by acquainting him with the major works in at least two languages. An attempt will be made to teach some use of Ottoman materials. A minor problem will be investigated in detail by every student. Prerequisite, knowledge of at least one major language besides English, such as French, German, or Russian.
NEW
577-578-579 Seminar in Latin American History (3-6)-(3-6-(3-6)
Problems of historical research in the history of Latin America from colonial beginnings to the present. Prerequisite, permission of instructor.
NEW
615 Field Course in Islamic History (3-6)
An introduction to advanced study designed to show how important historical conclusions have been reached, to suggest further research and particularly to give bibliographical guidance to students in their preparation for examinations in this field. Prerequisite, permission of the instructor.
NEW
645 Seminar In American Constitutional History to 1800 (5)
Research in the formative period of the American Constitution.
HOME ECONOMICS
NEW
409 Food and People (3)
Economic, cultural, and social determinants of food patterns. Problems of population and
food supply. Meaning of food to different peoples. An ecological approach to malnutrition as a major world problem. Programs of national and international scope designed to combat malnutrition. Prerequisites, upperdivision standing and 307, or 15 credits in social science.
NEW
509 E"aluallon of Nutritional Status (1)
Dietary, clinical, and biochemical aspects as an integral part of evaluating nutritional status. Critical examination of major nutritional status surveys. Experimental design. Dietary methodology. Prerequisites, 407, 408, Biochemistry 405, 406, or equivalent.
NEW
510 Community Nutrition (3)
Survey of major nutritional problems facing American communities, with special emphasis on the problems of pregnancy and childhood. Practical approaches to nutritional education and the dynamics of changing food habits. Program planning and exposure to available resources for interdisciplinary services. Current programs in the United States and other countries. Prerequisites, 457 or equivalent, 509, and permission.
NEW
511 Field Work in Public Health Nutrition (1-11, max. 11)
Observation and participation in community agency nutrition programs. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
556 Seminar in Family Relationships (3)
Seminar on recent developments in the field of family relationships, with emphasis on current research methods and findings and their application to family problems. Prerequisites, 456 or equivalent, and permission.
LINGUISTICS
NEW
101-102-103 Introduction to Language (5-5-5)
An introduction to the nature of language and language learning: linguistics as facilitating foreign language acquisition.
NEW
443J Semantics (3)
A study of recent work in linguistics and its implications for philosophy. Offered jointly with Philosophy. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
461J Morphology and Syntax (3)
Study of the structuring of meaningful elements in language; practical experience with a wide variety of languages; taxonomic and generative views of grammar; field techniques. Offered jointly with Anthropology. Prerequisite, 400 (may be taken concurrently) or permission.
19
NEW
524 Seminar in Descriptive Linguistics (1, max. 6)
Individual and joint research on selected topics in descriptive linguistics. Topics to change each quarter. Typical topics are semantics, generative grammar, phonological theories. Prerequisites, 453J, 463J.
MATHEMATICS
CHG 485 Replaces 393
MUSIC
NEW
311 Advanced Music Theatre Technique (1)
Dramatic interpretation of musical style as represented by the major opera composers since Mozart, including Verdi, Wagner, Strauss, and Puccini. Prerequisite, 211.
NEW
411 Music of Africa (3)
Music of the different ethnic groups of Africa and their influence on each other. Prerequisites, 314, 315, 316.
NEW
416 Music of Latin America (3)
The Indian, African, and European music of the countries of the Spanish-, French-, and Portuguese-speaking New World. Prerequisites, Music 314, 315, 316, or permission.
NEW
417 Music of Indonesia and the Philippines (3)
The music of the Indonesian and Philippine Islands from the high civilizations of Bali, Java, and Sunda, and the small ensembles to Sumatra, Ambon, and the southern Philippines to the tribal music of Borneo and the northern Philippines. Prerequisites, 314, 315, 316, or permission.
CHG 445 Replaces 514
NEW
454 Music of Japan (3)
The music of Japan from earliest known records until 1700. Prerequisites, 314, 315, 316, or permission.
NEW
455 Music of Japan (3)
The music of Japan from 1700 until the present. Prerequisites, 314, 315, 316, or permission.
NEW
456 Music of China (3)
The music of China from earliest times until the present. Prerequisites, 314, 315, 316, or permission.
CHG
477,478,479 Replace 497, 498
CHG
523 Replaces 526
NEW' 505 Systematic Musicology (3)
The use of the scientific method and empirical research procedures in musical investigations.
NEW 545 Seminar in Musical Learning (3, max. 6)
A study of learning theories as they relate to nonverbal musical learning. Prerequisite, 445 or permission.
NEW 551 Master's Recital (2, max. 4)
Public performance in solo recital, chamber music, cantata, oratorio, or conduction. For students in the Master of Arts in Music degree program. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW 555 Experimental Design in Musical
Research (3)
A study of experimental and quasi-experimental research designs and the application of experimental research methods for the investigation of problems in music teaching and learning, performance, and theoretical studies. Prerequisites, 505, Psychology 301, or Education 490, or permission.
OCEANOGRAPHY
NEW 444 Design and Analysis of Oceanographic
Experiments (3)
Planning of field and laboratory experiments in oceanography; evaluation and processing of oceanographic data. Prerequisite, Mathematics 281 or permission.
NEW 452 Physical Sedimentology (5)
An introduction to theoretical and experimental techniques used in studying erosion, transportation, and depositon of sediment. Analysis of sediment samples, initial motion of sediments, bed-load motion, suspension of sediment by turbulent flows, erosion and deposition of sediment by turbulent flows, mass movement of sediments, and applications of sediment transport theory to problems of geological interest. Prequisite, 450 or Chemical Engineering 342.
NEW 455 Biogenic Sediments II (3)
Survey of silicate microorganisms and microfossils, with emphasis on their geological and geographical occurrences and their application to deep-sea stratigraphy. Prerequisite, 454 or permission.
CHG
460-461 Replaces 460
CHG
462 Replaces 461
NEW 544 Statistical Models in Oceanography (3)
Multivariate regression, trend surface analysis, factor analysis, discriminant functions, and stochastic-process models in oceanography. Prerequisite, Mathematics 383 or permission.
NEW 560 Fluid Mechanics of Erosion and
Sediment Transport (3)
Advanced study of the erosion, deposition, and transportation of sediments by turbulent flows. Special emphasis on the use of theoretical fluid mechanics to formulate and solve problems of bed-load and suspended load transport of sediments, erosion, and deposition of sediments, erodible boundary-wave problems, turbidity currents, beach erosion. Prerequisites, 452 or equivalent, Civil Engineering 543, and permission.
NEW 561 Seminar In Geological Fluid Mechanics
(3)
Reading and discussion of topics of current interest in geological fluid mechanics. Course work will include a report on a specialized topic. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW 571J Gravity and Geomagnetic
Interpretation (3)
Fundamental concepts; the earth's magnetic field; instmmentation and reduction of magnetic measurements, interpretation of magnetic data; gravity measurements, reduction of gravity observations; interpretation of gravity anomalies. Offered jointly with Geophysics. Prerequisites, Mathematics 324, Physics 327, (or equivalents), Geophysics 405J or Geology 450, and permission.
NEW 581J Analysis of Sediments and Sedimentary
Rocks (5)
Methods of analysis of sediments and sedimentary rocks, and statistical evaluation, presentation, and interpretation of data. Offered jointly with Geology. Prerequisites, Geology 423, Mathematics 281, or permission.
PHILOSOPHY
NEW 260 Introduction to Philosophy of Science
(3)
An examination of formal languages, the nature of probability, the problem of induction, and determinism.
NEW 422 Studies in Continental Rationalism
(3, max. 9)
A study of the philosophical system, or some part of the philosophical system, of one or more of the major continental Rationalists: Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz. Prerequisite, 322 or permission.
20
NEW 443J Semantics (3)
A study of recent work in linguistics and its implications for philosophy. Offered jointly with Linguistics. Prequisite, permission.
NEW 464 Philosophical Psychology (3)
Reinstatement of former course.
NEW 472 Logical Theory I (3)
Introduction to the study of traditional formal logic and theories of meaning. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW 473 I_ogical Theory II (3)
The theory of attributive terms. Quantification theory. Techniques of proof. Prerequisite, 472 or permission.
NEW 474 Logical Theory III (3)
The theory of collective terms. The theory of descriptions. The logistic thesis. The theory of logical types. The seman tical paradoxes. The theory of abstract terms. Modal logic. Prerequisite, 473 or permission.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION-MEN
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
NEW 590 Research Methods in Health, Physical
Education, and Recreation (3)
Guidance and methods of research for health, physical education, and recreation. Prerequisite, 447 or equivalent.
NEW 591 Research Seminar (2, max. 6)
Development and critique for a research prospectus. Initial reporting, refinement, and endorsement of the research proposal. Prerequisite, permission.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION-WOMEN
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
NEW 229 Advanced Riding (1)
Drill patterns; use of two Cavaletti; Cavaletti and jump; show procedures. Prerequisites, 128 and 228, or equivalent.
HEALTH EDUCATION
NEW 481J Foundations of Sex Education (3)
Scientific exploration of physiological, psychological, and cultural aspects of sexual development. Expression, problems, and adjustments of youth and adults. Basic concepts underlying sex education. Offered jointly with Obstetrics and Gynecology. Prerequisite, permission.
PHYSICS
CHG
221 Quantum Physics (3) Replaces 222
Introduction to the physics of atoms, molecules, and nuclei; elementary quantum physics. Not open to students who have completed 320. Prerequisites, 123 or 123H; concurrent or previous Mathematics 126 or 136H.
CHG
222 Statistical Physics (3) Replaces 221
Heat, thermodynamics, and the statistical description of matter. Prerequisites, 221 or 320 (may be concurrent), concurrent or previous Mathematics 126 or 136H.
NEW 223 Elementary Mathematical Physics (3)
Applications of mathematics to physics, particularly as illustrated by classical mechanics. Prerequisites, 123 or 123H, and Mathematics 224.
NEW 231 Electric Circuits Laboratory (3)
Basic linear elements in DC, AC, and transient circuits; solid-state and vacuum-tube devices; electrical measurements. Prerequisites, 123 or 123H, and Mathematics 126 or 136H.
NEW
232 Electric Circuits Laboratory (3)
Continuation of 231. Prerequisite, 231.
NEW 301 Review of Mechanics (4)
Review of elementary classical mechanics for junior college physics teachers. Prerequisite, college-level physics teacher.
NEW 302 Review of Electricity and Magnetism (4)
Review of elementary electricity and magnetism for junior college physics teachers. Prerequisite, college-Ievel physics teacher.
CHG
321,322,323 Electromagnetism (3,3,3) Replace 325, 326, 327
Charges at rest and in motion; dielectric and magnetic media; electromagnetic waves; relativity and electromagnetism; physical optics. Prerequisites, 123, Mathematics 324 or 234H; 321 for 322; 322 for 323.
NEW 324,325 Quantum Mechanics (3,3)
Introduction to nonrelativistic quantum mechanics. Prerequisites, 221 or 320, Mathematics 324 or 234H: 324 for 325.
CHG
327 Introduction to Nuclear Physics (3) 'Replaces 323
A study of nuclear structure, including nuclear reactions, fission, particle accelerators,
and nuclear instrumentation, applications of nuclear phenomena in atomic energy and astrophysics. Not open to students who have completed 422. Prerequisite, 221 or 320, or permission.
NEW 331 Optics Laboratory (3)
Optical and spectroscopic measurements. Prerequisite, concurrent or previous 323.
NEW 405 Laboratory for Physics Teachers (3)
Laboratory work in selected topics in teaching physics, especially at the high school and lower-division colJege level. Prerequisite, one year of college physics.
NEW 421 Atomic and Molecular Physics (3)
Survey of the principal phenomena of atomic and molecular physics. Prerequisites, 323 and 325, or permission.
NEW 422 Nuclear and Elementary Particle
Physics (3)
Survey of the principal phenomena of nuclear and elementary particle physics. Prerequisites, 323 and 325, or permission.
NEW
423 Solid State Physics (3)
Survey of the principal phenomena of solid state physics. Prerequisites, 323 and 325, or permission.
CHG
424, 425, 426 Mathematical Physics (3, 3, 3) Replace 481, 482, 483
424: advanced classical mechanics. 425, 426: mathematical techniques of particular use in physics including partial differential equations. Prerequisites, 323 and 325, or permission; 425 for 426.
CHG
431, 432, 433 Modern Physics Laboratory (3, 3, 3) Replace 471, 472, 473
431, 432: measurements in modem atomic, molecular, and solid state physics. 433: techniques in nuclear and elementary particle research. Prerequisites, 30 credits in physics or permission; 327 or 422, or permission for 433.
NEW 541 Survey of Elementary Particle Physics
(3)
A survey of topics in elementary particle physics, intended for the nonspecialist having a background of quantum mechanics. Prerequisite, 519.
NEW 542 Sun'cy of Nuclear Physics (3)
A survey of topics in nuclear physics, intended for the nonspecialist having a background of quantum mechanics. Prerequisite, 519.
21
NEW
543 Atomic and Molecular Physics Survey (3)
A survey of topics in atomic and molecular physics, intended for the nonspecialist having a background of quantum mechanics. Prerequisite, 519.
NEW 544 Solid State Physics Survey (3)
A survey of solid state physics, intended for the nonspecialist having a background of quantum mechanics. Prerequisite, 519.
CHG
550 Replaces 562
NEW 562 Theoretical Nuclear Physics (3)
Prerequisite, 519.
NEW 569 Theory of Solids (3)
Prerequisite, 519.
POLITICAL SCIENCE
NEW 439 Government and Politics of Sub-Saharan
Africa (5)
A survey of government and politics in the countries of. tropical Africa, with major emphasis on political development and national integration in former British Africa. Prerequisite, 201 or permission of instructor.
NEW 448 Comparatil'e Federal Systems (5)
An intensive analysis of the development and operation of typical federal systems in established states, and comparisons with those recently adopted in developing areas. Attention will be devoted to legal, political, and socioeconomic problems in these federal regimes.
NEW 491 Political Behavior Methodology (5)
Course will emphasize numeric and symbolic approaches to the study of political phenomena. Consideration will be given to typologies, scales, measurement techniques, sampling of elites, and selected multivariate procedures and the results of the application to legislative, voting, judicial, and administrative behavior. Prerequisite, 490 or permission.
NEW 504J Seminar on the Modernization of
Japan (5)
Historical and theoretical approach to social, political, economic, and psychological problems of modernization in Japan. Offered jointly with the Far Eastern and Russian Institute 504J and History 509J. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
5321·533J Seminar in Political Institutions of Contemporary China (3·3)
Advanced research on structures and functions of political institutions in post-1949 China. Offered jointly with the Far Eastern and Russian Institute. Prerequisite, permission; reading knowledge of Chinese desirable.
NEW
538 Government and PoUtics in the Middle East and North Africa (3)
Study of political change in the area within the context of comparative politics; breakdown of traditional political systems; new range of choice expressed in competing ideologies; governmental and nongovernmental instrumentalities of change; and problems of international relations and regional conflict and integration.
NEW
539 Politics in Sub-Saharan Africa (3)
Selected problems of government and politics in the countries of Sub-Saharan Africa. Prerequisite, 439 or permission.
NEW 553 Public Opinion (3)
Selected problems in opinion formation, characteristics, and the role of public opinion in the policy-making process. Prerequisite, 452 or permission of instructor.
NEW 587 Community Minority Politics (3)
A research seminar organized to develop and test hypotheses concerning the social, economic, and political opportunity-costs to minorities and the poor in gaining responses from urban bureaucracies and representation in community public policy decisions. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW 590 Seminar in PoUtical Behavior (3, max. 9)
Analysis of behavioral research in selected fields of political science.
PSYCHOLOGY
CHG
201,201H Replace 191, 191H
CHG
202,202H Replace 191, 191H
CHG
302, 303 Replace 301
NEW
426 Psychophysics of Audition (5)
Properties of the auditory system, including mechanisms of the ear, transducer mechanisms of the inner ear, statistical theories of the auditory sense, problems of detecting signals in various kinds of noise. and the effects of various pathological conditions. Prerequisites, 422 or equivalent, and permission.
NEW
510 Consistency Theories in Social Psychology (3)
Theoretical and empirical work that focuses on the ramifications of a need or pressure for cognitive consistency; dissonance, balance, and congruity theories will be critically evaluated on the basis of current research. Prerequisites, 503 and graduate major standing.
NEW
511 Experimental Approaches to Personality (3)
A survey of current methodology and experimental research in the area of personality. Topics include the relationships of anxiety, hostility, need of achievement, and personal styles to behavior. Prerequisite, graduate major standing or permission.
NEW 512 Discrimination Learning in Children (5)
Theories of discrimination learning and some of the relevant literature with special consideration to areas that are relevant to developmental changes in learning; i.e., transfer of training, transportation, acquired distinctiveness of cues. Prerequisite, graduate major standing.
CHG
524 Replaces 424
NEW 525 Psychodiagnostic Testing (3)
Training in administration, scoring, and interpretation of individual intelligence tests, projective tests, and other major clinical techniques. Required of aU first-year graduate majors in clinical psychology. Prerequisite, first-year graduate major standing.
CHG
528 Replaces 463
NEW 573J Artificial Intelligence (4)
Introduction to problem solving. Survey of theorem proving, symbol manipulating, pattern recognition, and inductive problem-solving techniques. Computer models of human thought. Offered jointly with Computer Science. Prerequisite, Computer Science 478J.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE
ROMANCE LINGUISTICS AND LITERATURE
NEW 600 Research (*)
Prerequisite, permission of the Graduate Program Adviser.
fRENCH
297 French-SpeakJng Europe and Its Culture (3 or 6)
For participants in the Study Abroad program. Readings on aspects of French literary tradition; discussion of social and cultural values
22
as reflected in French literature. Field trips to sites of literary, historical, and artistic interest. Substantial paper (written in English), and higher degree of participation, required for 6 credits. Course conducted in English. Prerequisite, 222 or college equivalent, or permission of instructor.
350 Drama (3)
Generic study of French drama. Prerequisite, 222, or college equivalent, or placement test.
NEW 351 Poetry (3)
Generic study of French poetry. Prerequisite, 222, or college equivalent, or placement test.
NEW
352 Fiction (3)
Generic study of French fiction. Prerequisite, 222, or college equivalent, or placement test.
NEW
427 Fiction Since 1950 (3)
Malraux, Queneau, Sartre, Sarraute, and Duras. Prerequisites, 304, 305, 306.
CHG
441 Replaces 436
CHG
442 Replaces 431
CHG
444 Replaces 432
CHG
445 Replaces 433
CHG
446 Replaces 434
NEW
463 Romantic Drama (3)
French theatre in the romantic period. Prerequisites, 304, 305, 306.
NEW 464 Realist and Naturalist Drama (3)
French theatre in the realist and naturalist periods. Prerequisites, 304, 305, 306.
CHG
465 Replaces 464
NEW 470 Cinema (3)
Major films and figures of French cinema from the beginnings to the present. Prerequisites, 304, 305, 306.
NEW 553 Eloquence (3)
French eloquence of the sixteenth seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries: d'U;fe, J. de Balzac, Pascal, Bossuet, Fenelon Massillon Mirabeau, Danton, de Maistre. Prerequisite' graduate standing. '
NEW 599 Graduate Readings (*)
S.upervise~ r.eading in specific fields. Prerequisite, permISSIon of Graduate Adviser.
ITALIAN
420, 421, 422 Elghteenth·Century Italian Literature (3, 3, 3)
420: Arcadia and the Melodrama: Metastasio
421: Drama: GoldonJ and Alfieri
422: Poetry: Parini, Monti, Foscolo
NEW 450 ManzonJ and the Romantic
Movement (3)
A study of Manzoni's works, especially the Promessi Sposi, as products of Italian romanticism. Prerequisites, 304, 305, 306.
NEW 451 Leopardi and the Lyric (3)
A reading of the Cant; with lectures, discussions, reports. Prerequisites, 304, 305, 306.
NEW 460 Verismo (3)
A study of representative realistic writers such as Capuana, Verga, Serao, Fucini, and Deledda. Prerequisites, 304, 305, 306.
CHG
590 Replaces 531
NEW 599 Graduate Readings (*)
Supervised reading in specific fields. Prerequisite, permission of the Graduate Program Adviser.
PORTUGUESE
NEW 150 Accelerated (5)
For graduate students in Spanish who wish to develop a rapid command of Portuguese primarily for reading purposes. Prerequisite, graduate standing in Spanish or permission of instructor.
NEW 590 Special Seminar and Conference
(2.5, max. 20)
PROVENCAL
eHG 535, 536 Replace 534
ROMANIAN
NEW 420,421 Structure of Romanian (3,3)
Descriptive analysis of the phonological morphological, snytactical, and lexical str~ctures of modern Romanian. Prerequisite Romance 401 or permission. '
SPANISH
NEW 350 Drama (3)
Generic study of Spanish drama. Prerequisite 203 or college equivalent, or placement test. '
NEW 351 Poetry (3)
Generic study of Spanish poetry. Prerequisite 203 or college equivalent, or placement test. '
NEW 352 Fiction (3)
Generic study of Spanish fiction. Prerequisite, 203 or college equivalent, or placement test.
NEW 445 Spanish Drama and Play Production (5)
The first half of the quarter will be an intensive study of five to eight Spanish dramas with emphasis on problems of style, period: and staging. The second half of the quarter, students will be involved in one of these plays. Climax of the course will be three performances open to the public. Prerequisites, 304, 305, 306.
484 Twentieth·Century Spanish. American Poetry (3)
Lectures on major trends in modern SpanishAmerican poetry; close reading and discussion of poems by representative contemporary poets. Prerequisites, 304, 305, 306.
NEW 489 Problems in the Spanlsh·American
Novel (3)
Ana]ysis of specific national movements or literary currents in the twentieth-century novel of Spanish America. Prerequisite, 352 or permission.
CHG
590 Replaces 531
NEW 599 Graduate Readings (*)
Supervised reading in specific fields. Prerequisite, permission of the Graduate Program Adviser.
SCANDINAVIAN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE
SCANDINAVIAN
482 Replaces 382
23
NEW 517 Nineteenth·Century Swedish Novel (3)
Seminar in the novel from Almqvist to Strindberg. Prerequisites, graduate standing and equivalent of three years of college work in a Scandinavian language.
NEW 521 Recent Swedish Poetry (3)
Seminar in recent and contemporary poetry from Lagerkvist to the present. Prerequisites graduate standing and equivalent of thre~ years of college work in a Scandinavian ]anguage.
NEW 530, 531 Medieval Scandinavian Literature
(3,3)
The study of the main genres in the vernacular, with primary emphasis on the ballads. Prerequisites, graduate standing and equivalent of three years of college work in a Scandinavian language.
DANISH
NEW 450 History of Danish Literature (3)
A one-volume history serves as text. Representative literary works from the earliest times to the present are read to supplement the historical account and to show the evolution of the thought and form of the various genres. Prerequisite, 222 or equivalent.
SWEDISH
NEW 455 History of the Swedish Language (3)
The study of the language from its earliest recorded forms to the present. Prerequisite, 222 or equivalent.
SOCIOLOGY
CHG
330 Replaces 230
NEW 422 General Methodological Strategies (3)
An introduction to the varied strategies of research in sociology. These strategies include laboratory and field experimentation, statistical studies, surveys, field observations, historical and comparative studies, mathematical modeling, and computer simulation. Prerequisite, 223.
NEW 431 Population Analysis (5)
Population growth and distribution, popu]ation composition, population theory, urbanization. Determininants and consequences of fertility and mortality trends and migration in economically developed and underdeveloped areas. Open to seniors and graduate students only. Prerequisite, 110 or 310.
NEW
465 Complex Organizations (3)
An examination of the structure of complex organizations. Particular attention will be given to developing generalizations applicable to industrial organizations, businesses, hospitals, prisons, labor unions, governments, universities, armies, and similar formally instituted organizations. The major focus will be on empirical research, with some attention to methodological problems in studying such organizations. Prerequisites, 15 credits in sociology.
NEW
481, 482, 483 Issues in Analytic Sociology (3,3,3)
Examination of current issues in sociological analysis. The specific content of the course will vary according to recent developments in sociology and according to the interests of the instructor. Any of the sequence may be repeated with the consent of the instructor. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
532 Research Methods in Human Ecology (3)
Analysis of community structure, segregation, and other spatial phenomena. Measures of migration, inter-city relations, and diversity. General problems of measuring ecological associations. Prerequisite, 330 or 430.
NEW
533 Research Methods in Demography (3)
Measures of population composition, fertility, and mortality. Life table analysis, standardization procedures, popUlation projections and estimates. Prerequisite, 331 or 431.
NEW
539 Selected Topics in Demography and Ecology (3)
Specialized problems in demography or ecology are covered; for example, migration fertility, mortality, language, race and ethni~ relations, metropolitan community. See quarterly announcement for specific problem to be covered. May be repeated for credit.
NEW
581,582,583 Special Topics in Sociology (3,3,3)
Examination of current substantive topics in sociology. The specific content of the seminar will vary according to recent developments in sociology and according to the interests of the instructor. Any of the sequence may be repeated with the consent of the instructor. Prerequisite, permission of Graduate Adviser.
CHG
591,592,593 Replace 601, 602,603
SPEECH
CHG
313 Replaces 476
NEW
379 Suney of Speech and Hearing Disorders (3)
For students not intending to major in speech pathology or audiology.
CHG
380 Replaces 480
CHG
381 Replaces 481
CHG
384 Replaces 484
CHG
387 Replaces 487
NEW
402 Speech-Communication and Interpersonal Influence (5)
Source, message, and receiver variables as determinants of communication effects. Examination of major theoretic positions underlying current speech-communication literature in interpersonal influence.
NEW
404 Experimental Methods in Speech-Communication (3)
Application of behavioral research principles to problems in quantification, design, and analysis of data in speech-communication research. Prerequisite, statistics or permission.
NEW
406 Speech-Communication: Behavioral Models and Theories (3)
Examination of selected theories and communication models from the behavioral sciences. Emphasis on application of theory to problems in hypothesis. Testing in empirical rc~e~rch in speech behavior. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
418 Instrumentation for Speech and Hearing Science (3)
General design problems and application of electronic equipment used in the speech and hearing profession. Includes certain basic concepts about electricity and electroacoustic measurement that are fundamental to the knowledgeable usc of audiometric and speechrelated instruments. Simple laboratory problems and demonstration.
NEW
429 Rhetoric of Social and Political Mo"ement't (5)
Inquiry in the rhetoric of social and political movements; emphasis on the investigations of persuasive discourse; also an examination of the n~mverbal persuasion. Prerequisite, junior standmg.
24
NEW
487 Speech Audiometry (3)
Evaluation of auditory function using speech as a stimulus. Implications in differential diagnosis and aural rehabilitation. Prerequisite, 387.
NEW
518 Advanced Instrumentation for Speech and Hearing Science (3)
Design and use of electronic and electroacoustic devices for clinical and research purposes in speech and hearing. Proper use of test equipment and signal sources. Laboratory projects to include construction and/or calibration of related equipment.
NEW
596 Seminar in Interpersonal Communications (2)
Examination of experimental literature on selected topics. Subjects to change from year to year including conflict resolution, information processing, communication networks, feedback systems, audience composition research, communication effects. Prerequisite, permission.
ZOOLOGY
CHG
111-112 Replace 111, 112
Prerequisites, 150 for 111-; 111- for -112.
NEW
568 Chemical Integration (2)
Graduate seminar dealing with current problems in endocrinology and neuroendocrinology. Prerequisite, permission.
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
ACCOUNTING
CHG
430 Replaces 344
NEW
570 Semjnar in Auditing (3)
To examine the changing business environment of the auditor and the impact of these changes on auditing philosophy, objective, and methodology. The course will focus largely on the auditing of integrated information systems, the usc of computers as an audit tool, the expansion of the reporting function, and the administration of the CPA firm to meet changing audit requirements. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
599 Doctoral Seminar in Accounting (3)
Prerequisite, permission.
ADMINISTRATIVE THEORY AND ORGANIZATIONAL BEBA VIOR (A ORG) (Formerly Human Relations and Policy and Administration courses)
CHG
365, 440, 441, 460, 463, 499, 500, 550, 565, 571·572, 575, 576, 580, 604, 700, 702 Replace Human Relations (H REL) 365, 460, 499, 500, and Policy and Adminis. tration (pOL A) 440, 441, 463, 499, 550, 565, 571.572, 575, 576, 580, 604, 700, 702
NEW 461 Two-Person Behavior in Organizational
Contexts (5)
Clinical examination of those behavioral skills and processes that are most basic in the development of effective individual behavior in business and other organizational contexts. Emphasis on clinical practice in developing: (1) self-awareness; (2) skills and processes in face-to-face communication and interaction; and, (3) structuring effective interpersonal relationships in organizational contexts. Prerequisites, 460 or permission, and senior or graduate standing.
NEW 587 Seminar in Advanced Organization
Theory (3)
Investigates the development of a theory of organization with subtheories on structures, processes, goal determination, problem solving, innovation, and change. Appraises various approaches to the study of organizations such as the sociological, normative, descriptive, analytical, and systems approach. Studies in detail the most important conceptual and analytical models of organization such as bureaucratic, information-communication, coalition, economic, and behavioral. Appraises the research methodologies in field studies, laboratory investigations, model building, and simulation. Discusses the future trends in organization theory.
NEW 599 Doctoral Seminar in Administrative
Theory and Organizational Behavior (3)
Prerequisite, permission.
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION· CONJOINT
CHG
475 Conjoint Honors CoUoquium (5, max. 15) Replaces 475H
BUSINESS ECONOMICS
CHG
300 Replaces General Business 441
NEW 301 Money, National Income, and Prices (4)
Measurement and analysis of business activity in the commodity and money markets; static and dynamic models of income and interest rate determination; problems of policies in the stabilization of business conditions. Prerequisite, Economics 200.
CHG
439 Replaces General Business 439
NEW 499 Undergraduate Research (3, max. 6)
Research in selected areas of business economics. Prerequisite, permission.
CHG
500 Replaces Business and Its Environment 500
NEW 501 Business Economics II (3)
Analysis of real and monetary factors affecting the national and international economic environment in activity supply and demand for money, national income determination, interest rates and credit availability, stabilization problems and poJicies.
CHG
520 Replaces Finance 520
593 Replaces Business and Its Environment 593
CHG
594 Replaces Business and Its Environment 594
BUSINESS, GOVERNMENT, AND SOCIETY (BGS) (Formerly Business and its Environment courses)
CHG
101,361,444,445,499,570 Replace General Business 101, 361, 444, 445, 499, 570
CHG
200, 510, 552, 562, 571·572, 590, 597, 598, 604 700, 702 Replace Business and Its Environment 200, 510, 552, 562, 571.572, 590, 597, 598, 604, 700, 702
CHG
307, 403 Replace Business Law 307, 403
NEW 553 Advanced Problems in Business and
Public Polley (3)
Advanced contemporary problems in business and public policy; wage and price controls; collective bargaining and strikes in essential industries; racial integration; "undesirable" and "excessive" advertising; industrial impact on the physical environment. Prerequisite, 510.
NEW 565 Industrialization and Social Structure (3)
Continuity and change in the structure of societies undergoing industrialization, with special attention to theories of the American experience, and to the status and power of business.
25
NEW 575 Theories of Capitalism (3)
The seminar focuses upon the various theories of capitalism developed over the past several centuries and their relevance to our contemporary society. Prerequisite, permission.
BUSINESS POLICY (B POL) (Formerly Policy and Administration courses)
CHG
470,471,480,499,571·572,593,594 Replace Polley and Administration (pOL A) 470, 471, 480, 499, 593, 594
FINANCE
CHG
427 Replaces 327
CHG
460 Replaces 360
CHG
502 Replaces 500
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
NEW 544 Multinational Corporate Systems (3)
Theoretical concepts; structural and sociological systems; intra-company international trade; transfer of corporate skills; transfer pricing; managerial communication; integrations of the different national subsystems; normative deductions. Prerequisite, 515 or permission.
NEW 595 Business Studies Abroad (*, max. 9)
Research and study of foreign business problems in the country or countries where the firms are located. Limited to students who have the approval of a major adviser who has agreed to direct their work in accordance with a definite program of studies.
NEW 599 Doctoral Seminar in International
Business (3)
Advanced study and research in different areas of international business; presentations by visiting professors and research specialists; dissertation proposals and critique. Prerequisite, permission.
OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT (0 MGT) (Formerly Production courses)
CHG
301,. 441, 442, 443, 460 (now 4 credits), 499, 500, 520, 521, 571·572, 604, 700, 702 Replace Production (PROD) 301, 441, 442, 443, 460, 499, 500, 520, 521, 571· 572, 604, 700, 702
NEW
582 Analytical Models in Operations Management (3)
Application of quantitative methods to operations management problems. Content will vary. Topics to include design of production facilities, inventory control, production scheduling, maintenance scheduling, quality control, with one or two areas covered in depth each quarter. Prerequisites, 500 and Quantitative Methods 510, or equivalent.
NEW
585 Operations Systems Analysis (3, max. 6)
Analysis of the structure and dynamic behavior of management systems. The dynamics of operations management decision making from the systems point of view, considering the impact of the interaction of the separate elements of an enterprise. The computer as an integral part of decision processes. Study, in different quarters, of such topics as industrial dynamics (theory and analysis of the feedback structure of organizations and computer simulation of feedback models), integrated and automated decision systems, heuristic decision methods, and management information systems. Prerequisites, 500, Administrative Theory and Organizational Behavior 550, and Quantitative Methods 200, or permission.
MARKETING
NEW
341 Product and Price Policies (4)
Examines important aspects of product planning and development, product line decisions, packaging, brand policies, guarantees, and services. Price theory is considered but emphasis is placed on special pricing policies and problems and legal constraints on pricing activity. Prerequisites, 301 and Business Economics 300.
NEW
361 Marketing Channels and Institutions (4)
Analysis of marketing institutions and their functions, marketing channel structure, and channel alternatives available to management. Special attention is given to the role and perspective of the channel manager in directing marketing channel systems. Prerequisite, 301 or equivalent. (Not open to students who have taken 381.)
CHG
411 Advertising (4) Replaces 391
The management of the advertising function and its integration with other forms of promotion. Topics covered are planning the program; determining the most effective approach; evaluation of media and budget; advertising research; advertising institutions; economic and social aspects. Prerequisite, 301.
CHG
500 Marketing Management (4) Replaces 500, 501
PERSONNEL AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
NEW
541 Management-Employee Relations Systems in the White Collar and Professional Sectors (3)
Focuses on current and emerging forms of management and employee relations systems. Primary emphasis is given to new forms of white-collar unionization, bargaining and quasi-bargaining situations between professionals and management, and emerging forms of third party participation in these relationships. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
599 Doctoral Seminar in Personnel (3)
Prerequisite, permission.
QUANTITATIVE METHODS (Q METH) (Fonnerly Business Statistics and Operations Research courses)
CHG
200, 201, 350, 360, 444, 450, 451, 460, 470, 480, 490, 499, 500, 510, 516, 520, 544, 550, 571.572, 604, 700, 702 Replace Business Statistics and Operations Rese~rch (B STAT) 200, 201, 350, 360, 444J, 450, 451, 460, 470, 480, 490, 499, 500, 510, 516, 520, 544, 550, 571-572, 604, 700, 702
RISK AND INSURANCE
CHG
420 Replaces 320
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CHG
301 Urban Development Economics (4) Rcplaces Real Estate 301
CHG
395 Urban Development and Private Investment (4) Replaces Real Estate 410
Prerequisite, 301.
NEW
405 Urban Del'elopment and Location of Finns (4)
Spatial equilibrium and the optimum location of business firms and households; decision criteria for location of commercial and industrial firms, and for residences; rent and location theory. Prerequisites, 301, 395.
CHG
496 Research in Urban Del'elopment (3) Replaces Real Estate 496
CHG
520 Urban Development Economics (3) Replaces Real Estate 520
CHG
521 Investment in Urban Development (3) Rcplaces Real Estate 521
26
NEW
525 Urban Development and Location of Firms (3)
Graduate seminar in spatial equilibrium of the firm and households, both inter-urban and intra-urban; decision criteria for optimum location with constraints; public policy and allocation of urban land uses. Prerequisites, 520, 521, and graduate standing.
CHG
571·572,604, 700, 702 Replace Real Estate 571·572, 604,700, 702
NEW
595 Urban Denlopment Problems (3)
Seminar for advanced graduate students concerned with contemporary problems of urban development, including problem identification and measurement; research methodology and techniques; historical and cultural aspects; social indicators. Prerequisites, 520, 521, and graduate standing.
COLLEGE OF EDUCATION
NEW
304 Educational Psychology (5)
Basic educational psychology for teachers. Emphasizes the developmental processes, the process and conditions of learning, instructional strategies, social climate of the classroom, teacher-pupil interactions, and classroom management.
NEW
365 Sensory-Motor and Language Development in Young Children (3)
A study of the perceptual processes inherent in the development of motor and verbal responses in young children. Theories and practices in the development of language and communication skills are examined. Appropriate laboratory experiences are included. A pluralistic, multiple approach to study in this area characterizes the course. Prerequisite, 304.
NEW
366 Modem Theories and Practices in Early Childhood Education (3)
An introduction to modern theories and practices in early childhood education presented via classroom lectures and observations in selected schools and agencies. Prerequisite, 304.
NEW
367 I,anguage Arts and Social Studies in Early Childhood Education (3)
A basic course stressing language arts and social studies as related to the development of the young child. The course familiarizes students with effective teaching procedures and learning resources designed to help children learn language competencies and social awareness within the framework of social studies content. Prerequisite, 304.
NEW
368 Mathematics and Science in Early Childhood Education (3)
A basic course in science and mathematics instruction emphasizing knowledge and skills in teaching scientific and mathematical processes and concepts to young learners. Prerequisite, 304.
NEW
369 Program Planning in Early Childhood Education (3)
The theoretical and practical aspects of planning, selecting, preparing, presenting, and supervising curricular materials and activities in the prekindergarten are presented. (Course taken concurrently with student teaching, 7 credits.) Prerequisite, 304.
NEW
382 Industrial Education: Basic Woodworking for Occupational Therapists (5)
Hand tool processes, elementary machine operations, safety practices, problem solving and planning, methods of assembling and fastening, simple wood finishing. (Not open to students completing 280 and 383.)
CHG
401 Advanced Education PsychologyLearning (3) Replaces 309
Prerequisite, 304 or equivalent.
NEW
413 Adolescence and Youth (3)
An advanced course in the psychology of adolescence and youth. Cognitive, physical, social-emotional patterns and processes are examined. Implications for education are stressed.
NEW
414 Culturally and Economically Disadvantaged Pupil (3)
Survey of social and psychological factors related to the culturally and economically disadvantaged pupil and his education. Prerequisite, 404.
NEW
475R Improvement of Teaching: Art Appreciation in the Schools (3)
A course designed for teachers at all levels of instruction, covering subject matter areas on a survey of the history of art to promote an appreciation of our cultural heritage: (1) Development of content in sequential or unit plan studies to incorporate art history in general studies curricula. (2) Development of methods and preparation of materials for classroom presentation. Illustrated lectures. Prerequisite, teaching experience.
CHG
505 Replaces 425A
NEW
511 Behavior Modification of Exceptional Children (3)
Exploration of variables affecting the academic and behavioral performance of exceptional children. Assessment and establishment of instructional programs and procedures.
CHG
515J Replaces 448J
NEW
521 I.earning Resources Systems of Instruction (3)
A study of the "systems" approach to instruction and the orchestration of those components, techniques, and arrangements which contribute to that system: e.g., technological services, self-instructional techniques, logistical control of learners, content, learning resources, and learning space. Prerequisites, 455, 520, or permission.
NEW
522 Learning Resources and Learning Domains (5)
A study of the potentials and limitations of visual and auditory stimuli in learning domains (affective, perceptual-motor, and cognitive) as reflected in the rele\'ant literature and research. Prerequisites, 401, 455, 501A, 501B, 520 (or equivalent of these courses).
NEW
523 Doctoral Seminar in I.earning Resources (3)
A course restricted to doctoral majors in learning resources. Concentrates on candidate's research in the contemporary field. Preparation for postdoctoral research.
CHG
545 Replaces 545A and 545B
NEW
554 Seminar in the Administration of Colleges and Universities (3)
A study of the internal administration and organization of four-year colleges and universities, with emphasis on both practice and theory. Prerequisite, 450.
NEW
557 Occupational Programs in Higher Education (3)
Analysis of occupational preparation programs in institutions of higher education, industry, and business and governmental agencies, with emphasis on methods of determining content, processes for evaluation, and research.
NEW
563 Seminar in School Personnel Administration (3)
Major emphasis will be the analysis of factors to be considered in the selection and evaluation of teachers, including determination of relevant criteria, acquisition and analysis of data, planning and decision processes. Less emphasis will be given to other school personnel topics. Prerequisite, master's degree in Educational Administration or equivalent.
NEW
564 Practicum in School Psychology (3)
Laboratory work related to the practice of school psychology. Prerequisites, 540, 545, 565.
27
NEW
593 Experimental Design and Analysis (5)
Experimental design with specific emphasis on the analysis of variance and covariance. Prerequisites, 490 or equivalent, and 591.
NEW
594 Advanced Correlational Techniques (5)
Multivariate analysis, including regression and multiple correlation; partial correlation; phi, tetrachoric, biserial, and point-biserial correlation; the discriminant function; factor analysis; intraclass correlation; trend analysis. Prerequisites, 490 or equivalent, and 591.
NEW
599 Independent Studies in Education (*)
Independent studies or readings of specialized aspects of education. Registration must be accompanied by a study prospectus for the work proposed, endorsed by the appropriate faculty adviser and the Graduate Program Adviser. Prerequisite, permission of instructor and Graduate Program Adviser.
SECRETARIAL STUDIES
CHG
120, 121 Replace 120-121
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING
AERONAUTICS AND ASTRONAUI1CS
NEW
442 Flight Mechanics III (3)
Determination in flight of performance, stability, and control characteristics; comparison with results calculated, using aerodynamic information obtained in the previous courses of the series. Laboratory work is conducted with an airplane available to the department. Prerequisite, 441.
CHG
503 Replaces 514
NEW
AA 524 Aerodynamics of Aircraft Gas Turbine Engines I (3)
Aircraft gas turbine cycle analysis-ramjet, turbojet, turbofan, turboprop, multispool engines, afterburning engines, component behavior, component matching, overall engine performance.
NEW
525 Aerodynamics of Aircraft Gas Turbine Engines II (3)
Aerodynamics of turbines and compressors. Ideal one-dimensional theory, supersonic compressors, cascade theory, performance of a single stage, multi-stage compressors, throughflow theories, actuator disc theory, threedimensional effects.
NEW
526 Aerodynamics of Aircraft Gas Turbine Engines III (3)
Advanced aerodynamics of turbines and compressors. Secondary flow in turbomachines, boundary layers, separation, mathematics of stochastic processes, turbulence in supersonic inlets, engine compatibility. The transonic compressor, the supersonic turbine, the scramjet.
CERAMIC ENGINEERING
CHG
412 Replaces Materials Engineering 412
NEW
430 Nuclear Ceramics (3)
Uses and properties of ceramic materials for nuclear reactors: radiation effects. Offered alternate years. Prerequisite, 3 I 4 or 400.
CHG
501 Replaces 512
CHG
512 Replaces Materials Engineering 512
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
NEW
526 Phase Equilibria (3)
Classical and molecular thermodynamics of phase equilibria, solution theory, thermodynamic stability, and critical phenomena. Prerequisite, 525 or permission.
CHG
543J Replaces 543
CHG
544J. Replaces 544
NEW
555 Interfacial Phenomena (3)
CapiItary statics and dynamics; classical and statistical thermodynamics of interfaces; adsorption. Prerequisites, 525, 540.
CIVIL ENGINEERING
CHG
316 Replaces 216
NEW
452 System Engineering Fundamentals (3)
The methodology and philosophy necessary to employ the system approach to management of natural resources, design of public works systems, or any other complex systems arc surveyed. Scientific methods are introduced for the tasks of problem definition, goal setting, system synthesis, system analysis, and choice among alternative systems. Prerequisites, Mathematics 224 and senior standing.
CHG
461 Replaces 561
NEW
477J Model Techniques for Structural Design (3)
The theory and practice of model study as applied to the preliminary design of architectural structures. Offered jointly with Architecture. Prerequisite, Architecture 378 or permission.
NEW
545 Incompressible Flow Through Porous Media (3)
Application of conformal mapping techniques to both confined and free-surface flow through porous media. Groundwater flow provides the basic motivation for the course, but the mathematical methods are developed with a large degree of generality to give the student an insight into their application to other areas of two-dimensional potential theory. Prerequisites, graduate standing and Mathematics 224, or equivalent.
NEW
579 Introduction to Structural Design Optimization (3)
Introduction to the general methods of approach used in optimization. Linear programming theory and its application to linear algebraic problems. Application of linear programming to optimization of design of trusses and frames. Application of linear programming to nonlinear systems using the approach of sectionally linearized constraints. Prerequisite, graduate standing or permission.
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
NEW
304 Basic Electrical Engineering Laboratory (I)
One three-hour laboratory each week covering measurements of direct- and alternating-current circuits. For mechanical engineering majors. Prerequisite, Mechanical Engineering 263 and corequisite, Mechanical Engineering 363.
CHG
315 Replaces 235
CHG
316 Replaces 236
CHG
317 Replaces 311
CHG
318 Replaces 312
CHG
362 Replaces 364
NEW
364 Electronic Devices I.abomtory (1)
A three-hour laboratory each week in electronic devices. I>rerequisite, concurrent registration in 363.
28
NEW
421 Electroacoustics (4)
Fundamentals of acoustics and the electroacoustical aspects of electromechanical systems. Characteristics of transducers. Synthesis of systems. Prerequisite, 323 or permission.
NEW
476 Logical Design of Digital Devices (3)
Number theory of formal and informal systems, translation, error detection characteristics. Arithmetic operations in formal and informal systems. Boolean algebra, algebraic manipulation and simplification. Topological methods. Switching and logical applications in combinatorial minimization. Analysis and synthesis of sequential logic, minimization criteria. Systems design. Prequisite, upper-division standing.
NEW
478J Computer Organization and Machine Language Programming (4)
Differences and similarities in computer structure. Flow of control. Instruction codes and their execution for arithmetic, logical, character manipulation, and input-output operations. Indexing and indirect addressing; subroutine linkage. Study of information representations and their relationship to processing techniques. Offered jointly with the Computer Science Group. Prerequisites, fundamental knowledge of FORTRAN and Assembly Language Programming.
CHG
498 Rel)laces 463
NEW
506 Stochastic Processes and Communication Theory 1(3)
Stochastic processes, correlation functions and power spectra, implementation of optimum receivers. Prerequisite, 505.
NEW
507 Stochastic Processes and Communication Theory II (3)
Bandpass channels, fading channels, sampling theorem, optimum mean-square linear filtering, different types of modulation such as linear, frequency, pulse-code, etc. Prerequisite, 506 ..
NEW
513 Actin Circuit Theory (3)
Principles of analysis and synthesis of linear active circuits. Emphasis on general principles, including conservation theorems, invariants, performance limitations in the presence of parasitic elements and realizability conditions. Illustrative applications related to negative resistance amplifiers, feedback amplifiers, and active filters. Prerequisite, 441 or permission.
NEW
547 Neural Communication and Control in Biological Systems (3)
A first course which conveys the state of quantitative knowledge of how neural events, that is, motion of charged particles, accomplishes communication and control in biologi-
cal systems. The stress is on experimentally derived mathematical models and their limitations. Prerequisite, graduate standing or permission.
CHG
573 Electromagnetic Theory and Applications U (4) Replaces 575
GENERAL ENGINEERING
NEW
215 Topics in Digital Computing (3)
Continuation of material in 115 to include the entire FORTRAN language, description of the current monitor system, and an introduction to the use of problem-oriented languages. Prerequisite, 115.
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
NEW
204 Introduction to Manufacturing Methods (3)
A survey of production techniques in the foundry, welding, and machining manufacturing areas. Emphasis is on the economics of and the mechanical characteristics produced by the design choice specifying the manufacturing process. Projections beyond current techniques are included. Lecture and laboratory.
CHG
261 Replaces 260
NEW
308 Production Methods (3)
A study of the principles and application of thermal and mechanical processes in the production of manufactured parts. Lecture and laboratory. Prerequisites, 204 or 201, 202, and 203.
CHG
360 Replaces 367
NEW
363 Mechanical Systems II (3)
Continuation of 263 to include Fourier analysis, Laplace transform, transfer functions, introduction to feedback, matrix methods. Prerequisites, 263 and Mathematics 238.
NEW
364 Mechanical System Dynamics (3)
Application of system concepts to the study of mechanical system dynamics. Vibrations of systems with several degrees of freedom; random oscillations. Laboratory emphasizing dynamic measurements of various physical quantities. Prerequisites, 360 or Civil Engineering 291, and 363.
NEW
401 Metal Casting Theory and Design (3)
Study of the physical phenomena involved in the metal casting process and how their effects can be controlled. Introduction to quantitative analysis of process variables for control. Prerequisites, 201 and 340, or permission.
NEW
403 Material-Removal Processes (3)
Cutting and noncutting processes for material removal in the shaping of manufactured products. Study of forces and of power consumption in the various processes, and relative costs. Prerequisites, 203 (or 204), and 340, or permission.
NEW
450 Mechanical Behavior of Solids (3)
Study of clastic, plastic, and viscoelastic deformations of solids; application to assemblages of bars, and to concentric pressure vessels of thin- and of thick-wall constmction. Prerequisite, 340 or permission.
METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING
CHG
255 Replaces 224
CHG
270 Replaces 204
CHG
323 Replaces 321
CHG
455 Replaces 424
CHG
460 Replaces 461
CHG
461 Replaces 460
CHG
462 Replaces 441
CHG
463 Replaces 464
CHG
511 Ad,'anced Theory of X-Ray Diffraction (3) Replaces Materials Engineering 513
NEW
512 Transmission Electron Microscopy (3)
Fundamentals of electron optics as applied to microscopy. Applications of contrast theory and electron diffmction with emphasis on defect and multiphase structures in crystalline solids. Prerequisites, 541 and permission.
COLLEGE OF FISHERIES
NEW
504 Invertebrate Pathology (5)
Pathological effects and response to injury in invertebrates. The approach is topical, e.g., inflammation, tumors, physical and chemical trauma, and parasitic diseases, rather than phylogenetic. Under each topic, the discussion is phylogenetic and comparative. Prerequisite, permission.
29
NEW
535 Metabolic Effects of Chemical Pollutants (4)
Physiological and biochemical effects of industrial, urban, and agricultural chemicals on aquatic biota; specific metabolic effects of various poisonous and inhibitory substances; modes of inhibition of enzymes systems of aquatic organisms. Prerequisites, upper-division or graduate standing, organic chemistry, general physiology, biochemistry, or cell physiology or equivalent.
NEW
545 Speciation (3)
Intraspecific variation, mechanisms of speciation, and interspecific interactions, with special emphasis of fishes. Prerequisite, Genetics 451 or equivalent.
COLLEGE OF FOREST RESOURCES NEW
354 Field Studies-Outdoor Recreation (6)
Studies of outdoor recreation in action. An introduction to the problems of managing large recreation complexes or private county, state, and federal lands during the period of maximum visitor use. Field trips.
CHG
415 Replaces 455
NEW
416 Micrometeorological Measurements and Instrumentation (3)
Principles and theories of biometeorological instrumentation. Accuracy, measuring solar and thermal radiation, heat flux, air and soil temperature, atmospheric moisture content, wind. Prerequisites, Mathematics 124, 125, 126, Physics 121, 122, 123, or permission.
NEW
420 Ecology and Natural Science as an Approach to Conservation Education (3)
Classroom and field instruction in ecology, geology, soils, climate, forest pathology, entomology, and wildlife. Course includes field trip designed to give students opportunity to apply knowledge received .in classroom. Prerequisite, teacher of science.
CHG
450 Replaces 456
NEW
451 Outdoor Recreation Economics (3)
The application of economic principles to outdoor recreation problems. The elements of demand for outdoor recreation opportunities, the evaluation of recreation alternatives, and the allocation of resources for recreational use on public and private lands. Prerequisite, Economics 201.
NEW 453 Principles of Interpretation (5)
A consideration of the interpretive specialist in outdoor recreation. Increasing visitor enjoyment and manipulating visitor impact through interpretation. Special emphasis on promoting visitor interest and an ecological understanding through information progress. Prerequisite, 450.
NEW 454 Regulation of Recreation Areas (5)
Acquaints the student with the problems of administration and management of large recreational land areas. Includes control of public use, protection of environmental quality, determining carrying capacity, organization structure, and other administrative details. Prerequisite, 450.
NEW 455 Planning and Design of Outdoor
Recreation Areas (5)
The physical planning process in resourceoriented recreation and urban development. Relates both the general influences of sun, climate, access, and urban proximity, with specific site influences of topography, vegetation, soil, and water in recreation design. The laboratory includes graphic methods of communication and field trips.
NEW 457 Field Problems in Outdoor Recreation
(5)
Application of principles and practices to field problems in outdoor recreation. Extensive field trips. Prerequisites, 450, 451, 453, 454, 455.
NEW 487 Introduction to Wood Biochemistry (3)
Basic biochemical concepts; emphasis on the chemistry of photosynthesis, plant metabolism, and protein biosynthesis. Prerequisite, Chemistry 232 or permission.
NEW 522 Outdoor Recreation Research Methods
(3)
The application of scientific method to the study of outdoor recreation problems. The procedures and techniques used in conducting recreation research, such as preparation of problem analyses, research proposals, and study plans; the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data normally used in recreation studies. Prerequisite, graduate standing.
NEW 489 Wood Biosynthesis (3)
Biosynthesis of carbohydrates, phenolic and terperoid compounds in forest trees, and biochemistry of wood degradation. Prerequisite, 487 or Biochemistry 406.
SCHOOL OF NURSING
NEW 523 Seminar in Therapeutic Nursing Process
I (3)
Analysis and synthesis of concepts relative to therapeutic nursing based upon consideration of individual rights and privileges and selected theories of human development. Library research and field study required.
NEW 524 Seminar in Nursing Leadership
Processes (3)
A core course for pre-master's students in nursing. It provides a theoretical and conceptual basis for interaction in nursing leadership roles. The teacher-learner and superiorsubordinate processes in achieving personal development and health goals are viewed within the framework of organized systems.
NEW 525 Seminar in Therapeutic Nursing
Process II (3)
Analysis and synthesis of concepts relative to therapeutic nursing based upon consideration of the individual's response to crisis and stress as these influence health and illness. Library research and field study required.
NEW 536 Operant Techniques in Modification of
Deviant Behavior (3)
Reinstatement of former course. Use of behavioral principles in nursing and other disciplines involved in care of normal and retarded children. Experimental analysis of behavior. Laboratory demonstrations. Enrollment limited. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW 546J Rehabilitation Nursing Seminar I (3)
Analysis of selected theoretical components underlying rehabilitation and utilization of scientific rationale in clinical nursing studies, with emphasis on prevention and maintenance. Library research und field study are required. Offered jointly with Physical Medicine and Rchabilitution. Prerequisite, graduate standing.
NEW 547J Rehabilitation Nursing Seminar II (3)
Reconceptualization of theories of rehabilitation through study of patients with a variety of disabilities, with emphasis on supportive aspects. Library research and field study are required. Offered jointly with Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Prerequisite, 546J.
NEW 548J Rehabilitation Nursing Seminar III (3)
Assessment of the nursing problems and direction of nursing therapies for groups of patients with a variety of disabilities, with special emphasis on restorative needs. Library research, intra- and interdisciplinary conferences will be included. Offered jointly with Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Prerequisites, 546J, 547J.
30
NEW 549J Rehabilitation Nursing Seminar IV (6)
Evaluation of nursing therapies used for rehabilitative problems in a variety of settings. Communication of pertinent rehabilitation nursing interventions. Library research and field study are required. Offered jointly with Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Prerequisites, 546J, 547J, 548J.
NEW 565 Implications from Microbiology for
Nursing (2)
Examination of selected major fields from microbiology. Exploration of particular aspects of those fields and of current research progress in microbiology. Relevance for nursing. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW 566 Seminar in Associate Degree Nursing
Education I (3)
Synthesis of teaching-learning theories affecting teaching of nursing in community colleges. Review of research, analysis of factors influencing teaching in relation to learning needs of students. Prerequisites, Education 555 and permission.
NEW 567 Seminar in Associate Degree Nursing
Education II (3)
An examination of principles and concepts of curriculum development and their implications for associate degree nursing education. Prerequisites, 566 and permission.
NEW 568 Seminar in Associate Degree Nursing
Education III (3)
Philosophy of and problems of design in conducting institutional research in associate degree nursing programs. Application of research findings to teaching. Prerequisites, 567 and permission.
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
I'HARMACY
NEW 362 Fundanlentals of Pharmacotherapeutics
(3)
Dosage forms; principles of pharmacology; drug classes, actions and clinical uses, with emphasis on the use of drugs in dental patients. For dental hygiene students. Prerequisites, Chemistry 102, Conjoint (Medical) 317-318.
GRADUATE SCHOOL COMPUTER S< 'IENCE NEW
478J Computer Organization and Machine Language Programming (4)
Differences and similarities in computer structure. Flow of control. Instruction codes and their execution for arithmetic, logical, character manipulation, and input-output operations. Indexing and indirect addressing; sub routing linkage. Study of information representations and their relationship to processing techniques. Offered jointly with Electrical Engineering. Prerequisites, fundamental knowledge of FORTRAN and Assembly Language Programming.
NEW
510 List Processing and String Manipulation (3)
Structure of information sets which reflect the syntactic or semantic relationships in the information. The generation and processing of structures such as lists and trees. Generalized information systems. Pattern recognition and manipulation of symbolic strings. Markov algorithms. Algebraic symbol-manipulation processes. Syntax, semantics, and use of recent versions of languages such a'i LISP, FORMULA-ALGOL, SNOBOL, and FORMAC. Prerequisite, Electrical Engineering 501 or permission.
NEW
520 Computer Science Seminar (1, max. 3)
Weekly discussion by students and faculty or visitors on topics of current interest. Must be taken by all graduate students for three quarters.
NEW
531 Automata Theory I (3)
Finite, probabilistic, growing, and reproducing automata. Representation of automata by state graphs, regular expressions, logical nets, recursive functions, Turing machines. Prerequisite, Mathematics 305.
NEW
573J Artificial Intelligence (4)
Introduction to problem solving. Survey of theorem proving, symbol manipulating, pattern recognition, and inductive problem-solving techniques. Computer models of human thought. Offered jointly with Psychology. Prerequisite, Computer Science 478J.
NEW
590 Special Topics in Computer Science (*)
Lectures and discussions of current interest in Computer Science. May not be offered every quarter; content may vary from one offering to another. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
600 Research (*)
Prerequisite, permission.
700 Thesis (*)
Prerequisite, permission.
GEOPHYSICS
NEW
406J General Seismology (3)
Ray theory analysis applied to an inhomogeneous earth; travel time analysis; observational seismology, instruments, quantitative measurement of earthquakes; properties of earth's interior; tectonic significance of earthquakes. Offered jointly with Geology. Prerequisite, 405J or permission.
NEW
510J Physics of Ice and Snow (3)
Structure of the water molecule. Crystallographic structures of icc. Electrical, optical, thermal, and mechanieal properties of ice. Growth of ice from the vapor and liquid phases. Physical properties of snow. Offered jointly with Atmospheric Sciences. Prerequi-site, permission. .
NEW
51U Glaciology I: Formation of Snow and Ice Masses (3)
Snow climatology. Transport of snow by wind. Transfer of radiative, sensible, and latent heat at the surface of snow and icc. Freezing of natural water bodies. Heat and mass budget of ice masses. Theories of icc ages. Offered jointly with Atmospheric Sciences. Prerequisite, 510J or permission.
NEW
512J GlacioloID' II: Structural Glaciology (3)
Heat and mass transfer in snow and ice. Metamorphism. Effects of heat conduction, vapor diffusion, radiation, solid impurities, brine inclusions. Petrography of snow and ice. Flow structures. Bulk physical properties of natural snow and ice. Offered jointly with Atmospheric Sciences. Prequisite, 5111 or permission.
NEW
513J Glaciology III: Dynamic Glaciology (3)
Flow laws of ice, steady laminar flow. Sliding on bedrock. Kinematic waves, glacial surges. Snow and avalanche dynamics. Deformation and drift of sea ice. Relation of structures to deformation. Offered jointly with Atmospheric Sciences. Prerequisite, 51U or permission.
NEW
5141 Field Glaciology (6)
Structure and metamorphism of snow cover. Energy exchange at melting snow and ice surfaces. Deformation and flow of glaciers. Climatology and mass budgets. Glacier features. Emphasis on instrumentation, field techniques, and data analysis. Offered jointly with Atmospheric Sciences. Prerequisites, 5111, 512J, or permission.
NEW
539J Structure and Dynamics of Upper Atmosphere (3)
Properties of the ionosphere, electromagnetic wave propagation, the dynamics of the ionosphere. Offered jointly with Atmospheric Sciences. Prerequisite, 542 or permission.
NEW
551J Potential Theory and Application (3)
Newtonial fields; integral theorems; harmonic functions; geopotential, mass, moment, shape of the earth; theory of analysis of gravity and magnetic anomalies. Offered jointly with Geology. Prerequisite, Mathematics 428 or Aeronautics and Astronautics 568, or permission.
NEW
5521 Theoretical Seismology (3)
Wave motion in uniform and layered elastic solids, dispersion, surface waves, modal analy-
31
sis; inhomogeneous and anisotropic media; effects of anelasticity, gravity, and curvature, eigenvibrations of the earth. Offered jointly with Geology. Prerequisite, Aeronautics and Astronautics 546.
NEW
535 Introduction to Plasmas in Geophysics (3)
Kinetic theory of ionized gases, phase space distributions, magnetohydrodynamics of conducting fluids, transport processes, configuration-space instabilities in the magnetosphere, charged particle trajectories in nonuniform fields, geomagnetic trapping in radiation belts, electromagnetic and hydrodynamic waves in anisotropic media, velocity-space instabilities, propagation in the ionosphere and magnetosphere. Prerequisite, graduate standing or permission.
NEW
553J Physical Properties of Earth Material (3)
Composition of rocks; mechanical, thermal, magnetic, and electrical properties of rocks; tensor properties of crystals; measurement of rock properties at high pressures and temperatures. Offered jointly with Geology. Prerequisite, Aeronautics and Astronautics 567 or permission.
NEW
571J Gravity and Geomagnetic Interpretation (3)
Fundamental concepts; the earth's magnetic field; instrumentation and reduction of magnetic mea..c;;urements, interpretation of magnetic data; gravity measurements, reduction of gravity observations; interpretation of gravity anomalies. Offered jointly with Oceanography. Prerequisites, Mathematics 324, Physics 327, (or equivalents), Geophysics 405J or Geology 450, and permission.
NEW
580 Special Topics in Geophysics (2)
Intensive treatment of a selected topic in geophysics presented by lectures or seminars for students in geophysics and related special fields. Subject is selected from all areas in geophysics and is expected to vary from year to year. Prequisite, graduate standing or permission.
NEW
700 Thesis (*)
SCHOOL OF LIBRARIANSHIP
NEW
465 Hospital and Institutional Libraries (3)
Orientation in the field: organization and techniques that apply to different types of hospitals, institutions, and public library extension services. Special emphasis on bibliotherapy and the library's contribution to rehabilitation.
NEW
485 Seminar in Library Programs for Children and Young People (1-5)
A course designed to provide an opportunity for discussing changing concepts in library de-
velopment for children and young people, and for planning programs that reflect current educational trends. Prerequisites, 454 or equivalent, and permission of instructor.
NEW
491 Documentation (3)
A course in the variolls means of recording, organizing, locating, and duplicating informational materials. Emphasis will be given to practical methods of the documentation cycle.
NEW
537 Library of Congress Classification (3)
An extensive consideration of the basic principles of Library of Congress classification and subject headings. Emphasis is on theory and practice in the use of the scheme. Prerequisites, 443, 535.
SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION NEW
552 Administrath'e Problems of Development (3)
Problems of administering developing nationstates and regions, including theoretical aspects of development administration, bureaucratic change, administrative-political interaction in policymaking, organizational development, political impact of administering major programs. Prerequisites, Political Science 473, 474, or permission.
NEW
553 Comparative Urban and Regional Administration (3)
A comparative analysis of the organizational structure and administrative and political behavior within urban and regional governmental units and the relationships of these units to national governments. Prerequisite, permission.
PUBLIC POLICY
NEW
580J Medical Care (2)
An interdiscipHnary seminar designed to survey factors affecting the delivery of medical care. The subject will be viewed by representatives of medicine, sociology, economics, and political science. Offered jointly with Preventive Medicine. Prerequisite, graduate standing.
NEW
590,591,592 Midcareer Seminar (3, 3, 3)
Interdisciplinary seminar in public policy for midcareer executives. Open to National Institute of Public Affairs award winners and others by permission.
SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK
CHG
500 Replaces CSSWK 500 (Formerly approved for Continuing Studies)
NEW
527 Social Work Practice With Groups (2)
Study of service of clients within a social work group; especially adapted for students specializing in either social casework or community organization. Prerequisites, 521 and secondyear standing.
SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY
DENTAL SCIENCE AND LITERATURE
CHG
430-431-432 Replace 430, 431, 432
DENTISTRY
CHG
N515-516 Replace 516
FIXED PARTIAL DENTURES
CHG
132, 133, 134 Replace Operath-e Dentistry 132, 133, 134
ORAL BIOLOGY
CHG
431 Replaces 131
PERIODONTICS
CI-IG
407.408 Replace Dental Hygiene 407, 408
NEW
599 Periodontal )athology (2)
Course objective is to cover in depth the gross, microscopic, and chemical alterations observed in the tissues in periodontal disease and to discuss the various concepts concerning the nature of the underlying lesion_ The course will be conducted on a seminar basis and will draw heavily from the current literature. Prerequisites, 445, 500, or permission.
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
BIOCHEMISTRY
CHG
562 Replaces 563, 564
NEW
571 Chemical Regulation of Cell Growth and Function (2)
A description of cell growth and function in terms of chromo!iome replication. modulations of chromosomal activity, and regulation of enzyme synthesis and activity. Prerequisite, 442 or permission.
32
NEW
583 Advanced Biochemistry Laboratory (2)
Experiments in advanced techniques used in biochemical research, including ultracentrifugation, electrophoresis, chromatography, spectrophotometry, and radioactive isotope techniques. Prerequisites, 441, 444, and permission.
NEW
590 Proteins and Enzymes Seminar (1, max. 8)
Weekly conferences on current research in protein and enzymes. For graduate students in biochemistry. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
591 Seminar on Protein Structures (1)
Topics on the determination of protein structure by X-ray crystallography, and on relationships between structure and chemical properties in solution and in the crystalline state. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
592 Seminar on Lipid Biochemistry (1)
Topics of research interest in lipid biochemistry will be discussed in detail. The organic chemistry and physical chemistry of simple and complex lipids will be undertaken in considerable detaiL Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
593 Semillar in Nucleic Acid Chemistry and Protein Synthesis (1)
Seminar discussions in current developments in the chemistry of nucleic acids and protein biosynthesis. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
594 Glycogen Metabolism Seminar (1)
Weekly conferences on research in glycogen metabolism. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
595 Ontogeny and Phylogeny (1)
Weekly conferences on current research in ontogeny and phylogeny.
NEW
596 Clinical Chemistry Seminar (1)
Conferences on research and development in clinical chemistry. For postdoctorals in clinical chemistry and graduate students with permission. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
597 Phmt Viruses Seminar (1)
The structure and mode of replication of plant viruses will be discussed in detail. The effects of ultraviolet radiation on plant viruses and their component protein and nucleic acids will be examined. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
598 Seminar in De,-elopmental Biology (1)
Discllssion will cover recent advances in the field of developmental biology, especially those arcns that are or can be analyzed by a biochemical approach. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
599 Seminar in Physical Chemistry of Polymers (1)
Weekly conferences on current research in the physical chemistry of macromolecules. For graduate students in biochemistry. Prerequisite, permission.
BIOMEDICAL HISTORY
NEW
410 History of Medicine in the United States (2 or 5)
A detailed survey of the development of medicine in the United States from the colonial period to the twentieth century. Medical students receive 2 credits.
NEW
411 American Medicine During the Colonial Period (3)
A detailed examination of the background and beginnings of the medical profession in America. The main emphasis will be placed on the events that led to the emergence of a distinctive American medical profession in the post-Revolutionary era.
NEW
412 American Medicine During the Early National Period, 1787-1865 (3)
A study of the American medical profession from the early years of independence until the conclusion of the Civil War. The major emphasis will be placed on the development of what could be called an American School of Medicine during the early part of this period, and its disintegration into sectional medicine at the end of the era.
CHG
414 Replaces 440
NEW
415 History of Public Health (2 or 5)
A survey of the public health movement from its Greco-Roman origins to the present time, with emphasis on leading figures and significant events. Credits available arc 5 for students interested in the field of public health; 2 for a medical student's elective.
CHG
419 Replaces 419J
NEW
420 Evolutionary Thought and Society (3)
A survey of the development of organic evolutionary thought from ancient times to the present. Consideration will be given to the impact of evolutionary ideas on both the lay and scientiric communities. The rise of modern genetics and the significance of genetical and evolutionary knowledge for a variety of intellectual disciplines will be investigated.
NEW
425 The History of the Biological Sciences in America (5)
A survey of the character of biological research, teaching, and publication in America from colonial times to the present. Attention will be given to major scientific controversies and to the seeming and real conflict of scientific values with the religious, aesthetic, intellectual, and political traditions of the community.
NEW
430 Medicine in the Age of Reason (3)
A detailed consideration of the development of medical theory and practice during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Emphasis will be placed upon the interacting forces and ideas leading to the establishment of scientific medicine.
NEW
431 Medicine During the Nineteenth Century (3)
A detailed consideration of the development of the basic and clinical medical sciences during the nineteenth century, empha.<;izing medical theory and practice. Prerequisites, 301 or 304,402 or 501, and 502.
CHG
432 Replaces 444
NEW
440 History of United States MiUtary Medicine through the Nineteenth Century (3)
Medicine and surgery practiced during the early wars of the United States, with particular emphasis upon the medical advances resulting from these wars.
NEW
450 Medicine in Nonliterate Societies (2 or 3)
A survey of various cultural settings of medical practice wiII be followed by detailed considerations of public reactions to illness, types of therapy, and the selective impact of cultural contact on medical practices. Available arc 2 credits to medical students, 3 credits for others.
NEW
451 The Curer: A Cross Cultural Comparison (3)
A general consideration of the training and types of curers will precede case studies of curing practices from world ethnography. Attention will be paid to specific curing situations, rather than to theoretical formulations and model building.
NEW
452 Culture and the Ecology of Dlo;ease (3)
The ecology of food production in hunting and gathering, pastoral, and agricultural societies; culture and parasitic diseases (trypanosomiasis and schistosomiasis); culture and metabolic disorders (sickle cell anemia and kuru); problems relating to culture-bound syndromes.
33
NEW
460 Chinese Medicine: The Classical Position (2 or 3)
The philosophical and shamanistic backgrounds of Chinese Medicine (Confucianism, Taoism, the Yin-Yang School, Wu and Ku Sorcery); early medical men of China (the Yellow Emperor, Pien Ch'iao, and others); the early syntheses of Chang Chung-ching and Huang-fu Mi. Medical students may earn 2 credits; 3 credits are available to others.
NEW
461 Chinese Medicine from the Tang Dynasty to 1850 (3)
A summary consideration of how the classical position in Chinese medicine paves the way for discussions in medical ethics and forensic medicine, foreign influences on Chinese medicine, and the development of the principal therapies of Chinese medicine, herbs, and acupuncture.
NEW
462 Chinese Responses to Biology and Medicine from the West (3)
The early flow of ideas between East and West has a stop and go history. Reasons for this ready acceptance alone time and extreme xenophobia at another arc considered. The selective acceptance of Western science is also explored.
NEW
463 Acupuncture (3)
The origins and development of one of the principal Chinese therapies; the meridians and points of acupuncture will be considered in detail as well as the physiology that underlies acupuncture; diffusion of acupuncture to the West and its modern practice.
MEDICINE
NEW
490 Emergency Room-King County Hospital (*)
General medical training in the emergency room of the King County Hospital, encompa'ising medicine, pediatrics, and surgery. Prerequisite, fourth-year medical student.
MICROBIOLOGY
NEW
505 Immunochemical Techniques (*, max. 3)
Theory and usc of current immunochemical techniques. Prerequisites, 551 which may be taken concurrently, and permission.
NEW
551 Immunochemistry (2)
Discllssion of the synthesis, structure, and reactions of antibody molecules. Prerequisites, 5 credits in biochemistry and permission.
NEW
702 Degree Final (3)
Limited to students completing a nonthesis master's degree program. Prerequisite, permission of Department adviser.
NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY
NEW
498 Undergraduate Thesis (*)
Offered to those students who have engaged in summer research in the Department of Neurological Surgery. Provides time for extension of such projects, and opportunity to study and prepare for completion of thesis on selected neurosurgical subjects. Elective for medical students. Prerequisites, summer research and permission.
NEW
499 Undergraduate Research (*)
Prerequisite, permission.
OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY
NEW
N401 Understanding Human SexuaUty (0)
A series of Ilh-hour seminar discussions to be held monthly, presenting basic concepts underlying sex education. Scientific exploration of physiological, psychological, and cultural aspects of sexual development, expression, problems, and adjustments of youth and adults. Elective for freshmen. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
465 Introduction to Obstetrics and Gynecology (8)
Four weeks of clinical clerkship in obstetrics and gynecology, to include daily seminars with the faculty on pre-assigned topics, followed by morning and afternoon preceptorial sessions with inpatients and outpatients. Required for third-year medical students.
NEW
481J Foundations of Sex Education (3)
Scientific exploration of physiological, psychological, and cultural aspects of sexual development. Expression, problems, and adjustments of youth and adults. Basic concepts underlying sex education. Offered jointly with Health Education. Prerequisite, permission.
PATHOLOGY
CHG 320,321,322 Replace 320, 321, 322-
CHG 423-424-425-426 Replace -424-425
CHG 441-442-443 Replace 440-441-442-443
(Medical students only)
CHG 444-445 Replace 440-444-445 (Dental
students only)
PEDIATRICS
CHG 475, 476, 477, 482, 483 Replace 480A, 480B,
480C, 482A, 4828
PHARMACOLOGY
NEW
532 Essentials of Toxicology (2)
A study of harmful effects and various factors that influence the harmful effects of chemicals on biological tissue. Prerequisites, 442-443 or 301-302 or 234.
NEW
533 Methods of Toxicology (2)
A combined laboratory demonstration and didactic consideration of chemical, physical, and biological methods involved in studies of harmful effects of chemicals on biological tissue. Prerequisites, 442-443 or 301-302 or 234.
PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOPHYSICS
NEW
430 Mathematical Methods of Physiology and Biophysics (3)
Selected mathematical methods particularly useful in physiology and biophysics are developed. Emphasis is on deriving mathematical descriptions, usually in the forms of ordinary or partial differential equations, for physiological systems. Topics covered will usually include solution of differential equations using the Laplace transform linear approximation of nonlinear systems, transfer function, and Green's function description of physiological systems. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
431, 432 Biological Control Systems (3, 3)
Application of feedback and control system theory to the analysis of physiological regulation. Review of appropriate mathematical techniques. Discussion of applications to cardiovascular, respiratory, and temperature regulation, and to nervous and endocrine systems. Prerequisite, permission.
437 Computer Programming for Biological Research (3)
Application of procedure-oriented languages to biological research. Stress is placed on programming in FORTRAN IV, ALGOL, and digital-analog simulator. Programming practice on various computers is assigned with term-program written at conclusion of course. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
470 Selected Topics in Endocrinology and Metabolism (3)
Reading and discussion of current literature, with emphasis on regulatory mechanisms in mammals. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
519 Membrane Biophysics Seminar (I)
Detailed discussion and study of current topics in cell membrane function and structure.
NEW
531 Real-Time Computer SystenL<; (3)
Use of digital computer as an instrument in biological experimentation. Includes real-time analog-digital conversion, digital-analog con-
34
version interrupt processing from the "real" world, display and analysis of data. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
545 Physiology of Vision (3)
Selected readings from recent literature on visual systems. Emphasis is placed on studies of single neuron discharge, but other topics, such as biochemistry of visual pigments and optical properties of the eye, are usually included. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
549 Properties of Neurons (3)
Offered in alternate years with 545. Selected readings from recent literature comparing properties of neurons from different regions of the vertebrate central nervous system. Emphasis is on the critical evaluation of data obtained by intracellular recording. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
551 Physiology of Cerebellum (3) Function of cerebellUm and its afferent and efferant systems; discussion of current physiological literature. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
559 Integrath'e Neurophysiology (3)
Interpretation of neurophysiological phenomena from comparative, biophysical, and evolutionary standpoints.
NEW
560 Contraction of Skeletal Muscle (3)
Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
580 Special Topics in Physiological Control Systems (*)
Selected physiological control systems will be covered in detail. A literature survey of pertinent papers will be used as a basis for indicating the direction of future research. Prerequisite, permission.
PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION
NEW
460- Beginning Physical Therapy Procedures (2-)
Introductory principles and concepts related to clinical physical therapy. Laboratory and clinical practice of basic physical therapy procedures in hydrotherapy. Application of physiological principles to clinical procedures. Prerequisite, physical therapy student.
CHG -461 Replaces 461
CHG 473 Occupational Therapy Theory
Administration and Supervision (3) Replaces 484
CHG
475 Replaces ·475
CHG
476 Replaces -476
CHG
515J Replaces 448J
NEW
540 Application of Measurement Systems (2)
Introduction to, and clinical application of, measurement concepts pertinent to occupational therapy. Prerequisite, permission.
NEW
546J Rehabilitation Nursing Seminar I (3)
Analysis of selected theoretical components underlying rehabilitation and utilization of scientific rationale in clinical nursing studies, with emphasis on prevention and maintenance. Library research and field study are required. Offered jointly with Nursing. Prerequisite, graduate standing.
NEW
547J Rehabilitation Nursing Seminar II (3)
Reconceptualization of theories of rehabilitation through study of patients with a variety of disabilities, with emphasis on supportive aspects. Library research and field study are required. Offered jointly with Nursing. Prerequisite, 546J.
NEW
548J Rehabllitation Nursing Seminar III (3)
Assessment of the nursing problems and direction of nursing therapies for groups of patients with a variety of disabilities, with special emphasis on restorative needs. Library research and intra- and interdisciplinary conferences will be included. Offered jointly with Nursing. Prerequisites, 546J, 547J.
NEW
549J Rehabilitation Nursing Seminar IV (6)
Evaluation of nursing therapies used for rehabilitative problems in a variety of settings. Communication of pertinent rehabilitation nursing interventions. Library research and field study are required. Offered jointly with Nursing. Prerequisites, 546J, 547J, 548J.
NEW
550 Electromyography for Occupational Therapists (3)
Designed to familiarize the occupational therapist with some of ·the principles of electromyography. Lectures with demonstrations and practice sessions.
PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
NEW
474 Statistical Methods in Dentistry (2)
Application of statistical techniques to dental research, design, and interpretation of clinical and laboratory studies.
NEW
507 Applied Immunochemistry (3)
Intensive. Theory and techniques for antigenic analysis of micro-organisms (bacteria, mycoplasmata, and viruses). Prerequisites, 5 credits each in microbiology and biochemistry, and permission.
NEW
519 Principles of Epidemiology (3)
Lectures and discussions covering evolution and meaning of epidemiology, concepts of disease causation, basic epidemiologic methods and descriptive, analytic, and experimental epidemiology. A term paper on the epidemiology of an assigned disease will be
35
required. This course is a prerequisite for Preventive Medicine 520 and 521. Prerequisites, introductory microbiology and statistics or permission.
NEW
580J Medical Care (2)
An interdisciplinary seminar designed to survey factors affecting the delivery of medical care. The subject will be viewed by representatives of medicine, sociology, economics, and political science. Offered jointly with Public Policy (School of Public Affairs). Prerequisite, graduate standing.
NEW
591,592,593 Special Topics in Advanced Biostatistics (3, 3, 3)
Multivariate analysis, clinical trials, health survey design and analysis, Bayesian procedures, regression and classification techniques, applications of contagious distributions in ecology, and other advanced statistical methods will be covered. Each course may be repeated once for credit. Prerequisite, permission.
UROLOGY
NEW
475 Urology Preceptorship (*)
Students will follow a preceptor in all of his work in order to better understand the pathophysiology and management of the problems of the urogenital system and to become acquainted with the office management of urological problems. Full time required for either a ten-day or three-week period. Open to third- and fourth-year medical students. Prerequisite, permission of Department.
CHG
499 Replaces 483
REQUIRED PERMISSION SIGNATURES AUTUMN QUARTER 1968
In order to register for the following courses, the student must obtain a permission signature on his Official Program from the persons listed.
Some departments, schools, or colleges have general permission requirements applicable to many courses. These requirements are also listed. Note: A slash (/) between names indicates that either party
may grant permission.
Abbreviations:
DEPT
ARCHITECTURE
Permission required from a member of the department teaching the course
PERMISSION REQUIRED OF NONMAJORS FOR ADVANCED COURSES ARCH
ARCH ARCH ARCH ARCH
300
440 499 600 700
BUILDING TECH & ADMIN
ARCH ADV DEPT INSTR INSTR INSTR
MAJORS OR DEPT
NONMAJORS MUST HAVE DEPARTMENT PERMISSION FOR ALL COURSES
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE LA AR 334
URBAN PLANNING URB P 400 SEC A&B URB P 479 URB P 485 URB P 522 SEC A&B URB P 523 SEC A&B URB P 541 SEC A&B URB P 600 SEC A&B URB P 700
ANTHROPOLOGY ANTH 100H ANTH 201H ANTH 202H ANTH 371 ANTH 456 ANTH 464 ANTH 466 ANTH 491 ANTH 591
ART
SAKUMA
DEPT DEPT ADV DEPT ADV DEPT ADV DEPT ADV DEPT ADV IN~TR INSTR
ASHP ASHP ASHP GREENGO EASTMAN/OTTENBERG EASTMAN EASTMAN/OTTENBERG QUIMBY QUIMBY
ALL NONMAJORS MUST OBTAIN PERMISSION FROM THE UNDERGRADUATE ART ADVISER FOR ANY STUDIO ART COURSE NUMBERED 300 OR ABOVE ART 105 SEC I&K DUNTHORNE ART 109 SEC E&M DUNTHORNE AR T 280 DUNTHORNE ART 498D BRAlEAU/DUNTHORNEI
ART
ART
ART ART ART AR T
498H
498P
500 501 502 600
ASTRONOMY ASTR 499 ASTR 600 ASTR 700
JOHNSON BRAZEAU/DUNTHORNEI JOHNSON BRAlEAU/DUNTHORNEI JOHNSON JOHNSON JOHNSON JOHNSON BRAZEAU/JOHNSON
INSTR INSTR FACULTY MEMBER
37
DEPT ADV Permission required from the adviser of the department teaching the course
ASHP Permission required from the Arts and Sciences Honors Program office
INSTR Permission required from the instructor of the course
HONORS ADV Permission required from the Honors Program adviser in the department teaching the course
PR Prerequisite
ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES ATM S 390H ASHP
GRAD ADV GRAD ADV GRAD ADV
ATM S 531 ATM S 543 ATM S 546
BIOLOGY BIOL 473L BIOL 586
BOTANY BOT 498 BOT 520 BOT 522 BOT 600 BOT 70U
CHEMISTRY CHEM 145H CHEM 147H CHEM 198 CHEM 198H CHEM 199 CHEM 199H CHEM 345H CHEM 455H CHEM 499 CHEM 499H
CLASSICS GRK 300 GRK 49UH
LA T 490H
COMMUN I CAT IONS CMU 150 CMU 495H CMU 498 CMU 598 CMU 600 CMU 700
ADV 342
JOUR 291 JOUR 300 JOUR 300 JOUR 319 JOUR 404
R TV 27u R TV 376 R TV 454 R TV 456 R TV 457 R TV 461 R TV 465
EDMONDSON WHI TELEY
DEPT DEPT DEPT DEPT DEPT
ASHP/DEPT ADV ASHP/DEPT ADV DEPT ADV ASHP/DEPT ADV DEPT ADV ASHP/DEPT ADV
SEC AR&AU ASHP/DEPT ADV ASHP/DEPT ADV DEPT ASHP/DEPT ADV
DEPT ADV ASHP & HONORS ADV
ASHP & HONORS ADV
DEPT ADV ASHP & DEPT ADV DEPT ADV GRAD ADV GRAD ADV GRAD AOV
ADAMS
CONRAD SEC A.B&C DEPT ADV SEC U NONMAJORS BY PERM DEPT
DEPT ADV BRIER
SEC A&U CRANSTON KINKEL KINKEL KINKEL SHADEL ALDRIDGE ALDRIDGE
DANCE KOREAN DANCE 251 SEC A&B BORIS/JONSON KOR 465 SUH DANCE 256 SEC A&B BORIS/JONSON KOR 499 DEPT DANCE 280 BORIS/JONSON KOR 531 SUH DANCE 290 BORIS/JONSON KOR 550 SUH DANCE 351 BORIS/JONSON KOR 600 LUKOFF/SUH DANCE 49U ALL SEC BORIS/JON~ON KOR 700 STAFF
DRAMA MONGOLI AN DRAMA EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM OPEN TO MONG 499 INSTR SELECTED PARTICIPANTS MONG 600 INSTR ORAliA 121 ROSS DRAMA 141 ROSS RUSSIAN DRAMA 146 ALL SEC CRIDER RUSS llO SEC B HANEY DRAMA 151 SEC A,C,D,E CRIDER RUSS 200 HANEY/HAGGLUND DRAMA 155 ROSS RUSS 2U5H HANEY DRAMA 181 ROSS RUSS 499 HANEY DRAMA 184 ROSS RUSS 600 DEPT DRAMA 221 ROSS RUSS 700 DEPT DRAMA 241 ROSS DRAMA 255 ROSS TI BETAN DRAMA 298 GRAY TIB 499 NORNANG/WYL I E DRAMA 435L CARR TIB 500 NORNANG/WYLlE DRAMA 438L SIKS TIB 502 LABRANG, NORNANG, DRAMA 490 ALL SEC CRIDER WYLIE DRAMA 498 GRAY TIB 600 WYLIE DRAMA 499 CRIDER TIB 700 WYLIE DRAMA 513 LOUNSBURY DRAMA 514 CONWAY VIETNAMESE DRAMA 515 CRIDER VIET 600 QUYEN DRAMA 562 DEPT DRAMA 581 JOSEPH DRAMA 599 CRIDER SOCIAL SCIENCE
SOC S 101H SEC AD&AE ASHP
ECONOMICS GENERAL STUDIES ECON 400 PUBLI C AFF A I RS OR G ST 301H ASHP
EYSENBACH G ST 391 LUTEY ECON 496H SEC A('B MC CAFFREE G ST 493 LUTEY ECON 499 BUECHEL ECON 600 FLOYD GENETICS ECON 700 FLOYD GENET 499 DEPT ECON 702 FLOYD GENET 501 DEPT
GENET 520 DEPT GENET 551 DEPT PR-451 OR PERM
ENGLI SH GENET 554 DEPT ENGL 264H ASHP (, HEINERT ENGL 461 INSTR GEOGRAPHY ENGL 462 INSTR GEOG 100H ASHP ENGL 490 INSTR GEOG 207H ASHP ENGL 492H ASHP (, REINERT GEOG 440J DEPT ENGL 493 INSTR GEOG 442 VELI KONJA/DEPT ENGL 499 INSTR GEOG 477 DEPT/ULLMAN ENGL 499H ASHP (, REINERT ENGL 600 FOWLER & BOWIE GEOLOGY ENGL 700 FOWLER & BOWIE GEOL 10lH ASHP ENGL 702 FOWLER (, BOWIE GEOL 205 GRESENS, CHRISTENSEN
GEOL 450 BOSTROM FAR EASTERN (, RUSSIAN GEOL 472 GRESENS FAR E 210H ASHP GEOL 498 DEPT FAR E 421J PR OR PERM INSTR GEOL 499 DEPT FAR E 461 CONZE GEOL 510 PORTER, WASHBURN FAR E 472 CONZE GEOL 511 PORTER, WASHBURN FAR E 499 DEPT GEOL 512 PORTER, WASHBURN FAR E 501 CONZE GEOL 520 DEPT FAR E 504J HELLMAN GEOL 530 MALLORY, RENSBERGER FAR E 532J INSTR GEOL 540 MC KEE, MISCH FAR E 534J TREADGOLD GEOL 550 BOSTROM, CROSSON, FAR E 535J TREADGOLD CHRISTENSEN FAR E 539J PR OR PERM INSTR GEOL 551J CROSSON FAR E 541J RESHETAR GEOL 560 MALLORY/WHEELER FAR E 550J BUTOW GEOL 570 GRESENS FAR E 559J PYLE GEOL 580 WHETTEN FAR E 560J SUGAR GEOL 585 CHENEY FAR E 598 DEPT GEOL 590 DEPT FAR E 599 DEPT GEOL 600 DEPT FAR E 600 DEPT GEOL 700 DEPT FAR E 611J GASSTER GEOL 702 DEPT FAR E 700 DEPT
GERMANIC LANGUAGES (, LIT CHINESE GERM 201H SEC BB ASHP (, SAUERLANDER (,
CHIN 2()0 SEC A PR OR PERM INSTR GALT CHIN 499 YEN GERM 301H ASHP (, SAUERLANDER CHIN 530 INSTR GERM 312H ASHP (, SAUERLANDER CHIN 551 WILHEL'" GERM 401H ASHP & SAUERLANDER CHIN 600 DEPT GERM 490H ASHP & SAUERLANDER CHIN 700 DEPT GERM 498 SEC B LOEB/HRUBY
GERM 501 LOEB/HRUBY JAPANESE GERM 510 LOEB/HRUBY JAP 311 SEC A&B MATSUDA/N1WA GERM 528 LOEB/HRUBY JAP 401 PR OR PERM INSTR GERM 531 LOEB/HRUBY JAP 451 HURVITZ GERM 534 LOEB/HRUBY JAP 460 TAKAYA GERM 555 LOEB/HRUBY JAP 499 DEPT GERM 556 LOEB/HRUBY JAP 522 HIRAGA GERM 567 LOEB/HRUBY JAP 550 MCKINNON GERM 574 SEC A&B LOEB/HRUBY JAP 600 DEPT GERM 580 LOEB/HRUBY JAP 100 DEPT GERM 590 LOEB/HRUBY
38
HISTORY MUSIC 331 DEPT ADV HIST 101H ASHP MUSIC 334 DEPT ADV HIST 102H ASHP MUSIC 337 ALL SEC DEPT ADV HIST 421J INSTR MUSIC 341 DEPT ADV HIST 498 GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 344 DEPT ADV HIST 490H ASHP & INSTR MUSIC 346J DEPT ADV HI ST 493B INSTR MUSIC 350 ALL SEC DEPT ADV HI ST 499 GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 351 DEPT ADV HIST 500 SEC A GRAD ADV/INSTR /,IUSIC 360 DEPT ADV HIST 509J INSTR "iUSIC 367 DEPT ADV HIST 515 GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 370 DEPT ADV HIST 517 GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 371 DEPT ADV HIST 520 GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 372 DEPT ADV HIST 521 GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 374 DEPT ADV HIST 524A GRAD ADVIINSTR MUSIC 375 DEPT ADV HIST 533 GRAD ADVIINSTR MUSIC 380 DEPT ADV HIST 534J GRAD ADVIINSTR MUSIC 384A DEPT ADV HIST 535J GRAD ADV/INSTR ~USIC 384B DEPT ADV HIST 538 GRAD ADVIINSTR MUSIC 390 DEPT ADV HIST 539J GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 391 DEPT ADV HIST 543 GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 400 DEPT ADV HIST 550J INSTR MUSIC 4U8 DEPT ADV HIST 559J GRAD ADV/INSTR ,",USIC 409 DEPT ADV HIST 560J GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 430 ALL SEC DEPT ADV HIST 566A GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 440 DEPT ADV HIST 575 COSTIGAN/GRAD ADV/ MUSIC 450 ALL SEC DEPT ADV
CHAIRMAN MUSIC 451 DEPT ADV HIST 580 GRAD ADVIINSTR MUSIC 457 DEPT ADV HI ST 593 GRAD ADVIINSTR I.\USIC 460 DEPT ADV HIST 611J GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 464 DEPT ADV HI ST 615 GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 470 DEPT ADV HIST 645 GRAD ADV/INSTR MUSIC 471 DEPT ADV
I.\USIC 478 DEPT ADV MUSIC 48CJ DEPT ADV
HOME ECONOMICS MUSIC 487 DEPT ADV H EC 307H ALL SEC ASHP & HALL MUSIC 490 DEPT ADV H EC 315H ASHP & HALL MUSIC 491 DEPT ADV H EC 329 BROCKWAY MUSIC 492 DEPT ADV H EC 329H ASHP & HALL MUSIC 499 DEPT ADV H EC 338H ASHP & HALL MUSIC 499H ASHP & DEPT ADV H EC 347H SEC AO&BO ASHP & HALL MUSIC 501 GRAD ADV H EC 348 SEC A&B INSTR MUSIC 522 GRAD ADV H EC 354H ASHP & HALL MUSIC 523 GRAD ADV H EC 356H SEC B&D ASHP & HALL MUSIC 550 ALL SEC DEPT ADV H EC 380 INSTR MUSIC 5S1 DEPT ADV H EC 434 SHIGAYA MUSIC 566 GRAD ADV
H EC 495 ALL SEC INSTR MUSIC 584 GRAD ADV
H EC 495H ALL SEC ASHP & HALL MUSIC 590 GRAD ADV
H EC 496H ALL SEC ASHP & HALL MUSIC 591 GRAD ADV
H EC 600 ALL SEC INSTR MUSIC 600 GRAD ADV MUSIC 700 GRAD ADV t-IUSIC 702 GRAD ADV
LINGUISTICS LI NG 553J GRAD ADV OC EANOGRAPHY LI NG 580 GRAD ADV OCEAN 423 SEC ZN&ZO INSTR LI NG 599 GRAD ADV OCEAN 440 INSTR
OCEAN 444 KELLEY OCEAN 460 INSTR
MATHEMATICS OCEAN 461 INSTR MATH 134H ALL SEC KINGSTON/LORTZ OCEAN 480H ASHP & INSTR MATH 201H ASHP & INSTR OCEAN 488H ASHP & INSTR MATH 234H KINGSTON/LORTZ OCEAN 489H ASHP & INSTR MATH 496H DUKE OCEAN 499 ONE OF THE FOLLOWING
ENGLISH,FLEMING, MC MANUS,RATTRAY,
MUSIC RICHARDS,CREAGER, MUSIC 101 ALL SEC DEPT ADV KELLEY, OR LEWIN MUSIC 104 ALL SEC COLLEGE OF EDUC OCEAN 518 BARNES/RATTRAY MUSIC 110 ALL SEC DEPT ADV OCEAN 521 RICHARDS MUSIC 114 ALL SEC DEPT ADV OCEAN 523 RICHARDS MUSIC 130 ALL SEC DEPT ADV OCEAN 531 ONE OF THE FOLLOWING MUSIC 150 ALL SEC DEPT ADV BANSE,ENGLISH'LEWIN. MUSIC 160 DEPT ADV OR TAYLOR MUSIC 171 DEPT ADV OCEAN 537 LEWIN MUSIC 172 DEPT ADV OCEAN 550 ONE OF THE FOLLOWING MUSIC 174 DEPT ADV BENNETT,CREAGER. MUSIC 175 DEPT ADV KELLEY,OR MC MANUS MUSIC 180 DEPT ADV OCEAN 554 CREAGER MUSIC 190 DEPT ADV OCEAN 600 ONE OF THE FOLLOWING MUSIC 191 DEPT ADV BANSE,BARNES,COACHMAN, MUSIC 200 DEPT ADV ENGLI SH, FLEM I NG. MUSIC 201 ALL SEC DEPT ADV MC MANUS,RATTRAY, MUSIC 207 SEC A&B DEPT ADV RICHARDS.TAYLOR. MUSIC 210 ALL SEC DEPT ADV BENNETT,CREAGER, MUSIC 211 DEPT ADV KELLEY, OR LEWIN MUSIC 214 SEC A&B DEPT ADV OCEAN 700 SAME AS 600 MUSIC 221 DEPT ADV OCEAN 7U2 SAME AS 600 MUSIC 230 ALL SEC DEPT ADV MUSIC 234 DEPT ADV MUSIC 240 DEPT ADV PHILOSOPHY MUSIC 244 DEPT ADV PHIL 100H ASHP & DEPT HONORS ADV MUSIC 250 ALL SEC DEPT ADV FOR NON-HONORS STDNTS MUSIC 264 DEPT ADV PHIL 215H ASHP & DEPT HONORS ADV MUSIC 291 DEPT ADV FOR NON-HONORS STDNTS MUSIC 307 SEC A&B DEPT ADV PHIL 484 DEPT UNDERGRAD OR MUSIC 321 SEC A&B DEPT ADV GRAD ADV MUSIC 330 ALL SEC DEPT ADV PHIL 584 GRAD ADV
39
PHil PHil
600 70C
PHYSICAL EDUCATION-MEN PE M 147 PE M 149 PE'" 247 PE M 249 PE M 371
R ED 454
PHYSICAL EDUCATION-WO~EN PE W 765 PE W 272H PE W 498
PE W 498H
PE W 499
PE W 499H
PE .W 501 PE W 547 PE W 580 PE W 700
H ED
R ED
PHYSICS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS
498
454
121H 122H 123H 401 401H 485H 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 600 700 702
All SEC SEC C&D
POLITICAL SCIENCE POL S 20lH POL S 398H POL S 499 POL S 5U4J POL S 532J POL S 541J POL S 57u SEC A&6
POL S 573
POL S 576
POL S 587
POL S 600 POL S 700 POL S 702
PSYCHOLOGY PSYCH 190H
PSYCH 450H PSYCH 498 PS YCH 499 PSYCH 591 PSYCH 592 PS YCH 594 PSYCH 596 PSYCH 597 PSYCH 599 PSYCH 60U PSYCH 7UO
SEC Al.B
GRAD ADV GRAD ADV
QUI lLIAN CROCKFORD QUilLIAN CROCKFORD INSTR PERM REQ OF NONMAJOR~
KUNDE/f-40VIS
MAC lEAN FOX BROER,FOX,PURDY, OR WILSON BOER, FOX. PURDY. OR WILSON BROER,FOX.PURDY, OR WilSON BOER, FOX, PURDY. OR WILSON WilSON, ABERNATHY BOER. WilSON WilSON BOER, WilSON
GAINES
KIDWEll
ASHP/GERHART ASHP/GERHART ASHP/GERHART DEPT DEPT GERHART INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR DEPT DEPT DEPT
ASHP ASHP & INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR FOR STD IN GRAD SCH OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS-OTHERS BY PER'" FOR STD IN GRAD ~CH OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS-OTHERS BY PERM FOR STD IN GRAD SCH OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS-OTHERS BY PERM FOR STD IN GRAD SCH OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS-OTHERS BY PERM INSTR INSTR INSTR
ASHP & HONORS ADVBEACH ASHP & BEACH INSTR INSTR INSTR/DEPT ADV INSTR/DEPT ADV VAN EGEREN INSTR/DEPT ADV SUPERVISOR/INSTR INSTR INSTR INSTR
40
ROMANCE lINGUISTICS & liT ROM 531 ROM 590 ROM 599
FRENCH FR EN FREN FREN FREN FREN FREN FREN FREN FR EN FR EN
ITALIAN IT Al !TAL
SPANISH SPAN SPAN SPAN SPAN SPAN SPAN SPAN SPAN
103 103H 201H 202H 222H 3"1H 3u4H 390 59u 600
590 600
lU3H 201H 202H 203H 3U1H 3v4H 390 600
SCANDINAVIAN SCAND 600 SC AND 700 SCAND 702
DAN 490
NORW 490
SWED 49U
SOCIOLOGY SOC UOH SOC 389
SOC 496H SOC 499 SOC 501 SOC 591 SOC 599 SOC 600 SOC 700
SPEECH SPCH SPCH SPCH SPCH SPCH SPCH SPCH SPCH SPCH SPCH
ZOOLOGY ZOOl ZOOl ZOOl ZOOl ZOOl ZOOl ZOOl ZOOl lOOl
220H 339 349 374 384 499 499 574 584 59U
111H 490 490H 491 491H 498 506 568 578
SEC AH&BB
SEC AD&AE
SEC A
SEC A&8
All SEC SEC A&B
SEC A&8
SEC A-F SEC G&H
SEC BN&BP
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION ACCTG 499 ACCTG 500 SEC A&8 ACCTG 510 ACCTG 520 ACCTG 592 All SEC ACCTG 604
A ORG A ORG A ORG A ORG A ORG A ORG A ORG
499 500 550 575 576 580 604
SEC A&B All SEC
GRAD ADV GRAD ADV GRAD ADV
DEPT ASHP ASHP ASHP ASHP ASHP & DEPT HONORS ADV ASHP DALE GRAD ADV GRAD ADV
GRAD ADV GRAD ADV
ASHP ASHP ASHP ASHP ASHP ASHP W. WilSON GRAD ADV
JOHNSON/ARESTAD JOHNSON/ARESTAD JOHNSON/ARESTAD
JOHNSON/ARESTAD
JOHNSON/ARESTAD
JOHNSON
ASHP & CATTON/DEPT ADV DEPT & DEPT ADV FOR NON MAJORS ASHP & CATTON/DEPT ADV OEPT DEPT ADV/INSTR GRAD DEPT ADV DEPT DEPT DEPT
ASHP INSTR POST INSTR INSTR HOGAN YANTl~ INSTR/GRAD ADV INSTR/GRAD ADV INSTR
ASHP CAHN CAHN CAHN ASHP & CAHN INSTR WHITELEY GORSMAN ORIANS
DEPT GRAD SA ADV GRAD SA AOV GRAD SA ADV GRAD SA AUV GRAD SA ADV
DEPT GRAD I:!A ADV GRAD SA ADV GRAD BA ADV GRAD SA ADV GRAD BA ADV GRAD BA ADV
B ECN 499 DEPT EDUC 509 INSTR B ECN 500 SEC A&B GRAD SA ADV EDUC 519 INSTR B ECN 501 GRAD SA AD" EOUC 520 INSTR B ECN 520 GRAD SA ADV EDUC 536 ANDERSON/STRAYER EDUC 540 MEACHAM S G S 499 DEPT EDUC 541 5TOTT
B G 5 510 SEC A&B GRAD BA ADV EDUC 545 INSTR B G S 552 GRAD BA AD" EDUC 546 INSTR B G S 562 GRAD SA ADV EDUC 556 INSTR B G S 571 GRAD SA ADV EDUC 562 INSTR B G S 572 GRAD BA ADV EDUC 566 FREEHILL B G S 597 GRAD BA ADV EDUC 599 FACULTY ADV & I NSTR B G S 598 GRAD BA ADV EDUC 600 GRAD AOV B G S 604 GRAD BA ADV EDUC 700 GRAD ADV B G S 700 GRAD SA AD" EDUC 102 GRAD ADV B G S 702 GRAll BA ADV B POL 593 SEC A&B GRAD BA ADV
ENGINEERING FIN 499 DEPT A A 499 CHRMN FIN 502 GRAD BA ADV A A 599 CHRMN FIN 527 GRAD BA ADV FIN 550 GRAD BA ADV CH E 599 SEC A&S MOULTON FIN 560 GRAD BA ADV CH E 60U MOULTON FIN 604 GRAD BA ADV C E 498 INSTR & CHRMN
C E 499 INSTR & CHRMN BUS 499 DEPT C E 520 ALL 5EC INSTR BUS 515 GRAD BA ADV C E 599 ALL SEC INSTR & CHRMN BUS 521 GRAD SA ADV C E 600 INSTR & CHRMN BUS 571 GRAD BA ADV C E 700 INSTR & CHRMN BUS 572 GRAD BA ADV C E 702 INSTR & CHRMN BUS 604 GRAD BA ADV
E E 499 CHRMN MKTG 499 DEPT E E 499H CHRMN MKTG 510 GRAD BA ADV E E 599 CHRMN MKTG 520 GRAD SA ADV MKTG 571 GRAD BA ADV M E 599 CHRMN MKTG 572 GRAD SA ADV M E 600 CHRMN MKTG 604 GRAD BA ADV
CER E 499 MUELLER o MGT 499 DEPT CER E 599 PIFER o MGT 520 GRAD BA ADV CER E 600 PIFER o MGT 604 GRAD BA ADV
MET E 499 DEPT PERS 499 DEPT MET E 531 ARCHBOLD PERS 520 GRAD BA ADV MET E 599 PIFER PERS 604 GRAD SA ADV MET E 600 PIFER
QMETH 499 DEPT MIN E 499 DEPT QMETH 500 GRAD SA ADV MIN E 600 PIFER QMETH 510 GRAD BA ADV QMETH 544 GRAD BA ADV NUC E 5UO CHRMN QMETH 550 GRAD BA ADV NUC E 505 CHRMN QMETH 571 GRAD BA ADV NUC E 521N CHRMN QMETH 572 GRAD SA ADV NUC E 524 CHRMN QMETH 604 GRAD SA ADV NUC E 560 CHRMN QMETH 700 GRAD SA ADV NUC E 599 SEC A&B CHRMN QMETH 702 GRAD BA ADV NUC E 700 CHRMN
U 0 496 SEC A DEPT U 0 520 GRAD BA ADV NAVAL SCIENCE U D 571 GRAD BA ADV NON-NAVAL ROTC STUDENTS MU~T OBTAIN PERMI5SION U D 572 GRAD BA ADV FROM INSTRUCTOR PRIOR TO REGISTRATION IN ANY U D 604 GRAD BA ADV NAVAL SCIENCE COURSE U D 700 GRAD BA ADV U D 702 GRAD BA ADV
FISHERIES R INS 499 DEPT FISH 499 INSTR R INS 571 GRAD BA ADV FISH 501 INSTR R INS 572 GRAD BA ADV FISH 507 INSTR R INS 604 GRAD BA ADV FISH 556 INSTR
TRANS 499 DEPT FD SC 498 INSTR TRANS 520 GRAD SA ADV FD SC 504 INSTR TRANS 571 GRAD BA ADV FD SC 521 INSTR TRANS 572 GRAD SA ADV TRANS 604 GRAD SA ADV
FOREST RESOURCES FOR R 407 SARKANEN
EDUCATION FOR R 465 SEC A&S ROBERTSON EDUC 288 SEC B EOUC AOV OFFICE FOR R 490 INSTR EDUC 289 SEC A&B I:.DUC ADV OFFICE FOR R 491 INSTR
EDUC 346J MUSIC DEPT ADV FOR R 492 INSTR EOUC 371E EDUC ADV OFFICE FOR R 500 STETTLER/TURNBULL EDUC 371K EDUC ADV OFFICE FOR R 510 GESSEL EDUC 371S EDUC ADV OFFICE FOR R 515 GESSEL EDUC 371X EOUC AOV OFFICE FOR R 520 SCOTT EOUC 409 INSTR FOR R 525 GESSEL/SCOTT EDUC 422 INSTR FOR R 526 STETTLER EOUC 425B INSTR FOR R 530 SCHAEFFER/MURPHY EOUC 475M SEC MA INSTR FOR R 534 DRIVER EDUC 490 SEC A INSTR FOR R 535 INSTR EDUC 499 FACULTY ADV & INSTR FOR R 540 STENZEL EDUC 500 FACULTY ADV {, INSTR FOR R 542 STENZEL EDUC SOIA INSTR FOR R 550 SHARPE EOUC 505 INSTR FOR R 555 INSTR EDUC 506 HUNT FOR R 560 INSTR
EDUC 507 INSTR FOR R 563 TURNBULL
41
FOR R 565 ROBERTSON DENTl STRY FOR R 566 ROBERTSON DENT 510 SCHLUGER FOR R 568 DOWDLE DENT 511 .sCHLUGER FOR R 570 INSTR DENT 514 .sCHLUGER FOR R 573 ERICKSON DENT 581 SCHLUGER FOR R 575 WAGGENER DENT 589 SCHLUGER FOR R 590 INSTR FOR R 600 INSTR ENDO 3v4 NA TlO N FOR R 7UO INSTR ENDO 349 NATKIN
ENDO 449 NATKIN ENDO 546 DEPT ADV
NURSING ENDO 550 DEPT ADV NURS 564 DEPT ENDO 576 DEPT ADV NURS 600 INSTR ENDO 580 DEPT ADV
ENDO 582 DEPT ADV ENDO 586 DEPT ADV
PHARMACY ENDO 591 DEPT ADV PH ARM 420 PLEIN ENDO 600 DEPT ADV PHARfoI 483 PLEIN PH ARM 499 DEPT ORALS 520 DEPT PHARM 600 DEPT ORALS 540 DEPT PH ARM 700 DEPT ORALB 600 DEPT
ORALS 7UO DEPT PH CH 460 NELSON PH CH 499 DEPT PERIO 300 OGILVIE PH CH 600 DEPT PERIO 346 OGILVIE PH CH 700 DEPT PERIO 407 HEINS
PERIO 446 OGILVIE PHCOG 406 BRADY PERIO 546 SCHLUGER PHCOG 499 DEPT PERIO 550 ~CHLUGER
PHCOG 600 DEPT PERIO 576 SCHLUGER PHCOG 700 DEPT PERIO 58U SCHLUGER
PERIO 582 SCHLUGER GEOPHYSICS PERIO 586 SCHLUGER GPHY 551J INSTR PERIO 591 SCHLUGER
PERIO 600 SCHLUGER PERIO 700 SCHLUGER
RADIOLOGICAL SCIENCt RAD S 700 DEPT ADV
MEDICINE ANEST 480 DEPT ADV
COMPUTER SCIENCE ANEST 486 DEPT ADV C SCI 590 GOLDE ANEST 498 DEPT ADV C SCI 600 GOLDE ANEST 499 DEPT ADV C SCI 700 GOLDE ANEST 521 DEPT ADV
ANEST 522 DEPT ADV ANEST 523 DEPT ADV
LI BRARIANSHIP LI BR 440 DEPT BlOC 440 PR OR PERM INSTR LI BR 441 SEC A&B DEPT BlOC 498 INSTR LI BR 450 DEPT BlOC 499 INSTR LI BR 452 SEC A&B DEPT BlOC 520 INSTR LI BR 453 DEPT BlOC 590 INSTR LI BR 470 DEPT SIOC 591 INSTR LI BR 515 ALL SEC DEPT BlOC 593 INSTR LI BR 535 ALL SEC DEPT BlOC 594 INSTR L1SR 550 SEC A&B DEPT BlOC 595 INSTR LI BR 599 SEC A&B DEPT BlOC 597 INSTR
BlOC 598 INSTR BlOC 599 INSTR
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION BlOC 600 DEPT PERMISSION REQUIRED OF ALL NONMAJORS FOR COURSE~ RIOC 700 DEPT IN THE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS PB AD 501 SEC A&B FOR STD IN GRAD SCH OF B STR 330 PERM OF INSTR FOR
PUBLIC AFFAIRS-OTHtRS OTHER THAN DENTAL BY PERM STUDENTS
PB AD 511 SEC A&B FOR STD IN GRAD SCH OF B STR 401 PERM OF SCHWARl FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS-OTHERS OTHER THAN MEDICAL BY PERM STUDENTS
PB AD 521 SEC A FOR STD IN GRAD SCH OF B STR 404 PERM OF BLANDAU FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS-OTHERS OTHER THAN MEDICAL BY PERM STUDENTS
PB AD 541 SEC A&B FOR STD IN GRAD SCH OF B STR 405 PERM OF KELLY FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS-OTHERS OTHER THAN MEDICAL BY PERM STUDENTS
B STR 440 DEPT PUBLIC POLICY B STR 498 DEPT ADV PB PL 50U FOR STD IN GRAD SCH OF B STR 499 DEPT ADV
PUBLIC AFFAIRS-OTH~R~ B STR 521 DEPT BY PERM B STR 525 DEPT
PB PL 590 DENNY B STR 531 DEPT B STR 557 DEPT B STR 600 DEPT ADV
SOCIAL WORK B STR 700 DEPT ADV
SOC W 391 DEPT BI HS 498 DEPT SOC W 502 ALL SEC DEPT BI HS 499 DEPT SOC W 510 ALL SEC DEPT BI HS 500 DEPT SOC W 521 ALL ~EC DEPT BI HS 501 DEPT SOC W 572 SEC A&B DEPT BI HS 510 DEPT SOC W 573 DEPT SOC W 590 SEC A DEPT CONJOINT SOC W 591 DEPT CONJ 400 DEPT
MICRO 235 PERM REQUIRED FOR NON-DENTAL STUDENTS
42
MICRO 320 DUCHOW P MED 420 DEPT ADV MICRO 322 SHERRIS P MED 440 DEPT ADV MICRO 400 DOUGLAS OR ORDAl-FOR P MED 477 DEPT 3 CRS lECTURE CREDIT P MED 478 INSTR ONLY P MED 480 DEPT ADV MICRO 441 DEPT-FOR 3 CRS lECTURE P MED 482 DEPT ADV CREDIT ONLY P MED 483 DEPT ADV MICRO 498 DEPT AOV P MED 484 DEPT ADV
MICRO 499 DEPT ADV P MED 498 DEPT AOV MICRO 499H GROMAN P MEo 499 DEPT AOV MICRO 501 GROMAN P MED 510 DEPT AoV MI CRO 502 WHITELEY P MEO 522 INSTR MICRO 503 MC CARTHY OR SPOTTS P MEO 523 INSTR MICRO 504 NESTER OR DOUGLAS P MEO 530 INSTR MICRO 510 PR OR WHITELEY P MEO 535 INSTR MICRO 60U DEPT ADV P MEO 591 INSTR MICRO 700 DEPT AOV P MED 6UU DEPT MICRO 7U2 DEPT ADV P MEO 700 DEPT
OPHTH 481 DEPT PSYC 441 INSTR PSYC 475 INSTR
ORTHP 475 DEPT {, PRECEPTOR PSYC 480 INSTR ORTHP 476 DEPT PSYC 490 INSTR ORTHP 499 DEPT PSYC 491 RIPLEY ORTHP 521 DEPT PSYC 498 RIPLEY
PSYC 499 RIPLEY PATH 320 DEPT AOV PSYC 553 PR OR DEPT AOV PATH 424 DEPT ADV PATH 462 DEPT ADV UROl 475 PR OR PERM DEPT PATH 463 DEPT ADV UROl 483 DEPT PATH 465 DEPT ADV UROl 484 DEPT PATH 466 DEPT ADV PATH 467 DEPT ADV PATH 468 DEPT ADV PATH 469 DEPT ADV PATH 476 DEPT AOV PATH 480 DEPT ADV PATH 498 DEPT ADV PATH 499 DEPT AOV PATH 500 DEPT AOV PATH 510 DEPT AOV PATH 520 DEPT ADV PATH 551 DEPT ADV PATH 552 DEPT ADV PATH 553 DEPT ADV PATH 554 DEPT AOV PATH 600 DEPT AOY PATH 700 DEPT hOV
PEDS 404 INSTR PEDS 470 INSTR PEDS 472 INSTR PEDS 473 INSTR PEOS 480 INSTR PEDS 481 INSTR PEDS 482 INSTR PEDS 485 INSTR PEDS 486 INSTR PEDS 487 INSTR PEDS 488 INSTR PEDS 490 INSTR PEDS 498 INSTR PEDS 499 INSTR
P COL 498 INSTR P COL 499 INSTR P COL 507 DEPT P COL 509 DIllE P COL 525 WEST
PM&R 290 INSTR PM{,R 520 SEC B DEPT PM&R 596l DEPT
P BID 360 PERM OF STEVENS REQ FOR OTHER THAN PHARMACY STUDENTS
P BIO 430 INSTR P BID 470 INSTR P RIO 492 DEPT P BIO 494 CRIll P 810 498 OEPT AOY P elo 499 OEPT AOY P BID 515 PATTON P BIO 519 INSTR p BID 520 DEPT ADV P BIO 521 DEPT ADV P BID 524 WOODBURY P 610 525 DEPT ADV P BID 528 YOUNG P BIO 530 PATTON P BID 531 SCHER/WIEDERHIElM P BID 545 INSTR P BID 600 INSTR P BIO 700 INSTR
43
TIME SCHEDULE
AUTUMN QUARTER 1968
INSTRUCTORS1 NAMES ARE SHOWN ONLY WHERE ASSIGNMENTS ARE KNOWN AT THE TIME OF
PUBLICATION OF THE TIME SCHEDULEo ASSIGNMENTS ARE SUBJECT
TO CHANGEg
For sequence of Ustings, see
INDEX AND COIDIES, PIP. 5 Cllnd 6
COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE & URBAN PLAN
ARCHITECTURE
• 150 A 2
• 150 B 2
• 150 U 2
A 4
• 305 A
• 310 A
• 320 A 3
• 320 B 3
• 320 C 3
• 320 o 3
• 330 A 2
• 340 A 3
• 350 A 3
• 380 A 3
• 400 A 4
• 401 A 4
• 402 A 4
.,. 405 A
• 40& A
• 407 A
• 410 A
.411 A
• 412 A
• 420 A 4
• 420 B 4
• 420 C 4
.434 A 2
T TH 1030 PU~DT
T TH 130
W
~
T F
T F
TH
,., W F
~ W F
v. W F
M W F
T TH
T TH
~ W F
'" W F
PUNDT
700-850 PM PUNDT
130-430 230-430
130
130-430
730-930 RADCLIFFE
130-930 lEBE~T
930-1130 TORRENCE
930-1130 ALBRECHT
930 SfoIALL
1030-1230 HASE~STAB
1230 HILDEBRAND
1130
230-430
TF 130-430
M W 230-430
TF 130-430
TF
M W
/0', W
T
T
T TH
T TH
230-430
130-430
130
130
130
130-430
130-430
130-430
830-1130 RADCLIFFE
830-1130 TORRENCE
T TH 930-1230 lEBERT
T TH 430 TIMPE
BAr, 140
ARC 201
ART
ARA
ARA
ARA
ARC 102
MEB 232
ARC 102
MEB 232
JHN 56
JHN 6
BAG 140
MlR 301
APC 102 ARC III ARC 112
APC ARC ARC
ARC ARC ARC
ARC ARC ARC
ARC ARC ARC
ARC ARC ARC
ARC ARC ARC
ARC ARC ARC
ARC ARC ARC
GEB
ARC
GES
JHN
102 III 112
102 III 112
102 111 112
102 111 112
102 111 112
102 111 112
102 111 112
102 111 112
225
102
227
56
47
AUTUMN
ARCHITECTURE - CONTINUED
A 3
• 451 A 3
• 480 A 3
A * • 500 A 6
• 501 A 6
• 502 A 6
• 503 A 6
• 504 A 6
• 505 A 6
• 506 A 2
• 510 A 3
• 520 A 3
.523 A 3
524 A 6
525 A 6
526 A 6
• 550 U 1-3
.573 A 3
• 575 A 3
• 578 A 3
*600 A '" HOO A '"
SUllDING TECH & ADMIN
301 A 3
401 A 3
410 A 3
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
*334 A 4
350 A 6
351 A 6
352 A 6
460 A 6
461 A 6
462 A 6
~ W F
" W F
'" W F
* o
D
o
D
D
D
T TH
,." W F
~ W F
HT TF
MT TF
MT TF
W
" W F
830 WINKEL
1030 PUNDT
1230
130-430
130-430
130-430
130-430
130-430
130-430
930-1130 THIEL
930-1130 SPROULE
830 ALBRECHT
430 ROSNER
130-430
130-430
130-430
100-1000 PM
1130 MITHUN
M W 1030-1200 klNKEL
T TH 830-1030
'" '"
." W F
'"
BONSTEEL
'"
130 EBERHARTER
830-1030 HUTCHINSON
'" HUTCHINSON
T TH 830-1030 SAKUMA
D 130-430 SAKUMA
D 130-430
D
D
D
D
130-430
130-430
130-430
130-430
ARC
MlR
BAG
'" ARC ARC
ARC ARC
ARC ARC
ARC ARC
ARC ARC
ARC ARC
ARA
ARC
MEB
Eca
ARC
ARC
ARC
JHN
MlR
PAR
ECB
* '"
GEB
GEB
*
ARC
ARC
ARC
304
301
236
'" 305 306
305 306
305 306
302 303
302 303
302 303
303
104
101
106
106
106
5&
102
131
101
'" '"
225
225
'"
304
301
301
ARC 301
ARC 301
ARC "301
ARC 301
:t Permission signature required. See poges 37-43 for any general permission requirements for the depnrtmeou. schools. or c:ollegcs in whose c:ourscs you wish to regiSter.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE - CONTINUED
465 A 4
URBAN PLANNING
*400 A 3
*400 s 3
*479 A 2
*485 A 3
499 A 5
*522 A
*522 B
*523 A 2
*523 B 2
527J A 3
527J B 3
530J A 3
*541 A 5
*541 S 5
A *
*600 B *
noD A *
o 1230 HAAr,
T TH
,.. Ii F
"" W F
F
F
T TH
M If
*
*
*
1230
1230 ~OLFE
1030 ,"OlFE
1130 GREY
230-530 NORTON
130-330 J. SCHNEIDER
130-330 SCHUL TZ
130-330 COPELAND
130-330 JAMMAL
830 STA"lFIELD
330-500 CLA~IC
330-530 THOMAS
230-530 JAMMAL
230-530 HIGHTOWER
* NORTON. *
* HORWOOD.HIGHTOWER
* NOR TO,.,
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
ANTHROPOLOGY
100
'"
A
AA QZ
A8 OZ
AC OZ
AD OZ
AE OZ
H AF OZ
AG OZ
AH OZ
AI QZ
AJ CZ
AK OZ
AL OZ
AM QZ
BA OZ
BS QZ
I':TW F
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
730
B30
830
830
830
830
1030
1030
1030
1030
1030
1030
1230
1230
1230
1230
• New (Curse or (Cur$C number. See course changes pages 7·55.
ARC
GUG 40'.
SI-II
JHN
JHN
ARC
PAR
ARC
SMI
MC
MOR
MOR
S~II
ARC
ARC
*
10<
HUB
SAY
SAY
SAY
107
56
56
202
135
2020
104
202
224
224
402
103
103
* I;<
184
343
341
335
SAY 241
SAY 151
SAY 343
SAY 341
SAY 237
SAY 241
SAY 131
PAR 106
SAY 341
SAY 237
SAY 343
SAY 151 48
A~THROPOLOGY - CONTINU~O
100
201
'*
202
*
301
311
313
317
321
SC CZ
SO OZ
BE :JZ
BF oZ
.U
A
AA OZ
AS QZ
Ae QZ
AD OZ
H AE QZ
AF OZ
AG QZ
AH QZ
AI QZ
AJ OZ
AK QZ
AL OZ
AM OZ
BA QZ
SS QZ
BC OZ
SO OZ
BE CZ
SF OZ
A
AA OZ
AS OZ
H AC OZ
AD OZ
AE OZ
AF QZ
AG OZ
AH QZ
AI OZ
A
u
A
A
A
o 343J A
350 A
350 U
TH
TH
TH
TH
5
5 ~ WTF
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
5 '" WTF
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
3 T TH
3 T TH
3 !o\ W F
3 '" W F
3 M \oj F
3 '" W F
3 T TH
3 M W
230
230
230
230
700-920 PM
830 NEWMAN
630
830
E130
830
830 NEWMAN
L030
L030
1030
1030
1030
1230
1230
1230
1230
1230
230
230
230
230
1e30 CARROLL
830
830
1030 CARROLL
1030
1030
1230
1230
230
230
1030-1200 1030-1200
700-825 PM
1130
830
930 READ
1030 HOLM
130-300 WATSON
700-825 PM
SAY
SAY
SAV
SAY
SAY
HUB
341
237
343
241
331
184
SAY 343
SAY 341
SAY 335
SAY 241
SAY 333
SAY 343
SAY 341
SAY 241
SAY 237
SAY L31
SAY 343
SAY 341
SAY 237
SAY 241
SAY 335
SAY 343
SAY 341
SAY 241
SAY 237
SAY 233
SAY 151
GTH 306
PAR 106
GTH 306
GTn 311
SAY 131
GTH 306
GTH 306
GTI-! 311
SAY 233 SMI 120
SAY 343
SMI 303
SAY 341
SMI
ART 3
SAY 329
SAY 343
A~THROPOLOGY - CONTI~UEO
402
404
412
416
418
425
429
436
436
1.37
441
450
451J
461J
_*464
472
473
G> 480
490
*491
492
497
499
SOD
501
510
530
553J
561
5b2J
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
u
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
AN LB
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
SA
3
3
5
5
3
3
3
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
5
3
2
3
3
3
5
3
3
3
3
6
6
3
3
3
3
3
tJ. W F
M W F
M W F
M W F
", W F
1'1 W F
'" W F
", W F
1130 GREENGO
930
130
1030
1130 GARFIELD
1230
830 AMOSS
1030 JACOBS
1130
M W 700-920 PM
M W F 930 OTTENBERG
M W 130 PAVY
M W F 1230 OWEN
M W F 130
D 1030 T TH 1130
EASTMAN
M W F 1130 CONTRERAS
TH 130-330
104 W F
~I W F
M W F
).: W F
*
M W F
101 W F
* * *
F
T
T TH
·EASTMAN
1130 EASTMAN
1030 DuNNELL
930 KRIEGER
130
230-500 SWINDLER
430
* QUII~BY
1130 ATKINS
230 DUN1>iELL
* NEWMAN
230-430 QUIMBY
130-330 JACOBS
1030-1230 1130
1230-230 WATSOIII
330-530 ATKINS
..
SAY 343
SAY 341
SAY 341
SAY 343
SAY 341
SAY 343
SAy 343
SAY 341
SAY 335
SAY 335
SMI 303
SAY 237
DEN 211
SAY 335 DEN 122
BLM 416
SAY 335
SAY 335
SAY 237
SAY 341
SAY 401
SAY 401
SAY 335
.. SAY 237
SAY 341
* *
.. SAY 322
SAY 335
POL A216
SAY 322
HSB 0314
49
AUTUMN
ANTHROPOLOGY - CONTINUED
563
570
572
*591
bOO
700
ART
100
100
100
105
105
105
105
105
105
105
105
:H05
105
*105
105
105
105
105
105
105
105
105
106
106
106
106
106
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
C
A
B
c
o
E
F
G
H
J
K
L
M
a
p
U
v
w
A
B
C
u
v
3
3
3
3
*
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
T
TH
230-430 OTTENBERG
1030-1230 GREENGO
130-330 KRIEGER
* QUIMBY
T TH 1030-130 ELEM EOUC MAJORS
!of, W F 130-330 ELEM EOUC MAJORS
M W F 330-530 ELEM EDUC MAJORS
M W F 730-930
'" W F 730-930 ART II.AJORS
T TH 730-1030 ART MAJORS
T TH 730-1030 ART MAJORS
M W F 930-1130
M W F
T TH
T TH
'" W F
10\ W F
I' W F
'" W F
T TH
T TH
~, W F
M W F
M W
T TH
T TH
'" W F
T TH
". \oj F
T TH
ART MAJORS
930-1130
1030-130 ART MAJORS
1030-130 ART MAJORS
1130-130 ART MAJORS
1130-130
130-330 ART MAJORS
130-330 ART MAJORS
130-430 ART MAJORS
130-430 ART MAJORS
330-530 ART MAJORS
330-530
700-940 PM
700-940 PH
700-940 PM
1130-130 ART MAJORS
130-430
330-530 ART MAJORS
700-940 PM
700-940 PM
SIIV 322
SIIV 322
SAY 322
*
* * *
AfH &
ART *
ART 8
ART * ART
ART
ART
ART
ART * ART
ART *
ART
ART
ART
ART * ART *
ART
ART
ART
ART * ART
ART *
ART * ART *
ART * ART
i Permission signarure: required. See pages 37·43 for:my general permission requiremenls for the dep3rlments, schools, or colleges in whose courses you wish 10
register.
ART - CONTI NUED
107
107
107
107
107
109
109
109
109
*109
109
109
109
109
109
109
109
*109
109
109
109
109
109
109
110
110
110
110
110
129
201
201
201
202
203
205
205
212
215
• 250
• 2:;1
.253
A
B
C
U
v
A
B
C
o
E
F
G
H
J
K
L
M
N
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P
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v
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A
8
C
D
U
A
A
B
U
A
A
A
B
A
A
A
A
A
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
,.,. \of F
T TH
M \of F
,. 101 F
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TH
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TH
~ 101 F
~ W F
" \of F
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~ W F
'" W F
M W
M W
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M W F
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II! W F
T TH
M W
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
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)\ W F
M \of
T TH
T TH
T TH
730-930 ART MAJORS
730-1030 ART MAJORS
130-330
WITI-I 106 U
Io4ITH 106 V
730-930
730-930 ART MAJORS
730-1030 ART MAJORS
730-1030
930-1130 ART MAJORS
930-1130 ART MAJORS
1030-130
1030-130 ART MAJORS
1130-130
1130-130 ART MAJORS
130-330 ART MAJORS
130-330
130-430 ART MAJORS
130-430 ART MAJORS
330-530 ART MAJORS
330-530
700-940 PM
700-940 PM
700-940 PM
930-1130
1030-130 ART MAJORS
130-330 ART MAJORS
130-430
700-940 PM
1230
730-1030
1030-130
100-945 PM
130-430
130-1030
930-1130
1230
WITH 202
o 930 ROGERS/WE88
130-430
1030-130
1030-130
· ;!;, ~ or course number. Sec course changes
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
FRR
FRR
FRR
FRR
ART
ART
GUG
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART - CONTINUED
• 253 8
• 254 A 3
• 254 8 3
• 255 A 3
256 A 3
256 B 3
• 256 C 3
• 256 D 3
256 E 3
• 256 u 3
257 A 3
257 8 3
• 257 u 3
• 258 A 3
• • 758 u 3
* 259 A
259 8 3
261 A 3
261 U 3
• 265 A 3
• ~65 B 3
• 265 C 3
265 D 3
265 E 3
266 A 3
266 8 3 • 266 C 3 • 266 o • 266 3
* <:'67 A 3
• 767 B 3
* 267 C 3
* 267 o 3
267 3 • 268 A 3
• 3 272 A 3
• 272 B
272 C 3
• 273 A 3
* 273 B 3
273 C 3
274 A
• 274 B 3
224 274 C 3
*~80 A 3
283 A • 300 A 3
123 302 A 3
* 50 303 A 3
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)/. W F
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M \of F
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T TH
~ 101 F
M \of F
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M 101
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130-330
930-1130
1130-130
130-430
730-930
730-1030
1130-130
130-330
330-530
700-940 PM
930-1130
1030-130
WITH 25t> U
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
A~T
ART
130-430 ART
WITH 256 U
930-1130
130-430
730-1030
700-940 PM
730-930
730-1030
930-1130
1030-130
330-530
130-430 LUNDIN
830-1130
1030-130
130-430
930-1130
1130
130-330
930-1130
1030-1230
WITH ~65
WITH 265
WITH 265
WITH 265
WITH 265
WITH 265
WITH 265
WITH 265
WITI-! 265
WITH 265
WITH 272
WITH 272
WI TH 212
WI TH 272
WITH 272
WITH 2"12
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
* 123
123
•
• • •
•
*
•
• *
* *
•
124
124
124
• 3
* • •
AR T - CO~TI NUED
• 307 A
• 307 B
.308 A
• 308 B
310 A
316 A
322 A
323 A
324 A
o 328 A
332 A
333 A
334 A
335 A
336 A
337 A
338 A
• 339 A
341J A
• 343J A
350 A
350 B
351 A
352 A
353
354 A
355
357 A
358 A
359 A
360 A
360 B
361 A
361 B
362 A
362 B
366 A
366 B
402J A
405 A
410 A
• 416 A
430 A
436 A
437 A
3
3
3
5
5
3
3
3
2
3
3
3
3
3
5
3
3
3
3
3
5
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
5
3
3
5
5
!ol W F
T TH
D
D
T TH
TH
T TH
~ W F
~ W F
"', W
M W f
TH
T TH
'" W F
1130-130
130-430
130-330
330-530
130-430 DUPEN
830-1030
1030-130
1130-130
130-430 SPERRY
930 EDMCNSON
1030 HOlIA
1030-130 RITCHIE
130-430
730-930 ALPS
ART .. A~T
WITH 307
WITH 307
A~T
ART * ART 124
WITH 322
WITH 322
ART
WITH 32,
WITH 322
WITH 322
FRR * WITH 335
FRR
WITH 337
ART
DEN 308
ART 3
ART 208
ART 208
ART 208
WITH 351
M W F 130-530 FRR
.. W
T TH
M W
'" W T TH
" W F
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TH
ro. W F
130-430
930-1230
930-1130
130:""330
1030-130
1130-130
1030-130
1030-130 DAHN
1130 EDMONSON
WITH 353
WiTH 353
WITH 357
WITH 361
WITH 361
TH 1030-1200
o 130-930 RAND
" W f 1030
\I W 1130
WITH 322
WITH 322
ART 123
ART 125
ART
ART * ART
ART *
ART .. ART *
OEN 216
ART
ART *
ART .. ART ..
51
A~T - CONTINUED
438
445
450
451
452
457
458
459
463
464
465
466
469
472
475
475
476
476
477
477
482
485
486
487
491
492
495
*4980
*498H
HOI
512
522
523
524
530
531
532
550
551
552
553
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
A
e
A
B
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
5
5
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
5
3
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
5
5
5
3
3
5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
M W F
M W
II! \oj F
~; W
T TH
T TH
~ W F
T TH
TH
*
*
'*
'*
*
'*
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AUTUMN
WITH 322
D 330-530 DELGIUDICE
D
930-1230 ALPS
130-330
130-430 CAPlA~
1230 MERRIll
330-530
930-1130
1030-130
WITH 450
WITH 450
WITH 357
WITH 358
WITH 351
WITH 463
WITH 463
WITH 475
WITH 475
WITH 475
WITH 475
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
ART
130-300 ART
230 MERRIll
1030-1200 GROSSMAN
130-430 DAH~
* * '* '* JOHNSON
'* JOHNSON
* JOHNSON
*
'*
*
WITH 353
WITH 353
WITH 353
WITH 322
WITH 322
WITH 322
WITH 450
WITH 450
WITH 450
WITH 353
ART
ART
ART
* '* *
'*
.. * '*
208
..
*
3
* ..
3
'*
'*
*
'*
'*
*
'* '* *
t Permission signa~ reqwrcd. See pages 37-43 for any general permission reqwrements for the departmenu, schools. or colleges in whose courses you wish co register.
ART - CONTINUED
554
555
560
560
561
561
562
562
563
563
564
564
565
565
518
100
102
A
A
B
A
B
A
S
B
A
B
A
B
A
A
A
A
ASTRONOMY
101
301
411
512
531
*600
noo
A
AA QZ
AS QZ
AC QZ
AD QZ
AE QZ
AF OZ
AG QZ
AH QZ
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3
3
5
3
3
0:
3
3
0:
ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
101 A
AA QZ
A6 QZ
AC QZ
AD QZ
AE QZ
AF QZ
5
*
"I W F
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
,... W F
T TF
10\ W
MTWT
F
TH
F
TH
F
F
WITH 353
WITH 353
WITH 301
WITH 361
WITH 361
WITH 361
WITH 301
WITH 361
WITH 475
WITH 475
WITH 415
WITH 475
WITH 475
WITH 415
0:
GROSSMAN
230 WALLERSTEIN
830
930
1030
1130
1230
130
230
330
230
230 JACOBSON
230
130 HODGE
930 BOH~
0:
1030 UNTERSTEINER
1030
1130
1130
1230
1230
1230
• New course or coune number. Sec course changes pages 7·35.
ART
0:
PHY 320 •
PHY 258
PHY 260
PHY 321
PHY 321
PHY 258
PHY 321
PH ... 260
PHY 200
PHY 260
PHY 321
PHY 321
PHY 260
PHY 260
*
JHN 101
MEB 249
ATS 110
ATS 110
ATS 110
ATS 110
BNS 115
52
ATHO~PHERIC SCIENCES - CONTINUED
301 A
350 ZN
431 A
441 A
492 A
493 A
510J A
513J A
600
700
BIOLOGY
101
A
A
A
A
A
A
AA QZ
AS QZ
AC QZ
AD QZ
AE QZ
AF OZ
AG QZ
AH QZ
AI QZ
AJ QZ
AK QZ
AL QZ
MI QZ
BA QZ
Ct.,I LB
CO LB
CP LS
CQ LB
CR LB
CS LB
CT LB
cu LB
CV LB
Cloa LB
cx LB
CY LB
5
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
0:
0:
5
o e30 REED
~ W F 130-430 WALLACE
o 930 BUSINGER
o 1030 HOLTON
0: :0<
TH 1030 F 230
HOBBS
0: 0:
~ W F
0:
0:
" W
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
101 W
M W
T TH
MEIER
II<
BUETTNER
930 FLEAGLE
830 BADGLEY
0:
1030 KRUCKBERG. KOHt...!
830
830
630
930
930
930
1130
1130
130
130
230
230
330
330
130-930
730-930
830-1030
830-1030
830-1030
B30-1030
930-1130
930-1130
1130-130
1130-130
1130-130
130-330
ATS 110
ATS 2080
ATS llO
ATS 110
0: * ATS 20ac
0:
ATS 208C
ATS 2080
0:
ARC 207
JHN 214
J"iN 401C
JHN 313
JHN 401C
J"iN 249
JHN 313
JHN 214
JHN 401C
JHr., 249
JHN 401C
JHN 249
JHN 401C
JHN 214
JHN 401C
JHN 249
JHN 401C
JHN 313
JHN 315
JHN 249
JHN 401C
JHN 249
JHN 40lC
JHN 401C
JHN 315
JHN 401C
JHN 401C
BIOLOGY - CO~T[NUEO
210
473
*473L
BOTA~Y
111
201
313
CI LB
ON LB
00 LB
OP LB
A
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
AQ LB
AR LB
A
ZN
A
A
AA OZ
AB OZ
AC OZ
AD OZ
AE OZ
AF OZ
AG OZ
AH OZ
AI OZ
AJ OZ
AK OZ
AL OZ
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
AO LB
AR LB
AS LB
AT LB
AU LB
AV LB
Ak LB
AX LB
AV LB
A
A
3
2
3
5
2
5
T TH
" W
T TH
'" W F
T
TH
M W F
,.. W
,., 101 F
TH
TH
TH
TH
F
F
F
F
F
F
TH
101
TH
T
T
TH
TH
130-330
330-530
330-530
330-530
830
130-530
130-530
130-530
130-530
130-530
130 EDMONDSON
230-530 EDMONDSON
130 WHITELEY, CAHN, RUTTER, ~IOLLOSI CLONE~.MC eARTHY,
930 WALKER
830
830
930
930
1030
1030
1130
1130
130
130
230
230
730-1030
730-1030
730-1030
1030-130
1030-130
1030-130
1030-130
130-430
130-430
130-430
130-430
130-430
T TH 230-430 MUHLICK
T TH 1230
JHN 401C
JHN 401C
JHN 249
JHN 401C
JHN
JHN 147
JHN 141
JHN 141
JHN 147
JHN 147
JHN
JHN 208
HSB J280
GUG 224
JHN 9
JHN 315
JHN 9
JHN 341
JHN 313
JHN 315
JHN 313
JHN 315
JHN 313
315
JHN 313
JHN 315
JHN 313
JHN 315
JHN 313
JHN 313
JHN 315
JHN 313
JHN 313
JHN 313
JHN 315
JHN 313
JHN 313
JHN 315
GRH
JH~ 343
S3
BOTANY - CONTINUED
AN LB
443 A
AN LB
444 A
AN LB
462 A
AN LB
472 A
AN LB
*498 A
*520 A
*522 A
A
HOD A
CHEMISTRY
100
100
101
A
AA OZ
AB OZ
AC OZ
AD OZ
AE OZ
Af OZ
AG QZ
AH OZ
AI OZ
AJ OZ
AK OZ
AL QZ
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
AO LB
AR LB
AS LB
AT LB
AU LB
AV LB
AW LB
AX LB
U
A
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
5
5
5
5
1-15
2
*
5
5
5
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
,. 101 F
W F
... W F
W F
* •
M WT
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
F
F
F
MTW F
T
T
T
130-430 HITCHCOCK
830
930-1230 NORRIS
130 BLASER
230-500 BLASER
1230 STUNTZ
130-430
830 CLELAND, WALKER MEEUSE
130-430
*
•
330
130
130
130
'130
230
230
230
230
330
330
330
330
830-1130
830-1130
630-1130
830-1130
1230-330
1230-330
1230-330
1230-330
130-430
130-430
130-430
700-930 PM
1230
1030-1230
1030-1230
1030-1230
AUTUMN
JHN 343
JHN 341
JHN 40lA
JHN 302
JHN 302
JHN 341
JHN 40lA
JHN 341
JHN 406
• • * • • •
BAG 131
BAG 236
ATS 110
PH3 3
PH3
BAG 204
BAG 2.11
BAG 311
ATS 110
BAG 204
BAG 211
PH3
PH3 5
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 140
BAG 131
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
! Permission signature required. See pages 37-43 for l10y general permiuion requirements for the departments, schools. or colleges in ",hose courses you ",ish to register.
CHEMISTRY - CO~TINUEO
101
140
140
140
AQ LB
AR LB
AS LB
AT LB
AU LB
All LB
Ar- LB
AX LB
AY LB
B
BN LB
BO LB
BP LB
BO LB
BR LB
BS LB
BT LB
BU LB
A
AA QZ
AB QZ
AC QZ
AD QZ
AE QZ
Af QZ
AG OZ
AH QZ
AI QZ
AJ OZ
AK QZ
AL QZ
B
BA QZ
BB QZ
BC QZ
BO QZ
BE QZ
BF OZ
C
CA QZ
CB QZ
CC QZ
CO QZ
CE QZ
CF QZ
CG QZ
CH QZ
CI QZ
CJ QZ
5
3
3
3
TH
TH
T
T
Ii
w
,... WTF
T
T
TH
TH
T
T
T
" M W F
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
M joj F
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
"I Ii F
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
130-330
130-330
130-330
130-330
130-330
230- l t30
230-430
230-430
230-430
130
830-1030
830-1030
1030-1230
1030-1230
130-330
130-330
130-330
230-430
830
830
B30
830
830
930
930
930
930
1230
1230
1230
1230
830
830
B30
930
930
1230
1230
1130
1030
1030
1030
1030
1130
1130
1130
1130
130
130
• New course or course numb::r. Sec Olllrsc changes pages 7·35.
BAG 246
BAG 246
BAG 246
BAG 253
BAG 253
BAG 253
BAG 253
BAG 234
BAG 23 ft
BAG 131
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 253
BAG 253
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 234
BAG 131
BAG 211
BAG 311
BNS 115
8~S 203
BAG 204
BAG 211
BNS 115
8NS 203
BAG 204
BAG 236
BNS 115
BAI3 117
BAG 140
GEe 226
GUG 411
BNS 117
GEB 226
EEB 322
AND 203
BAG 131
BAG 204
BAG 236
BAG 311
BNS 115
BAG 204
BAG 211
BAG 236
BAG 311
BAG 311
BNS 117 54
CHEMISTRY - CONTINUED
140
140
140
CK OZ
CL OZ
o
DA OZ
DB OZ
DC CZ
00 OZ
DE OZ
OF OZ
E
EA OZ
ED OZ
EC QZ
ED QZ
EE OZ
EF OZ
EG QZ
EH OZ
EI OZ
EJ OZ
F
FA QZ
FB OZ
FC QZ
FD QZ
FE QZ
U
*145 H A
*147 H A
150
151
160
H AN LB
H AD LB
H AP LB
H AQ LB
A
AA OZ
AB QZ
AC QZ
AD OZ
AE Ql
AF QZ
A
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
AQ LB
AR LB
A~ LB
A
AA QZ
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
3
TH
TH
~ W F
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
M W F
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
Yo W F
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
~ W F
T TH
T TH
T TH
~ W F
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
T
T
T
w
w
F
F
'" w F
T
130
130
1130
1030
1030
1130
1130
130
130
230
1230
1230
1230
1230
230
230
230
230
330
330
230
1230
1230
230
230
330
700-900 PM
1030
830
630-1130
1130-230
130-430
230-530
130
830
630
830
130
130
130
830
930-1230
930-1230
130-430
130-430
230-530
230-530
930
1030
GEB 222
GEe 226
BAG 140
BNS 117
B"4S 203
BNS 117
8t>1S 203
ATS 110
PH3 3
BAG 131
BAG 211
GUG 306
JHN ':1
EEB 333
BAG 204
BAG 211
BAG 311
ATS 110
BAG 204
BAG 211
BAG 140
AND 215
EEB 327
BNS 115
EEB 316
BAG 311
BAG 131
BAG 140
BAG 311
BAG 133
BAG 133
BAG 133
BAG 133
BAG 140
ROB 203A
GEB 224
PHY 321
PH3 5
JHN 9
MaR 215
BAG 140
BAG 253
BAG 253
BAG 253
BAG 253
BAG 253
BAG 253
BAG 131
BAG 204
CHEMI~TRY - CO~TI~UED
AB QZ
At QZ
AD OZ
AE QZ
AF QZ
AG QZ
AI1 QZ
AI QZ
110 A
AN LB
AO LB
AP LB
AQ LB
AR LB
AS LB
*198 A
*198 H B
*199 A
U99 H B
221
231
231
232
241
241
241
241
241
241
242
242
242
335
335
345
*
*
A
AN LB
AO LB
AP LB
A
U
A
ZN
ZO
ZP
ZQ
ZR
ZS
ZN
IO
ZP
A
B
A
AN LB
AO LB
AP LB
AQ LB
H AR LB
AS LB
AT LB
Ii AU LB
3
5
3
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
2
T
T
T
T
T
T
T TH
·T TH
TH
T TH
T TH
W F
W F
".
.10\ W F
'" W F
" W
'" W
ro. W F
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
~ WTF
)0\ WTf
T
T
w
w
TH
1030
1030
1230
1230
1230
130
130
130
830
930-1230
930-1230
130-430
130-430
230-530
230-530
430
430
330
330
1030 ROBINSON
130-430
130-430
130-430
1030 ANOERSON
700-900 PM
tl30 WARRENER
830-1130
130-430
130-430
130-430
130-430
130-430
830-.1130
830-1130
130-430
930 SCHUBERT
1030 POCKER
1030 CHILTON
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
BAG 236
BAG 237
BAG 204
BAG 211
BAG 311
AND 203
6~S 117
GEB 226
BAG 131
BAG 246
BAG 246
BAG 246
BAG 246
BAG 246
BAG 246
bAG 204
BlIG 204
BAG 204
BAG 204
BAG 211
BAG 149
BAG 149
BAG 133
HUB 184
BAG 236
BAG 236
BAG 233
BAG 233
BAG 233
BAG 233
BAG 233
BAG 233
BAG 233
BAG 233
BAG 233
BAG 140
BAG 131
HUB 184
BAG 105
BAG 149
BAG 249
BAG 249
BAG 45
bAG 249
BAG 249
BAG 45 55
CHEMISTRY - CONTINUED
AV LB
AW LB
AX LB
AY LB
AZ LB
BN LB
BO LB
BP LB
BO LB
414 A
415 A
427 A
446 A
AN LB
455 A
456 A
458 A
AN LB
AO LB
*499 H B
513 A
530 A
540 A
550 A
560
581 A
582 A
583 A
585
590 A
591 A
592 A
593 u
595 A
600 A
700 A
702 A
CLASSICS
CLASSICS
101 A
101 B
101 C
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
* 2
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
'" 3
2
2
2
TH
TH
TH
F
F
F
F
TH
TH
'l W F
/0'. W F
M W F
T TH
T TH
V. k F
,., W F
T
ro W
T TH
• T TH
" W F
'" W F
" W F
• '"
'" T
TH
W
'"
T TH
TH
T TH
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
1230-430
130-530
130-530
830
1130
1130 CRITTENDEN
130
230-530 WOODMAN
930
930
130
1230
130-530
130-530
'" 830
VANDENBOSCH
1030 DAUBEN
1130 STOUT
930
1030
* '" '" *
330-530
330-530
730-930 PM
330-530
• '"
830
830
930
AUTUMN
BAG 149
BAG 249
BAG 333
BAG
BAG
BAG
BAG
BAG
BAG
333
45
249
249
249
249
BAG 211
BAG 211
BAG 204
BAG 204
BAG 31
GEB 134
BAG 237
BAG 236
BAG 236
BAG 134
BAG 134
• • BAG 204
BAG 236
BAG 236
BAG 204
BAG 204
* • • • 10< • '" '"
BAG 140
BAG 140
III •
BAG 237
BAG 236
10< •
OEN 205
BLM 212
DEN 212
! Permission signacure required. See pages 37-43 for any genernl permission requirements for tbe departments, schools, or colleges in whose courses you wish to register.
CLASSICS - CONTI~UED
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
210
426
430
430
GREEK
101
201
201
309
413
449
490
D
E
G
H
J
K
u
A
AA QZ
AB Ol
AC Ql
AD QZ
AE QZ
A
A
U
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
*490 H B
499
520
599
600
700
102
LATIN
101
101
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
A
U
A
A
A
A
A
B
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
5
3
3
3
5
3
2
3
3
3
3-6
3-6
* 3
* 3-5
3
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
~.
930
1030
1030
1130
1130
1230
130
130
100-850 PM
DEN 301
BlM 411
BLM 21ft
BL'" 416
BLM 411
BL,.. 408
DEN 211
DEN 314
DE~ 206
M W F 830 DEN 308
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
)0\ W F
to\ W F
M W
FRESHMN&SOPH ONLY PASCAL
930
1030
1130
1230
130
1030
1230
700-825 PM GRUMMEl
D 130 READ
"" W F 130
T TH
M W F
w
T TH
/I. W
*
T
F
*
M W F
'" W F
,... W
M W F
lot W F
M W F
130
830
130
230-345
400-515
* 100-900 PM
230-345
>:<
*
D 1130
o 1130
930
930
1030
1030
1130
1230
130
DEN 216
DEN 216
DEN 216
DEN 213
DEN 213
DEN 216
OEN 308
DEN 209
DEN 205
DEN 212
DEN 212
OEN 205
BlM 409
PAR 1338
PAR 133B
* * *
* * DEN 210
DEN 213
*
DEN 205
DEN 206
DEN 205
DEN 206
DEN 205
DEN 206
DEN 209
OEN 205
DEN 206
• ~: f.;'5:SC or course number. See course changes
56
lATI~ - CONTINUED
206
206
206
206
206
206
206
305
309
422
457
A
B
C
o
F
G
A
A
A
A
490 A
499 A
520 U
599 A
600 A
700 A
702 A
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3-6
3-6
*
3-5
3
CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
341J A
401J A
NEAR EASTERN
o 210 A
e 520 A
ARABIC
LOI A
201 A
401 A
490 A
.499 A
., 600
G 700 A
HEBRHI
LOI A
201 A
e 490 A
.499 A
3
3
5
3
5
5
3-6
3-6
3-6
'"
5
5
3-6
3-6
TH
T TH
T TH
TH
T TH
TH
T TH
~ W F
". TH
W
M W F
~ W F
930
930
1030
1030
1130
1230
130
1030
1230
400-515
230-345
'"
700-900 PM
230-345
*
*
930 EDMONSON
1130 EDMONSON
D 130 llAOEH
'" 330-530
*
*
ZIADEH
o 1130 HEER
D 1130 llADEH
D 1030 HEEIt
'"
'" '"
o 930 WEXLER
D 830 WEXLER
'" '"
DEN 205
DEN 20b
DEN 105
DEN 206
DEN 209
OEN 205
OEN 20b
DEN 111
OEN 113
DEN 310
PAR 133B
* '" *
* '" DEN 210
PAR 131
*
DEN 308
DEN 216
DElli 2 16
eLM 409
DEN 111
DEN 217
OEN 1LL
'" '"
'" '" '" '"
DEN 111
DEN 111
'" '"
PERSIAN
101 A 5
201 A 5
• '190 A 3-6
.499 A 3-6
TURKISH
• 101 A 5
• 490 A 3-6
• '199 A 3-6
COMMUN [CATl ONS
COMMUNICATIONS
lOON A o
A 5
201 A 2
202 A 2
203 A
o 220 A 3
226 A 3
226 B 3
226 U 3
303 A 3
303 B
303 U 3
310 A 3
316 U 3
406 A 3
414 A 3
415 A 3
470 A 3
480 A 3
*495 H A 3
A 1-5
508 A 5
*'
T
T TH
T TH
T TH
'" W F
I' W F
~. W F
T TH
". W F
~: W F
T TH
M W F
T
M W F
I't W F
M !oj F
M W F
'" W F
1'. W
D 930 LORJlINE
D 1030 LORAINE
o 930 AND~EWS
o
*'
330 SCHNEIDER
930
130 HOLLANDER
1030
930 AMES
1'130 S. WARD
830 s. WARD
130 WINTER
730-1355 PM ADAMS
830 BRIER
230 BRIER
700-825 PM BRIE~
930 EDELSTEI~
700-950 PM HI5BEE
930 CLARKE
1130
1030 MATHIASON
930 SHADEL
1130 EDELSTEIN
330 CLARKE
*' *' D 130
CARTER
DEN 209
DEN 209
*' *'
DEN 211
*'
C~U 120
CMU 104
eMU 120
eMU 120
CMU 226
C~U 120
CMU 332
eMU 332
CMU 104
CfI,U 326
CMU 326
eMU 332
eMU 226
Eca
C~U
CMU
CIoIU
eMU
CMU
*' CMU
102
332
326
332
351
226
243
*' 35i
57
AUTUMN
COMMuNICATIONS - CONTINUED
512
516
550
noo
A
A
A
A
A
A
ADVERTI SING
333 A
341 A
H42 A
445 A
445 B
JOURNALISM
*291 A
AN LB
BOO A
*300 B
HOD C
BOO U
301 A
AN LB
318 A
AN LB
318 B
BN LB
A
AN LB
A
It 13 A
RADIO-TELEVISION
260 A
4'270 A
3
3
3
1-5
3-5
*'
3
4
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
W
T
", W F
*'
*'
)I W F
T TH
!HWT
,. Ii F
~ W F
T TH
T TH
T TH
)01 W
F
'" W
f
K W F
~\ W F
k W F
k W F
330-530 AMES
230-430
1130
830
830 WINTER
130 ADAfI,S
830 GOODER
230 WINTER
930 CONRAD
* CONRAD
D 830 JACKSON
D 1030 KINKEL
o 130
700-855 PM BLUMENFELD
1230 SCHIIIEIDER
1030-1230
1130 SHADEL
1030-1230 SHADEL
130 YERXA
1230-230 YERXA
130 WILLIAMS
230-430
1030 BRIER
830 YERXA
930 ALDRIDGE
130 CRANSTON
eMU 351
eMU 35L
CMU 243
*' *'
*' *'
eMU 104
eMU 232
eMU L04
eMU 232
eMU 232
CMU 351
*' *'
CMU 230
eMU 230
eMU 230
eMU 232
eMU 243
eMU 243
eMU 222
eMU 232
eMU 243
CMU 232
eMU 222
'" *' eMU 222
eMU 243
eMU 326
eMU 326
!' Permission signature requir..u. Sc:e pages j7-4} for any general petmiMion requirements for we deparunenu, schools. or colleges in whose courses you wish 10
register.
RADIO-TELEVISION - CONTINUED
*270 U 3
350 ZN 3
352 A 5
A 3
AN LB
ZN 2
ZN 2
ZN 2
A 3
*465 ZN 2-4
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
300 A 5
401 A 5
510 A 5
522 A 3
• 535 A 3
• 565 A 3
• 580 A 5
600 A
700 A '" 702 A 3
T TH
T TH
730-855 PM MI LLEI!
130 WIRTZ
D 1030 CRANSTON
T TH 930
". w F
'"
"'. W F
'"
KINKEL
230-430 KINKEL
830 HATCH
'" KINKEL
'" SHADEL
1230-230 ALDRIDGE
'" ALDRIDGE
1230 JONES
D 1030 REINERT
T TH 130-330
/I.
w
T TH
.. '" ..
STRUC
130-330 KERt.l
1030-1230 LEINER
130-330 BAUMGAERTEL
330-530 KONICK
..
DANCE - See also Dance under PE Women
*251 A 3
*251 B 3
*256 A 3
*256 8 3
*280 A
*290 A 2-5
*351 A 5
*490 A 1-3
*490 B 1-3
*490 C 1-3
T TH W
TWT
M W F
M w F
T TH
'" M W F
T TH
T TH
F
930-1130 1130-130
130-330 JONSON
1130-130
130-330 BORIS
930 JONSON
1130-130 1130-130 BC'RIS. JONSON
330-530 BORIS
330-530
..
• New coune or CDUnIe number. See course changn pages '·35.
C"'U 304
CMU 304
C,..U 326
CP-IU 304
.. ..
C"'U 351
CMU 304
CMU 304
DTV 140
..
DE~ 21b
SAY
PAR
PAR
PAR
PAR
PAR
.. '" ..
IoiLS
A~Y
WLS
AMY
PTH
'" AMY WLS
146
131
135
1338
135
131
..
'"
201
20t
'" 201
A"'Y 201
AfI,Y 201
.. '"
DRAMA
101
*141
U46
U46
*146
*146
151
*l51
U5l
ti51
151
151
151
151
ti55
U81
.H84
210
210
58
A
AA QZ
AB Ql
AC QZ
AD OZ
AE QZ
AF OZ
AG OZ
AH Ol
A
A
AN LB
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
G
U
v
A
A
A
AN LB
AQ LB
U
5
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
5
2
2
214
2/4
II. W F
TH
T TH
TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
TH
T HI
1230 WOLCOTT
1030
1030
1130
1130
1230
1230
230
230
JHN
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
BNS
D 1130 PTH
..
TWT
pi. WT
..
..
1 TH
w
F
SELCTD PARTICPNT~ lASLOVE
D 1030 PLH SELCTD PARTICPNTS FARWELL
'" D 930
DRAMA MAJORS FARWELL
D 1030 DRAMA MAJORS GRAY
D 1130 DRAMA MAJORS VAlENTlNETTI
o 130 DRA~A MAJORS CARq,
D 830
D
DRAMA MAJORS CARR
830
D 930 DRAMA MAJORS GRAY
D 1030 DRA,..A MAJORS VALENTI NETTI
D 1230 DRA!-4A MAJORS CARR
D 1230
o 130 GALS TAUN
630-&00
700-830 P'"
D 130-430 SELCTD PARTICPNTS ROSS
'" SELCTD PARTICPNTS ROSS, ZASLOVE
.. SELCTD PARTICPNTS ROSS, lA!)LOVE
830 LOUNS8URY
830 830-1030
930 830-1030
700 PM
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
PTH
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DOH
DOH
DTV
101
101
105
101
105
101
105
105
203
45
11
45
45
45
11
45
45
41
41
45
41
'"
56
56
DRAMA - CONTINUED
211
212
247
247
247
310
316
316
331
331
338
338
338
414
415
431
432
UN LB
AN LB
AD LB
A
AN LB
A
A
A
B
C
A
A
A
A
B
A
B
A
AN LB
AO LB
B
BN LB
BO LB
c
CN LB
CO LB
A
A
A
A
ZN
4
4
2
2
2
2
5
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
2
2
2
2
w
TH
F
/of, W
T TH
800 PM 800-1000 PM
830 ItEVZAN
830 830-1030
930 630-1030
830 LOUNSBURY
830 830-1030
DOH
DTV
DTV DTV
DTV DTV
DTV
DTV DOH
o 1030 PTH SELCTO PARTICPNTS ZASLOVE
D 1230 PLH SELCTe PARTICPNTS ROSS
Y w F 930 PLH DRAMA MAJORS GALSTAUN
M W F 1130 PLH DRA~A MAJORS GALSTAUN
!o! W F 1230 PlH
M W
M W
T TH
,",. W
T TH
'" W F
T
M W F
W
TH
~ w F
T
T TH
!o\ W F
*
'"
'"
DRAMA MAJORS GRA'Y
e 230-530 WLS SELCTD PARTICPNTS ROSS, ZASLOVE
* i030-1230 DAVIS
830-1030
1030-1230
130-330 VALENTI NETTI
130-330 VALENTI NETTI
830 HAAGA
400
400
830 SIKS
400
400
130 HAAGA
400
400
930-1130 DAVIS
1030 CRIDER
* VALENTI NETT 1
* VALENTINETTI
'" CARIt
DTV
PTH
PTH
DTV
DTV
eTV
DTV
Drv
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
DTV
21
21 61
21 61
56
60
'" 60
51
51
41
II
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
60
54
51
'"
59
DRAMA - CONTINUED
438 A
*438L ZN
451 A
451 B
455 A
461 A
461L ZN
463 A
471 A
477 A
*4908 BA
:l:490C CA
492 A
:1:498 A
501 A
510 A
*513 A
*514 A
*515 A
*562 A
575 A
*581 A
*599 A
600 A
700 A
ECONOMICS
ZOO A
AA OZ
A8 QZ
At QZ
AD QZ
AE QZ
AF QZ
AG QZ
AH QZ
Al QZ
AJ QZ
2
3
3
2
2
2
5
3
1-5
1-5
1-5
3
1-5
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
1-5
5
M W F
*
F
T TH F
T TH
T TH
T TH .. )I W F
*
T TH
~ W F
'" T TH
T TH
\\ W F
'" II<
II<
'" W F
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
1130 SIKS
• SIKS
1030-1230 1030 LOPER
1030-1230 1130 LOPER
830-1030 CRIDER
230
330
* D 930
WOLCOTT
930 CONWAY
* *
*
* '"
230 FAllS
830 DAVIS
'" LOUNSBURY
1130 CONWAY
230 CRIDER
II<
1030 CONWAY
230-530 JOSEPH
II<
II<
930 BUECHEL
730
730
830
830
930
930
1030
1030
1130
T TH .1130
AUTUMN
Drv 11
DTV 41
DTV 41
DTV 41
DTV 41
DTV 41
'" '" MLR 102
OTV 101
'" *
* * '"
'" '" '" *
• OTV lOl
OlV 60
OOH
OlV 33
DTV 54
'" DTV 33
DlY 23
.. '" II<
*
ARC 207
GTH 315
GTH 313
GTH 308
GTH 309
GTH 30~
SAY 343
GTH 309
PAR 110
GTH 311
GTH 306
::: Permis.sion signaNfC required, See pagc::s 37-43 for an)' general permis.sion requirements for the: departments. schools, or colleges in whose counes you wish to register.
ECONOMICS - CONTINUED
200
200
200
200
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
.201
201
211
260
AK QZ
AL QZ
AM QZ
SA QZ
C 5
CA QZ
CB QZ
CC QZ
CD QZ
CE QZ
CF QZ
o
oA QZ
DB QZ
DC QZ
DO QZ
DE QZ
OF QZ
OG QZ
OH QZ
01 QZ
OJ OZ
OK QZ
DL QZ
U
v
A
B
C
o
E
F
G
H
J
K
U
A
A
AA QZ
AS QZ
AC QZ
AD OZ'
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
5
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
Pol W F
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
'" Ii F
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
1230
1230
130
130
1030 SHAPIRO
730
730
830
830
1230
1230
230 GINSBERG
1230
1230
130
130
230
230
330
330
330
430
430
430
700-920 PM
TH 700-920 PM
D 730
o 730
D 830
o 830
o 930 THOMPSON
D 930
o 1030
o 1030
o 1130 SHAPIRO
o 1130 HIGGS
o 1230 MAH
D 1230
~ W 700-920 PM BURCROFF
1>1. W F 1030 HUBER
M Ii F 1030 THOMPSON
T TH 830
T TH 930
T TH 1030
T TH 1030
• ~~:S ~35.sc or course number, See course changes
GTH 311
GTH 308
GTH 311
GTH 306
PAR 108
GTH 306
GTH 308
SAY 131
SAY 135
BLH 205
BL'" 209
SMI 120
GTH 315
8LM 303
SAY 131
GTH 315
GTH 315
GTH 313
GTH 315
GTH 311
GTH 308
GTH
GTH
GTH
GTH
GTH
SAY
SAY
315
311
308
313
313
137
132
SAY 137
SAY 132
SAY 137
SAY 132
SAY 137
SAY 132
SAY 137
SAY 132
SAY 137
SAY 132
GTH 315
AND 309
CMU 120
$"'1
SMI
GEa
ECB
309
309
222
r05
ECONOMICS - CONTINUED
281 A 5
300 A 5
300 8 5
300 C 5
300 U 5
301 A 5
330 A 5
340 A 5
340 B 5
350 A 5
370 A 5
hOO A 3
404 A 5
410 A 3
411 A 3
440J A 3/5
441 A 5
450 A 5
471 A 5
481 A 5
495 A 5
*496 H A 5
*496 H B 5
3
500 A 3
502 A 3
504 A 3
513 A 3
517 A 3
530 A 3
542 A 3
60
o 830 DOWDLE
o 930 LANCASTER
o 1130 H'tNES
o 1230 THORNTON
~ w 700-920 P~
o 1230 BROWN
o 1030 MUNO
o 930 GI LLINGHAM
o 1130 H(lPI"INS
o 1130 MILLER
o 1130 D. JOHNSON
nw 1230
". W F
'" W F
EVSENBACH
D 830 CRUTCHFIELD
1030 SILBERBERG
l230 GINSBERG
'" \oj F 1130 BEYERS
o l030 GILLINGHAM
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o 1030 HYNES
o 1130 LANCASTER
o 1030 THORNTON
!o\ W 130-330 MC CAFFREE
T TH 130-330 MC ChFFREE
,. . M W 130-300
BASSETT t BORCHERDING
T TH 1130-100 GLUSTOFF
~ W 330-500 HIGGS
T TH 130-300 GLUSTOFF
1/ W F 930 BASSETT SILBERBERG
T TH 900-1030
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MUND
130-300 HOPI< INS
GTH 313
GTH 309
GTH 309
GTH 309
GTH 309
SAY 331
SAY 331
SMI 102
SMI 205
GTH 313
GTH 315
SAY 329
GTH 315
SAY 329
GTI1 308
SMI 405
GTH 315
GTH 311
SAY 239
GTH 308
GTH 308
GTH 306
GTH 308
• :0<
• ,.
ECONOMICS - CONTINUED
580
noo
n02
ENGLISH
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
lOl
101
10l
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
A
A
A
AA
AB
Ae
AD
AE
AF
AG
AH
Al
AJ
AK
Al
AM
BA
BB
BC
BO
BE
SF
8G
BH
Bl
BJ
BK
Bl
BM
CA
CB
ce
co CE
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CG
CH
CI
CJ
CK
Cl
CM
OA
DB
DC
3
* * 3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
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3
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3
3
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330-500 HI LLER
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730
130
730
730
730
730
730
830
830
830
830
830
830
830
830
830
830
830
830
930
930
930
930
930
930
930
930
930
930
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1030
1030
1030
1030
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PAR 303
PAR 309
PAR 401
SI'II 309
SMI 311
SMI 313
THO 211
PAR 309
PAR 401
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GTH 306
GTH 308
GTH 309
SAY 131
SAY 135
SAY 151
SAY 241
SAY 335
PAR 303
PAR 309
PAR 401
SI-'I 309
SMI 311
GTH 308
SAY 131
JHt.I 9
MOR ,219
RAI 218
PH3 3
PAR 303
PAR 309
PAR 1,01
SMI 311
SMI 313
GTH 306
GTH 311
SAY 131
SAY 241
GEB 224
GEB 226
A~O 203 61
ENGLISH - CONTINUED
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
DO
DE
OF
DG
DH
01
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OK
DL
OM
EA
E8
EC
EO
EE
EF
EG
EH
EI
EJ
EK
El
EM
FA
FB
Fe
FO
FE
FF
FG
FH
FI
FJ
FK
FL
FM
GA
GB
GC
GO
GE
GF
GG
GH
GI
GK
GL
GM
HA
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
k H F
M W F
M W F
/I. W F
.. W F
M \oj F
po! W F
1030
1130
1130
1130
1130
1130
1130
M W F 1130
M W F 1130
/I. W F 1130
!o! W f 1130
f': W F 1130
'" W F 1130
/I, W F 1130
Yo H F 1130
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iii W F 1230
'" W F 1230
!I, W 1230
M W F 1230
", W F 1230
x ~ F 1230
/I. W F 1230
!-1 W F
k W F
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M W F
M W F
M H F
to! W F
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M W F
Yo W F
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M W F
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Yo W F
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1230
1230
1230
1230
130
130
130
130
130
130
130
130
130
130
130
230
230
230
230
230
230
230
230
no
230
230
AUTUMN
ClK 203
PAR 303
PAR 309
PAR 401
SMI
Sf4I
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309
311
313
GTH 306
GTH 311
SAY 131
SAY 241
GEB 226
GEB 227
AND 203
MOR 212
MOR 215
PAR 303
PAR 309
PAR 401
SMt 309
SMI 311
SMI 313
GTH 306
GTH 311
GTH 313
GTH 315
SAY 131
PAR 303
PAR 309
PAR 401
SMI 311
GTH 311
GTH 313
SAY 131
SAY 335
SAY 343
SAY 329
SAY 241
PAR 303
PAR 309
PAR 401
SMt 309
SMI 313
SMI 313
GTH 308
GTH 309
GTH 311
GTH 313
SAY 131
:I: Permission signarure required. Sec pages 37-43 for any general permission requirements for the departments, schools, or colleges in whose courses you wish to n.ogister.
ENGLISH - CONTINUED
101
101
101
101
101
101
HB
HC
HO
HE
HF
HG
101 H HI
101 H HJ
101 H HK
101 H HL
101 H HM
101 H IA
101 H 18
101 H IC
101 H 10
101 H IE
101 H IF
101 H IG
101 H IH
101 H II
101 H IJ
101 H IK
101 H IL
101 UA
101
101
102
102
102
102
102
102
102
102
102
102
102
102
103
103
103
103
103
103
150
UB
UC
AA
AB
AC
AD
AE
AF
AG
AH
AI
AJ
AK
UA
AA
AS
AC
AO
AE
AF
A
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
5
M W F
", \of F
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M W
M W F
M W
M W F
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M W F
1". W F
101 W F
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M W
TH
T TH
M W F
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T TH
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M W F
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M W F
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230
330
330
330
330
430
830
830
930
930
930
1030
1030
1130
1130
1130
1230
1230
130
130
130
230
ao 700-825 PM
700-825 PM
700-825 PM
830
930
930
1030
1030
1130
1130
1230
130
130
230
700-825 PM
830
930
1030
1130
130
M W F 230 FOR FOREIGN STUDENT ENGU SH SEe 150y151,303
o 1230
• New course or course number. See L'{JUrse changes pagt." 7-35.
SAY 132
PA~ 303
PAR 309
PAR 401
SMI 309
PAR 303
BLH 212
BU" 312
BLH 212
8LM 312
SMI 313
BLM 212
8LM 312
BLH 212
BlM 312
BLH 314
BLM 312
BLM 306
8LM 312
SMI 313
SMI 309
8LI" 205
BlI~ 214
SMI 309
SMI 309
SMI 313
AND 203
SAY 241
SMI 305
MEB 245
JHN 9
MOR 228
PH3 3
SAY 241
GTH 315
SAY 132
SAV 335
SMI 307
BAG 204
MEB 231
MOR 215
EGA 153
SAV 137
GTH 315
8LM 406
62
ENGLISH - CONTINUED
151
151
257
251
257
257
257
257
258
258
258
258
258
258
259
259
A
B
A
B
C
o
e u
A
B
C
D
E
U
A
B
259 U
264 A
*264 H B
264 C
264 D
264 E
164
264
264
264
265
265
265
266
267
267
267
7.67
267
267
271
271
271
271
Z71
271
271
271
272
G
H
U
A
B
c
A
A
B
c
D
E
F
U
A
s
C
D
G
H
A
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
o 1230
o 1230
o 930
D 1030 Zl LLHAN
o 1130
o 130
o 230
T TH 700-920 PM LOCKWOOD
o 830
o 930
o 1130
o 1230
o 130
~ W 700-920 PM NAIDEN
o 930
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~ W 700-920 PM
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MAYS
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o 930
o 1030
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o 1230
o 130
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o
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330
700-920 PH WILLI S
930
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o 130
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o 1030
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T TH 700-920 ~M
'" W
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p.: W F
I'. W F
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STANTON
830
930
1030 AVERY
1130
1230
130
230
330
1230
Sllot 308
8LH 414
SMI 203
C~U 226
SMt 203
SMt 102
SMt 102
SMI 203
Sfolt 205
THO 101
GEB 427
THO 101
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CMU 332
TH(I
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119
102
203
102
109
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202
202
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Tt'O 134
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SMI
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SMI
207
203
209
207
THO 135
THO 119
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SI'.I 203
THO 119
SAY 333
PAR 224
CfoIU 243
MLR 302B
SMI 105
MLR 302A
CMU 351
SMI 109
SAY 333
ENGLISH - CONTINUED
274
274
275
276
277
277
277
2.77
277
278
278
303
303
303
324
324
324
324
324
324
324
325
325
331
332
336
341
342
344
361
361
362
362
363
363
387
390
413
A
U
U
U
A
B
C
D
U
A
U
A
B
C
A
B
C
D
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A
B
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
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A
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A
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A
A
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5
5
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
o 1130 WAGONER
T TH 700-920 PH BEf'.JTLEY
T TH 700-920 PH BEf'.JTLEY
T TH 700-920 PM BENTLEY
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M W F 1130
,., W F 1230
tI· W F 130
T TH 700-825 PH LEAHY
II, W F 130
T TH 700-825 PH LEAHY
k W 1230
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M W F
T TH
130
230
D 830 STIRLING
D 930 ADAMS
o 1130
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D
D
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700-920 P14 SULLIVAN
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o 930 H. BURNS
T TH 700-920 PH NEUFELDT
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D 130
o 1030 EHE~Y
o 1030
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GTH 209
PAR 224
PAR 224
PAR 224
SHI 105
SAY 333
CMU 243
PAR 134B
C"'U 222
PAR 223B
CMU 222
BlM 203
DEN 213
8lM 408
SMI 202
SAY 239
SAY 146
St-tI 207
SAY 239
SMI 207
THO 134
SAY 237
PAR L06
SAY 146
THO 119
SAY 239
CHU 332
THO L34
PAR 110
THO 134
THO 134
PAR 110
THO 135
SMI 209
PAR 106
SHI 207
TI-IO 125
SII.I 203
63
ENGLISH - CONTINUED
417
418
418
419
419
425
430
431
434
435
435
435
437
447
453
453
454
455
457
458
A
A
U
A
8
A
A
A
A
A
B
C
A
A
A
U
U
U
A
A
U
*462. U
*490 A
*492 H A
*499 A
*499 H B
505 A
507 A
509 A
510 A
517 A
51B A
521 A
524 A
531 A
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
5
3-5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
D 930 HEllMAN
D 230
T TH 700-920 PH DUNLOP
D 1130
D 230
D 930 PAYNE
o 130
o 130
o 1130 H. BURNS
D 930 PHILLIPS
D 1230
o 230
o 130
D 1130
D 1130 WAGONER
T TH 700-920 PM 8ENTLEY
T TH 700-920 PH
T TH
~ W F
M W F
BENTLEY
700-920 PH BENTLEY
1230
1230
700-930 PH HARRIS
W 700-930 P~ HARRIS
• * PAYNE
* * * *
o 130 GRIFFITH
" W F 930 MORTENSON
D 1230 JONES
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M \oj 330-530 DIPPLE
M W 130-330 HATCHETT
T TH 1030-1230 STIRLING
T TH 1030-1230 A. STEIN
T TH 130-330 HAUCK
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AUTUMN
HLR 310
S"'I 209
THO 211
SHI 305
SAY 146
PAR 306
SAY 146
GTH 309
THO 134
THO 211
SHI 305
SMI 305
SAV
THO
151
135
GTH 209
PAR 224
PAR 224
PAR
eMU
CMU
224
351
351
CMU 222
CHU 222
* * * *
* *
PAR 133B
eMU 222.
eMU 222
SHI 105
SAY 333
SAY 333
CMU 351
CMU 222
CHU 222
CMU 222
::: Permission signature required. See pages 3743 for any general permission requirements for che dcpartmeolS, schools, or colleges in whose courses you wish 10 register.
ENGLISH - CONTINUED
538
541
544
553
561
562
599
599
noo
*102
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
A
A
A
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
*' 3
M W 1030-1230 SWINGLE
T TH 330-530 BROWN
T TH 130-330 AVERY
T TH 330-530 IRMSCHER
D 930 FOWLER
o 230 SALE
k W 130-330 HIlEN
/I, W 330-530 DUN~
* *' *
FAR EAST & RUSSIAN INSTITUTE
FA~ EASTERN & RUSSIA~
210
210
*
242
A
AA QZ
AS QZ
AC QZ
AD QZ
AE QZ
AF OZ
AG QZ
AH QZ
AI QZ
B
BA QZ
BB Ql
Be QZ
BD QZ
SE QZ
BF QZ
BG QZ
BH QZ
H Bl QZ
BJ QZ
BK QZ
BL QZ
BM OZ
A
5
5
3
MTW F
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
TH
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T
T
T
T
T
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/I. W F
1130 TAYLOR
930
930
1030
1130
1130
1230
130
130
230
130 GASSTER
930
930
930
1030
1030
1030
1130
1230
1230
130
130
230
230
1030 KOH
· ~c: ~5~ or course number. Sec course changes
CMU 351
CMU 243
SAY 333
CMU 222
CflU 243
GTH 209
GTH 135
C"'U 222
*' * * *'
*
SMI 120
THO 125
THO 335
MLR 302A
I-iLR 302A
PAR 222
SAY 131
PA~ 222
ECB 218
THO 317
SMI 120
THO 125
THO 311
THO 335
THO 311
HLR 302A
ECB 205
HLR 302A
ECB 105
SMI 105
PAR 222
ECB 105
ECB 105
THO 317
l-ILR 3028
64
FAR EASTERN & RUSSIAN - CONTI~UED
243 A 5
243 U 5
280J A 5
o 290J A 5
305J A 5
324 A 5
329 A 5
333J A 5
343J A 5
344J A
415J A 5
A 5
427J A 5
430 A 3
441J A 5
AA QZ
AS QZ
444 A 3
452J A
454J lJ 5
A 5
tlI 464 A
465J A 5
*472 A
482J A
A 3-5
*501 A 5
G*504J A 5
509J A 3
*532J A 3
*534J A 3-6
A 3-6
*539J A 3-6
t541J A 4
D 130 SPECTOR
T TH 700-920 PM SPECTOR
D 1030 CONLON
D 230
o 130 ROMANOWSKI
C 1130 SWAYZE
M \ot F
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TH
TH
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1'. W F
10'. W
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T TH
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o 930 MC VEY
o 130 TOWNSEND
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D 930
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1130
930 RESHETAR
930
1030
330-530 QUYEN
o 130 PYLE
o
730-950 PM PYLE
1030 COIUE
230 WYLIE
130
1130 CONlE
o 1230 CONLON
* 1130 CONZE
230-430 HELLMANN, PYLE
330-530 KAKIUCHI
330-530
330-530 TREADGOLv
130-330 TRE40GOLD
230-430
130-330 RESHETAR
JHN 101
THO 317
SMI 301
SMI 307
SMI 405
GEB 426
THO 101
SMI 202
MEB 242
MEB 242
THO 325
SMI 209
SMI 301
THO 211
S"'I
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SMI
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205
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104
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331
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* THO 122
SMI 104
S.,.I 411
MEB 102
THO 234
SMI 104
St-II 104
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FAR EASTER~ t RUSSIAN - CONTI~UED
*550J A 3-6
*SS9J A 3-6
*560J A 3-6
*598 A 5
*599 A 5
A '" *611J A 3-6
noo A :0:
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130-330 SUGAR
330-530 CONZE, HURVITZ, LI. WYLIE
230-430 DULL,GASSTER,MAH SHIH, TO\r;NSEND, kI LI-4ELM, TAYLOR
130-330 GASSTER
*
FAR EAST t SLAVIC LANG~AGES & LIT
CHINESE
101
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211
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GTH 135
GTH 135
THO 417
* '"
; Permission si,;narure required. Sec p:1gcs 37·43 for any general permission reqllirements (or the deparlments, schools. or colleges in whose COllrses you wish 10
register.
KOREAN - CONTINUED
501 A
*531 A
A
*600 A
noo A
MONGOLIAN
302
402
*499
521
*600
POLISH
401
RUSSIAN
100
100
110
*110
*200
205
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
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AO LB
AP LB
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AR LB
AS LB
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AW lB
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AZ LB
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U
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B
A
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o 1030 SUH
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1230 DIXON
830
830
930
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1030
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1130
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130
130
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700-900 PM 700 PM
930
o ~I W F
830 930
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TWTF
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D 1130 TRACY
1230 TRACY
930
930
1130
• New course or course number. Sec course changes pages '·3S.
THO 417
THO 417
'" '" '"
ClK 202
CLK 202
'" '" '" '"
THO 311
StH 120
THO 335
THO 325
THO 325
fotLR 302B
PAR 1348
THO 234
THO 325
THO 331
THO 231
THO 234
THO 235
THO 234
THO 311
THO 135
PAR 1338
THO 317
THO 317
nm 317
THO 118
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PAR
THO
302A
1338
317 66
RUSSIAN - CONTINUED
AQ LB
AR LB
AS lB
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*205 H B 5
H BN LB
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311 A 5
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315 A 2-3
320 A 5
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SLAVIC - CONTINUED
552
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301
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414
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GENERAL EDUCATION
HUMANITIES
101
101
101
101
101
A
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5
5
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103
103
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103 67
HUMANITIES - CONTI~UED
101
101
102
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101
* *
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AA OZ
AB OZ
AC QZ
H AD OZ
H AE QZ
AF QZ
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BE OZ
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GENERAL STUD I ES
*301 H A
*391 A
492 A
*493 A
GENETICS
451 A
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5
5
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830
830-1030
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930
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103
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184
ECB 102
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ECB 106
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LIB 402A LIB 402B
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t Permission sigDllCure required. See pages 37-43 for 11111 general permission requiremenlS for the depanmenu, Schools. or colleges in whose courses you wish CO register.
GENETICS - CONTINUED
:1:520 A
:1:551 A
A
600 A
700 A
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100 A
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1130
1230
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130
130
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1030 CHANG
730
830
830
930
930
1030
1030
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830 ROMANOWSKI
830
1030
1130
1230
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830
930
1030
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HSB J280
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* * * *
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68
GEOG~APHY - CONTINUED
25&
277
302
304
305J
333J
360
361
370
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1130
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GEOLOGV - CONTINUED
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930-1130
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700-950 PM
1230 GRESENS, CHRISTENSEN
730-930
930-1130
130-330
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1030 CHRISTENSEN
730-930
930-1130
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130-330
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GEOLOGY - CONTINUED
A
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563 A
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101
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101
101
101
101
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101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
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101
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1130 WHETTEN, KELLEY
130-330
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130
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830
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D 930
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DEN 317
DEN 316
DEN 311
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BLM 416
DEN 317
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GTH 306
GTH 311
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BLH 408
BLH 311
DEN 317
DEN 316
BLH 408
DEN 317
DEN 316
DEN 309
! Permission signature required. Sec pages 37·0 for ;my general permission reqUirements ror the departments, schools, or colleges in whose counc:s you wish m register.
GERMANICS - CO~il~UEo
101
101
101
101
101
101
102
102
102
102
102
102
103
103
103
103
103
103
123
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
201
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BI
BJ
BK
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AB
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5
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D 1030
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• New course or course number. See course cilnngcs pages 7-35.
DEN 317
DEN 316
BlM 408
DEN 317
DEN 315
DEN 316
DEN 314
BlM 408
GTH 315
BLM 314
BLM 311
BLH 301
DEN 309
BLM 301
DE,.,. 217
DEN 309
DEN 309
DEN 306
DEN 311
DEN 315
DEN 315
DEN 307
DEN 305
OEN 315
BlM 314
SLM 214
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DEN 315
DEN 307
DEN 313
DEN 315
DEN 307
BlM 414
DEN 311
DEN 315
DEN 307
DEN 315
DEN 307
DEN 316
DEN 317
OEN 314
DEN 306
DEN 314
DE"" 314
DEN 314
DEN 314
GERMANICS - CONTINUED
203
203
203
203
203
203
203
207
201
207
207
290
301
301
AA
AB
AC
AD
AE
AF
AG
AA
AS
AC
AD
A
A
B
BOI H C
301
301
312
312
312
312
401
401
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E
A
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o
E
A
8
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405 A
410 A
410 B
415 A
415 B
*490 H A
497 A
498 A
S
*501 A
*510 A
*528 A
*531 A
*534 A
A
A
A
70 *574 A
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
1-5
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~ W F 930
to: w F 1030
M W F 1130
,.. w F 1230
I'. w 1230
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TH 930
T TH 1130
T TH 1230
T TH 130
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M Ii F
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830
830
830
230-400
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930
930
930
230
230
330
330
330
130-300 VOYLES
230 IMMERwAHR
230
930 HERTlING
930 AMHERLAHN
330 BAUMGAERTEl
* 1-5 ~ * 1-5 !' W F 1030
330-530 3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
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~ \oj F 130
JI, 330-530
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230 VON KRIES
230 RABUIU
BLM 408
BlH 205
8LM 414
DEN 310
elM 408
BlM 414
BLM 414
DEN 313
DEN 310
BlM 305
BlM 411
OEN 307
OEN 311
oEt>,I 312
OEN 313
OEN 310
DEN 213
OEN 311
BLM 213
OEt>,I 310
DEN 213
DEN 305
DE,.,. 311
DEN 310
DEN 312
OEN 311
OEN 315
OEN 314
DEN 313
DEN 312
OEN 311
*
OEN 310
LIB 40LA LIB 401B
DEN 314
DEN 313
DEN 312
DEN 310
DEN 311
DEN 312
DEN 311
DEN 313
GERMANICS - CONTINueD
*574 8
*580 A
A
600 A
700 A
702 A
HISTORY
101
102
*
102
241
A
AA OZ
A8 QZ
AC OZ
AD QZ
AE OZ
AF QZ
AG QZ
AH OZ
Al OZ
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AH OZ
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330-530 GALT
230-430
230-430 BEHLER
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1230 KAMINSKY
830
830
830
930
930
930
1130
1130
1230
1230
1230
130
130
H30 PINKNEY
830
930
1030
1130
1230
130
700-920 PM FARRAR
830 BURKE
830
830
930
1030
1030
1030
1030
1130
1130
1130
1230
1230
130
130
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OEN 313
DEN 313
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218
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343
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120
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309
135
402
218
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ARC 207
HLR 104
CMU 332
SHJ 305
SMJ 309
SHJ 202
SMI 209
CMU 332
SAY
SAY
SHI
SHI
335
341
309
309
SMI 407
SAY 241
S4V 341
71
HISTORY - CONTINUED
271
280J
e 290J
305
0311
316
341
386
400
*421J
427J
432
433
G 438
445A
452J
454J
464
464
465J
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A
A
A
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AB QZ
AC QZ
AD tlZ
A
A
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A6 OZ
AC OZ
AD QZ
AE OZ
AF QZ
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
u
A
AA OZ
AB QZ
AC OZ
AD OZ
AE OZ
AF OZ
AG OZ
AH QZ
u
A
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
5
5
5
5
4
3
5
5
5
5
5
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TH
TH
TH
TH
o 230 COSTIGAN
o 1030 CONLON
D 230
1130 GRIFFITHS
830
930
1130
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HTWT 930
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TH
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M W F
M W
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830
930
1030
1230
130
230
D 930 DIFFIE
D
1030 EDMONSON/THOMAS
930
D 930 SUGAR
o 1130 BRIDGMAN
D 1030 EMERSON
1030 BACHARACH
1030 BESTOR
o 130
o
P'tLE
130-950 PYLE
130 CARSTENSEN
830
830
1130
1130
1230
1230
130
130
700-920 PM AVERY
130
AUTUMN
SMI 303
SMJ 307
SMI 307
SMI 318
GTH 306
BLM 313
MOR 228
SAY 343
MEB
SMI
PAR
RAt
SMI
SAY
SAY
103
318
108
218
409
135
241
ECB 217
GTH 30b
SMI
SMI
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207
305
209
307
304
303
309
209
407
307
233
202
G9
311
lOb
111
106
309
311
303
307
t Permission signature required, See pagc$ 37-43 for any general permission requirements for the depanmems, schools, or colleges in whO$C courses you wish to register.
HISTORY - CONTINUED
482J A
48b A
H90 H A
H93B BA
495 A
1t*498 A
A
A
500 B
A
A
A
A
A
*524A AA
A
t534J A
t535J A
t535 A
*539J A
*543 A
*550J A
*559J A
*560J A
*56M AA
*575 A
A
A
bOO A
t611J A
A
A
700 A
5
5
5
5
5
3-5
1-5
3
3
5
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
3-6
* 3-6
3-6
5
T
D 1230 CONLON
D 130 SOLBERG
130-330 EMERSON
,.. 130-430 T 130-330
FAR~AR
o 1130 ULLMAN
TH 230-430
*
W
T
T
T
TH
* TH
W
T
T
T
TH
T
T
T
TH
T
T
TH
,." W F W
SCHOll
* 330-530
FERRILL,MQSHER
330-530 FERRILL, MOSHER
230-/t30 HELLMAN'hPYLE
130-330 GRIFFITHS
130-330 KAMINSKY
130-330 HANKINS
330-530 BRIDGMAN
130-330 LYTLE
* PINKNEY
330-530 TREAOGOLD
130-330 TREADGDLD
330-530 FARRAR
230-430
330-530 PRESSLY
330-530
BUTOW
230-430 PYLE
130-330 SUGAR
130-330 PEASE
330-530 COSTIGAN
330-530 DIFFIE
130-330 GASSTER
130-330 BACHARACH
1030 130-330
BESTOR
• New course or course number. Sec course changes pages 7·35.
SMI 307
SHI 305
SMI 306
SMI 105
SMI 307
SMI 306
GEB 224
GEB 226
SHI 104
SMI 306
PAR 135
SA" 2bO
SM[ 306
SfoIl 104
* * THO 234
SMI 104
SMI 105
SMJ 104
MLR 106
LIB 401A LIB 401B
THO 234
SI-II
SMI
SMI
SAV
SAV
SMI
SMI SMI
116B
308
105
333
* 322
105
109 105
.*
HOME ECONOMICS
110 A 5
AN LB
125 A 3
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
134 A 3/5
L34 B 3/5
134 C 3/5
148 A 3
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
216 A 1-3
AN LB
231 A 2
234 A 3
307 A 3/5
AN LB
'" H AD LB
AP LB
'" H AQ LB
AR LB
* H AS LB
315 A 3/5
AN LB
* H AD. La
31b A 3
319 A
AA QZ
*329 A 2
72
T TH
Yo W F
T
TH
F
230 CRUtI,
230-430 CRUM
130 BROCKWAY
130-330 KING
130-330 KING
130-330 KING
D 830-1030 PHILBRICK
o 1030-1230 SHIGAYA
o 130-330 MURDOCH
F 930
v, w
T TH
W F
T TH
MTW F
TH
TH
TH
TH
F
F
T TH
T TH
T TH
F
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WILSON
930-1130 WILSON
930-1130 WILSON
1230-230 l'ilLSON
1030-1230 CRUM
1030-1230 CRUM
130 PHILBRICK
830-1030 SMITH
830 ARLIN
730-930 ARLIN
730-930 ARLJN
1030-1230 ARLIN
1030-1230 ARLIN
1030-1230 ARLIN
1030-1230 ARLIN
130 NIELSEN
130-430 NIELSEN
130-430 NIELSEN
830-1130
NIELSEN
1030
930-1130
930-1130 BROCKWAY
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAJ
RAI
RAI
RAJ
RAI
RAJ
HMH
HMH
HMH
RAJ
RAI
RAI
RAJ
RAJ
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAJ
RAJ
RAI
RAI
RAI RAI
212
2LL
310
301
301
301
307
307
307
212
212
211
310
305
310
218
218
218
218
218
218
218
211
211
211 212
UWH 88124
UWH 6S124
RAI 308
HO~E ECONOMICS - CONTINUED
*329 H B
334 A
336 A
*336 H B
347 A
* 347
* *346
*346
AN LB
H AD LB
B
BN LB
H BO LB
A
AN LB
B
BN LB
354 A
*354 H B
356 A
*356 H B
356 C
H56 H 0
*380 A
G 409 A
429 A
"'434 A
435 A
454 A
456 A
474 A
475 A
AN LB
475FJ FA
2 T TH
3 M W F
3 M W F
3 M W F
3/5 M W F
T TH
·T TH
3/5 M W F
T TH
T TH
3 II W F
* 3 T TH
930-1130 BROCKlo4AY
930-1130 LIENKAEMPER
230-430 LIENKAEMPER
230-430 LIENKAEMPER
930 SCHROEDER
930-1130 SCHROEDER
930-1130 SCHROEDER
130 SCHROEDER
130-330 SCHROEDER
130-330 SCHROEDER
330 WILSON
330 WILSON
* 3/5 MTW
TF 1030 1030 HALL
3/5 II.TW TF
i030 1030 HALL
3 II, W F 1230 STONE
3
3
3
2
3
3
3
5
2
3
5
3
3
It' W F
It W F
1230 STO"4E
230 STO"4E
230 STONE
T TH 130-330 SMITH
.., W F 230 FEENEY
'" W F 830-1030 BROCKWAY
/<! Vi F 130-330 SHIGAYA
T TH 830-1130 SMITH
W 330-510 HALL
!o\ W 330-500 STONE
~. WTH 330-530 T 330-530
'" W F
* T
SANDSTROM
930 TERRELL
* TERRELL
230-430 GRANBERG
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAI
RAt
RAI
RAI
HMH
*' HMH
RAI RAI
RAt RAt
RAt
RAI
RAI
RAt
308
313
313
313
304
304
304
304
304
304
o
218 310
218 310
310
310
310
310
RAt 305
RAt 304
RAI 308
RAt 305
RAI 313
PAR 131
PAR 134B
RAI 218 RAI 212
RAt 107
RAt 216
73
AUTUMN
HOME ECONOMICS - CONTINUED
A *
*495 H A
C
*495.H C *
D * *495 H D
E
*495 F *
*495 H F
*495 G *
*495 H G .;.
*495 H .;.
*495 H H
*495 .;.
*495 H
*495 K * *495 H K * *496 H A 2/3
*496 H B 2/3
*496 H C 2/3
*496 H D 2/3
*496 H E 213
*496 H F 2/3
*496 H G 213
*496 H 2/3
*496 H K 213
0511 A 2-12
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
* *
•
*
*
lOt
* COSTUME DSGN LtENKAEMPER SHIGAYA, SMITH
* COSTUME DSGN LIENKAEMPER SHIGAYA, SMITH
* INSTIT ADMIN TERRELL
* INSTIT ADMIN TERRELL
* NUTRITION JOHNSON
* NUTRITION JOHNSON
* TEXTILES BROCKWAY
* TEXTILES BROCKWAY
* FAMILV ECON HALL
* FAMILY ECON HALL
* FOODS NIELSEN
* FOODS NIELSEN
* HOME ECON ED MC ADAMS
• HOME ECON ED' MC ADAMS
'" FAMILY RELATN STONE
* FAM.lLY RELATN STONE
.;. HOME MANAGMNT WILSON
* HOME MANAGMNT WILSON
* HOME FURNSHNG SCHROEDER
* HOME FURNSHNG SCHROEDER
* COSTUME DSGN LI ENKAEMPER SHIGAYA, SMITH
* INSTIT ADMIN
*NUTRlTION JOHNSON
lOtTEXTILES BROCKWAY
*FAMILY ECON HALL
.FOODS NIELSEN
* HOME ECON ED MC ADAMS
• HOME HANAGMNT WILSON
* HOME FURNSHNG SCHROEDER
* FEENEY
.;.
.;.
*
* *
* *
* *
* .;.
*
*
* *
• *
*
*
•
*
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*
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*
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t Permission signature required. sec pages 37-43 for 1111)' general permission requirements for tbe departmCDts, schools, or mllegcs in wbose courses you wish to register.
HOME ECONOMICS - CONTINUED
576 A 4 '" 517 A 4 '" 578 A 4
*600 A :0: '" B :0:
*600 C *
*600 o :0:
E '" *600 F '" *
G 11< :0:
*600 H
*600 :0:
*600 K '" 700 A '"
HUMANITIES - See General Education
LIBERAL ARTS
111 A
AA QZ
A8 OZ
AC OZ
AD QZ
AE OZ
AF OZ
AG OZ
AH OZ
L INGU ISTICS
• 101 A
5
5
HT TF
T
W
TH
w
T
T
,., W F
T TI;!
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T TH
T TH
T TH
:0:
TERRELL
'" TERRELL
:0:
TERRelL
11< COSTUME OSGN LIEt.4KAEMPER
* INSTIT AOMIN TERRelL
"'NUTRITION JOHNSON
:O:TEXTILES BROCKWAY
*FAMIl Y EeON HALL
*FOODS NIELSE~
:0: HOME ECON ED He ADAMS
'" FAMILY RELATN STO"lE
'" HOME MAt..IAGMNT WILSON
'" HOME FURNSHNG SCHROEDER
'"
230 LUTEY
1230
1230
1230
1230
230
230
330
330
1030 TSI TSOPOUlOS
830
930
1030
1130
130
200
200
200
AA OZ
AS QZ
Ae OZ
AD OZ
AE OZ
A 5 o 1030
B 5
U 5
400 A 3
D
M W F
M W F
130
730-900 PM
930 SAPORTA
• New course or course number. See course changes p38cs 7-35.
lCI
:0:
'" :0:
*
'" :0:
:0: lCI
'"
:0:
:0:
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JHN 101
S~I 313
SMI 409
S~I 405
SMI 313
SMI 409
SMI 402
SMI 409
SMI 405
THO 101
BLM 306
BLM 211
8LM 205
8lM 205
BlM 306
DEN 211
DEN 209
BLM 402
THO 125
74
LINGUISTICS - CONTINUED
404 A
451J A
461J A
499 A
501 IN
514 A
A
A
*599 A
600 A
700 A
MATHEMATICS
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
104
104
104
104
104
104
105
AA
AB
AC
AD
AE
AF
hG
AH
AI
AJ
AK
AL
AM
BA
BS
BC
BO
BE
BF
8G
BH
81
UA
AA
A8
Ae
AD
AE
UA
A
AA oz
AB OZ
3
3
3
1-5
3
2
3
2-4
1-5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
5
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T
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230 SZEMERENYI
130
1130 CONTRERAS
'" 130-330
TStTSOPOUlOS
330-530 SZEMERENYI
1030-1230 1130
330-500 DALE
DEN 306
DEN 2LL
8LM 416
* C~U 243
OEN 312
POL A216
POL A216
330-500, ALT WKS THO SAPI)RTA
234
* *
730
730
730
730
730
730
730
730
1230
1230
1230
1230
1230
1230
1230
330
330
330
330
330
330
330
700-830 PM
830
930
930
1130
1130
630-755 PM
830
730
730
'"
PHY
PHY
PHY
PHY
PHY
PHY
11<
*
260
154
150
152
250
252
PHY 258
PHY 254
PHV 246
PHV 252
PHY 260
PHY 254
PHY 154
PHY
PHY 152
PHY 152
PHY 150
PHY 246
PHY 250
PHY 252
PHV 258
PHY 256
PHY 250
ROB 316
ROB 203A
ECB 101
GEe 422
ANO 215
PHY 256
GUG 224
PHY 258
PHY 256
MATHEMATICS - CONTINUEL
105
105
105
105
AC OZ
AD OZ
AE OZ
Af OZ
AG OZ
AH OZ
AI OZ
AJ OZ
AK OZ
AL OZ
B
BA OZ
B8 OZ
BC OZ
BD OZ
BE OZ
BF OZ
BG OZ
BH QZ
Bl OZ
BJ OZ
BK OZ
BL OZ
BM OZ
C
CA OZ
CB OZ
CC OZ
CD OZ
CE OZ
Cf OZ
CG OZ
CH OZ
Cl QZ
CJ OZ
o
DA OZ
DB QZ
DC eJZ
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DE QZ
OF QZ
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E
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5
5
5
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pol PI F
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M \oj F
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730
830
830
930 930
930 930
1030
1030
1130
1130
1230
930
730
730
730
730
830
830
930 930
1030
1030
1130
330
330
330
1030
930
930
1030
1030
1030
1130
1130
1230
1230
130 130
1130
130
730
730
130
730
830
830
230
230
230
230
PHY 154
PHY 154
PHY 260
EGA 152 GEe 225
5AV SMI
135 409
MEB 246
MOR 219
MEB 242
GUG 411
PHY 256
HUB 184
PHY 246
PHY 152
GUG 306
GUG 408
GUG 408
GUG 409
MEB SMI
242 405
ROB 203A
GUG 409
GUG 409
PHY 256
PHY 150
PHY 252
ARC ~07
Roe 316
PHY 258
GUG 405
Des 103
EGA 153
OBS 103
GUG 306
MEB G9
MEB 231
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JHN
aBS
MEB
EGA
EGA
PHY
MOR
OBS
SMI
MEB
MEB
151 153
101
103
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152
153
150
212
103
120
231
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MEB 232 75
AUTUMN
MATHEMATICS - CONTINUED
105
105
114
114
114
114
124
124
124
124
124
124
124
124
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EE OZ
EF OZ
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FB OZ
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124
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230
230
230 230
700-830 PM
700-830 PM
1230
1230
1230
700-850 PM
830
830
830
830
830
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930
930
930
930
930
930
930
930
930
1030
1030
1030
1030
1030
1030
1030
1030
1030
1130
1130
1130
1230
1230
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130
130
130
130
130
130
230
230
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150
152 153
152
235
205
ECB 205
ECB 202
ROB 318
GEB 422
GEB 422
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PHY 152
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GEB 424
PHY 252
GEB 422
GEB 422
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GE8 423
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GEB 424
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GUG 404
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t Permission sigoatu1'C required. Sec PlIgcs 3743 (or any general permission requirements (or the departmmts, schools, or colleges in whose courses you wish to register.
MATHEMATICS - CONTINUED
125
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130
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830
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1230
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130
130
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316
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427
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111
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MUSIC
*230
*230
*230
*230
*244
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
*250
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CONTINUED
LB
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RA
SA
S6
SC
A
A
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AA
AB
AC
AD
AE
AF
BA
B8
BC
CA
CB
CC
co
CE
DA
08
EA
FA
GA
GB
HA
HB
2-3
2-3
2-3
2-3
2-3
2-3
2-3
2-3
2-3
2-3
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
3-4
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830 CUNHA
230 WELKE
830 WELKE
00: PIANO SIKI
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'" PIANO MOORE
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00: VOICE
00: VOICE
'" VIOLONCELLO HE INI rz
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• New course or course number. Sec course changes pages 7·35.
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MUS 214
MUS 35
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80
MUSIC - CONTINUEO
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JA 3-4
*250 KA 3-4 '" *250 KB 3-4 '" *250 KC 3-4
*250 lA 3-4 '" lB 3-4 '"
*250 MA 3-4
*250 NA 3-4 '" *250 OA 3-4 '" *250 PA 3-4 '" *L50 QA 3-4 '" *250 RA 3-4
*264 A
*291 A 2 '" AN LB TH
300 A T TH
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H07 B 2
314 A 5 • Tft F
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AP LB TH
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*330 AA 2-3 '" *330 AB 2-3 '" *330 AC 2-3 '" *330 AD 2-3
*330 AE 2-3 *
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MUSIC - CONTINUED
*330
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*330
*330
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*330
*330
*330
*330
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*330
*330
*330
*334
BB
BC
CA
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CC
CD
CE
CF
DA
DB
EA
FA
GA
GB
HA
H8
IA
IB
JA
KA
KB
KC
LA
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MUSIC CONTINUED
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349 A 3
*350 AA 3-4
AB 3-4
*350 AC 3-4
*350 AD 3-4
*350 AE 3-4
*350 AF 3-4
BA 3-4
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*350 BC 3-4
*350 CA 3-4
*350 CB 3-4
*350 CC 3-4
CD 3-4
*350 CE 3-4
*350 OA 3-4
*350 DB 3-4
*350 EA 3-4
*350 FA 3-4
GA 3-4
*350 GB 3-4
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general permission requirements for the departments, schools, or colleges in whose courses you wish to register.
MUSIC
+350
*350
*350
*350
*350
*350
+350
*351
*360
*310
*311
*312
*315
*384A
*3848
+390
*391
*400
*408
*409
*430
*430
*430
*430
*430
*430
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CONTINUED
LA
LB
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AA
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KB 2-3 • *430 KC 2-3
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434 A 2 T TH
434 B 2 TH
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82
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230 HE INI TZ
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MUSIC - CONTINUED
*550
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1230 SANDS
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730-1030
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GUG 224
DeB 203
DC8 203
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203
203
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GUG 224
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203
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101
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101
101
101
101
101
201
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203
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DCE 216
aCE 216
OCEA~OGRAPHY - CONTINUED
450
454
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A
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*488 H A
*489 H A
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511 A
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PHILOSOPHY
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100
100
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BC OZ
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BF OZ
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120
120
120
120
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1130 CHAMBLESS
1130
1130
1130
1230
1230
1230
130 M~ SHAUNI
1230
1230
1230
130
130
130
230 f~ARKS
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1230
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230
230
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230
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1030
1030
1130
1130
1230
1230
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1230
1230
230
230
700-920 PM
AUTUMN
SAV 233
PAR 309
PAR 401
SAV 135
RAt 218
ARC 101
PAR 224
PAR
PAR
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307
106
110
2238
PAR 309
PAR 303
PAR 401
SAV 233
PAR 222
PAR 221
PAR 212
PAR 30b
PAR 401
PAR 310
PAR 224
SfoII 107
SfoII 409
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SAV 135
8LM 212
StH 303
PAR 303
PAR 309
PAR 303
PAR 309
PAR 307
PAR 401
PAR 309
PAR 303
PAR 30b
PAR 310
PAR 401
PAR 307
PAR 306
PAR .309
PAR .309
PAR 303
PAR 310
~ Permission signature required. See pages 37-1'3 (or any general permission requiremcnls (or che dep:utments, schools, or colleges in whO$C courses you wish co regisrer.
PHILOSOPHY - CONTINUED
200 U 5
215 A 5
AA OZ
* H AS QZ
AC QZ
231 A 2
267 A 5
320 A 5
321 A 5
370 A 5
410 A 5
415J A 5
• 422 A 3
424 A 3
446 A 5
453 A 5
472 A 3
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545 A 3
550 A 3
567 A 3
*584 A 1-4
587 A 3
*600 A 1-6
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T TH
700-920 PM MISHALANI
1030 MISHALANI
1030
1030 MISHALANI
1230
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o 130 OIETRICHSON
o 930 CLATTER BAUGH
o 1130 BOLER
o 130 CHATEAUBRIANO
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o 1030 SHIH
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330-530 SMULLYAN
330-530 olETRICHSON
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101 A * 106 A 730
106 B T TH 730
106 C 830
106 o T TH 830
106 E 930
106 M W 930
106 G T TH 930
106 H T TH 930
106 1030
106 J /01, W 1030
106 K T TH 1030
• New course or course number. See course chlUlgCS Jr.'8cs 7·35.
PAR 310
SMl 107
PAR 306
PAR 303
PAR 303
PAR 307
PAR 310
GTH 210
PAR 310
PAR 306
PAR 110
THO 325
PAR 306
PAR 306
PAR 310
PAR 310
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PAR 223B
PAR 2238
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PHYSICAL EOUCATION-ME~ - CONTINUED
106
106
106
107
107
107
107
107
107
107
107
110
110
110
110
110
110
112
112
114
114
115
115
115
117
117
117
117
118
118
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118
118
118
120
121
121
121
121
121
122
122
122
122
122
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PHYSICAL EDUCATION-MEN ~ CONTINUED
122
124
124
124
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127
127
127
127
128
128
128
128
128
128
128
129
131
132
132
138
138
136
139
141
142
143
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151
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158
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PHYSICAL EDUCATION-MEN - CONTINUED
158
158
158
160
161
161
162
164
190
227
241
242
243
244
245
*247
*249
252
255
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DANCE - Men - See also DANCE located between COMPARATIVE LITERATURE AND DR
t Permission signarure required. See pages 3743 for =y general permission requirements for the departments, schoob, or colleges in whose courses you wish to regiSter.
HEALTH EDUCATIO~-MeN
250 A 2 T TH
250 B 2 T TH
292 A 3 " W F
429 A 3 I'TWT
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RECREATION EOUCATID~-MEN
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PHYSICAL EDUCATION-WOMEN
105
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114
114
115
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• ~: f.3r.se or course number. Sec course changes 88
PHYSICAL EDUCATION-WOMEN -. CO~TINUED
124
124
126
126
126
126
128
128
131
131
133
133
135
135
135
135
135
135
140
145
148
149
149
151
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151
152
153
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154
156
156
156
160
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162
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PHYSICAL EDUCATION-WOHEN·- CO~TINUED
162
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228
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263
263
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266
267
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PHY 320
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• New course or course number. See cour~ changes pages 7·35.
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• New course or course number. See course changes pages 7·35.
94
F~ENtH - CONTINUED
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327
327
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390
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408
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554
558
564
575
*590
*600
*600
700
702
ITALIAN
101
101
101
101
101
A
A
B
C
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C
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3
3
2
2
2
2
2
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2-5
2-5
2-5
2-5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
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3
3
3
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5
5
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1130 ELLItICH
1130
230 J. LEINER
930
930
1130
1130
700 PM
930 Sr-.ITH
• ~ ~ F 1230
b. LEN~Kl
o 500
o 500
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~. \oj F 1230 OCONNELL
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tot. W F 330 DALE
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130-320 JONES
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430-630 LE INER
1130-130 DAVID
1130-130 STOKlE
130-330 KERN
• CREORE
• •
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PAR 108
POL A215
DEN 307
ECB 213
DEN 310
DEN 213
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• DEN 206
• • • •
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8LM 301
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POL A215
POL A215
POL A215
POL A215
BLM 308
• •
• • • • • >0<
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ECB
ARC
MEB
114
216
217
101
245 95
ITALIAN - CONTINUED
101 F
101 U
201 A
201 8
201 C
301 A
304 A
327 A
390 A
• 450 A
541 A
A
a
C
D
E
F
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700 A
702 A
PORTUGUESi:
101 A
201 A
301 A
390 A
SPANISH
101 AA
101 A8
101 UA
101 U6
102 A
102 B
102 C
10£ o
102 E
102 F
102 G
102 H
103 A
5
5
5
5
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3
3
2
2-5
3
3-9
3-9
3-9
3-9
3-9
3-9
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* 3
5
5
3
2-5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
AUTUMN
o 230 III
M WT 700-900 PM
D 1130
ECB
DEN 217
eCB 216
o 1130 ARC 101
D 330 EC8 111
.. W F 930 ME8 243
'" W F 1030 FRIEDRICH
MEa 243
T TH 1030 MEa 243
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D B30 EC8 217 JUNIORS t SENIORS
o 930 Eca 217 JUNIORS t SENIORS
,. W F 700-900 PM DEN 305
M \oj F 700-900 PM DEN 306
o 830 EC8 222
D 830 DEN 206
D 930
D 930
D 1030
o 1130
D 1130
o 1130
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Eee
ARC
113
101
Ece 118
MEB 234
MEB G6
JHN 9
Eca 220
:t Permission signature requirc:d. See pages 3743 for my general permission requirements for the dcpnrtmmu, schoob, or mllegcs io wbme mW$C:S you wish co register.
SPANISH - CONTINUED
103 B
*103 H C
103 o
t03
103 F
103 G
103 H
103
103
201 AA
201 AB
201 Ae
*201 H AD
201
201
201
201
202
202
202
AE
AF
AG
UA
A
B
e
*202 H 0
202
202 F
202 G
202 H
202
202 J
203 A
203 B
203 e
*203 H 0
203 E
203 F
203 G
203 H
203
203 J
301 A
BOI H B
301 e
301 o
301 E
302 A
303 A
304 A
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5·
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
3
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~; TWT
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o 930
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o 330
o 330
o 1\30
o 830
o 930
o 930
o 1230
o 1230
o
o
IJ
o
o
330
700-900 PM
830
830
930
930
o 1030
o 1030
o 1230
o 1230
o 130
o 130
o 630
o 830
o 930
o 930
o 1130
o 1130
o 1230
o 1230
o
o
330
330
930 SHIPLEY
1030 BODDEN
1030 ANDERSON
1130
1130 ANDERSON
830 W. WILSON
1130 BODDEN
630
• New course or course number. See course chnngcs pages 7·35.
ARe
EeB
MEB
EeB
MEB
101
222
G5
222
252
/'IEB 249
... EB 248
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MEB
MEB
MEB
MEB
EeB
MEB
220
235
249
247
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219
237
MEB 235
EeB 213
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MEB 245
DEN 209
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EeB 116
OBS 103
fo!EB 240
MEB 237
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DEN 212
MUS
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GEB
GEB
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EeB
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19
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118
222
222
218
219
218
106
ECB 218
MEB 240
MUS 19
DEN 211
MEB 240
DEN 212
BLM 314
96
SPANISH - CONTINUED
304 B
304 e
*304 H 0
321 A
327 B
327 e
327 o
327 E
327 F
327 U
• 350 A
351 A
*390 A
400 A
409 A
410 A
451 A
461 A
481
485 A
• 489 A
• 489 B
515 A
541 A
561 A
562 A
511 A
A
B
700 A
102 A
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
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3
3
3
3
3
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3
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3
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3
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T TH
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1030 DIAZ
1130 SAliNERO
1230 SHIPLEY
1030 P. SHIPLEY
1030 G. SHIPLEY
1030
1130 CON'IIOR.S
1130
1130
700 PM
230 ANDERSON
930 DIAl
1030 CONTRERAS
930
1230 DIAZ
1130 PENUELAS
130 W. WILSON
930 BODDEN
1030 VARGAS-BARON
1130 SHIPLEY
130 SOMMERS
230-430 GOETZINGER
230 SALINERO
130 130-330
SOMMERS
930 PENUElAS
130 VARGAS-BARON
*
* *
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MEB 231
BlM 401
MEB 237
MEB 235
DEN 213
BlM 308
BLM 409
SAV 333
BLM 211
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MUS 19
* * BlM 205
BlM 211
BLM 211
MEB 235
EeB 217
BLM 405
POL A215
EeB 113
Eea 216
ECB 217
EeB 213
POL A215
POL A215
POL A215
* *
* *
SCANDINAVIAN - CONTI~UED
100 A 2
100 B 2
309 A 2
480 A 2
500 A 3
508 A 3
519 A 3
*600 A :0;
A 00<
*702 A 3
DANISH
lOl A 5
220 A 3
223 A
A :0;
NORwEGIAN
101 A 5
101 B
101 C 5
103 A 5
220 A 3
222 A 3
223 A 2
223 B 2
225 A 2
300 A *
303 A 2
*490 A :0;
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101 A 5
101 B 5
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T TH
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1130 ARESTAD
130 SEHMSDORF
230 FREORIKSSON
130 ARESTAD
1230 FREDRIKSSON
330-530 ARESTAD
330-530 JOHIIISON
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ARESTAD/JOHNSON
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D 1030
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D 930 BUER
o 1130 LUNDBERG
D 130
D 1230 LUNDBERG
1030 SEHMSDORF-
130 SEHMSDORF
1030 HATIN
1030 LUNDBERG
130 HATIN
1230 SEHM3DORF
1230 FLATIN
:0;
ARESTAD
D 930
D 1030 HALL
DEN 301l
DEN 308
CMU 332
THO 119
CMU 332
POL C8D
POL C8D
• :0;
• :0;
• •
DE"I 312
DEN .HO
DEN 310
•
DElli 306
CEN 306
DEN 306
DEN 311
DEN 306
CEN 310
DEN 310
DEN 311
DEN 310
DEn 312
DEN 312
:0;
DEN 305
DEN 305
97
SWEDISH - CONTINUED
101
101
101
103
103
220
220
220
222
223
223
223
225
300
303
306
*490
c
o
E
A
B
A
B
C
A
A
B
c
A
A
A
A
A
5
5
5
5
3
3
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
•
o 1130 MOLANDER
o 1230 SODERBERG
D 130
~ W F
M '" F
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T TH
T TH
T TH
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14 III
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1030
1230
130 JARVI
1130 IARVI
1030 TORSTENSSON
1230 HALL
130 TORSTENSSON
1130 TORSTENSSON
&30 JOHNSON
830 FREDRIKSSON
830 FREDRIKSSON
:0;
JOHNSON
AUTUMN
DEN 305
DEN 305
DEN 3CJ5;
DEN 217
DEN 217
DEN 311
DEN 313
DEN 313
DEN 313
DEN 306
DEN 313
DEN 313
DEN 313
DEN 310
DEN 310
DEN 310
:0;
SOCIAL SCIENCE - SEE GENERAL EDUCATION
SOCIOLOGY
110 AA
110 AB
110 AC
110 AD
110 AE
110 AF
*llO 11 AG
110 AH
110
110
110
110
llO
110
llO
110
110
110
110
110
AI
AJ
AK
AL
AM
BA
BB
BC
BO
BE
BF
UA
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
C
D
o
o
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830
B30
830
830
930
o 930
o 930 CATTON
o 1030
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D 1130
o 1130
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o 1230
D
o o
o
D
130
130
130
230
230
700-920 PM
PAR 402
SAy 329
GTH 210
SAY 331
PAR 402
GUG 409
SAY 333
PAR 402
IoiFS 201
AND 211
PAR 402
SAY
PAR
RAI
329
402
212
PAR 402
GTH 210
SAY 331
PAR 402
SAY 331
SAY 329
:: Permission signature required. See pages 31-43 for any general permission requirements for the depanmeots, schools, or coUega in whose courses you wish to register.
SOCIOLOGY CONTINUED
223
223
240
270
• HO
331
352
352
362
371
*389
411
414
420
423
443
445
447
450
453
460
463
.. 65
A
8
BN LB
BO L8
BP LB
8Q LB
BR L8
8S L8
A
A
AA QZ
AS QZ
AC QZ
AD QZ
AE QZ
AF QZ
A
A
A
U
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
2-5
3
5
5
5
5
3
5
5
3
5
3
3
o 830 FARIS
/0\ W 930
T
TH
T
TH
T
TH
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930-1130
930-1130
1130-130
1130-130
130-330
130-330
D 930 EMERSON
,., W F 830
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
TH
T TH
SCHMI TT
830
830
830
230
230
230
D 1030 CAMPBELL
D 1230 HAGGERTY
D 930 COHEN
700-920 PM COHEN
D 1030 NGUeo
D 1130 AKERS
* * T 330-530
DODO
o 130 SCHF:flG
o 930 FARIS
o 1030 COSTNER
D 1130 LARSEN
,. W F 930 MIYAMOTO
D 1030 BURGESS
D 630 WAGER
,. W F 1130
T TH
I' W F
MAJORS ONLY SCOTT
D 930 THIELBAR
1130-100 BARTH
1030 GROSS
• New course or course number. See course changes pages 7·35.
GTH 211
JHN 101
GTH 211
GTH 211
GTH 211
GTH 211
GTH 211
GTH 211
JHN
PAR
Eta
ECB
ECB
GTH
SAY
SAY
PAR
PAR
CMU
SAY
GEB
6
108
112
205
206
309
131
132
307
108
120
331
134
SAY 331
* * GHi 135
GTH 209
GTH 209
GTH 313
Rill 310
SAY 329
GTH 210
GTH 209
GTH 210
GTH 313
GTH 210
GTH 309
98
SOCIOLOGY - CONTINUED
467 A
472 A
481 A
*496 H A
*501 A
530
540
544
562
574
*591
*600
*t-oo
*700
SPEECH
079N
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
lOO
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
101
10 1
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
S
A
A
A
S
C
D
E
F
G
H
J
K
L
U
AA
AS
AC
AD
AE
AF
AG
AH
AI
AJ
AK
3
5
3
3
2-5
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
1-6
2-5
2-5
*
o
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
TH 100-230
,.. W F
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TH
TH
TH
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,., W F
,.. W F
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,., \oj F
,. \oj F
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o 230 HIRSCHI
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130 SCOTT
330-530 CATTON
* 330-530
LARSEN
330-530 SCHMID
330-530 BURGESS
330-530 EMERSON
330-530 LlEBERSON
330-530 SCHRAG
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STEINBURN
*
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D 830
D 930
D 1030
D 1030
o 1130
o 1130
o 1230
o 1230
D 130
o 130
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700-920 PM
730
730
830
830
930
930
1030
1030
1130
ll30
1230
GTH 313
GTH Z10
GTH 308
GTH 209
'" . GTH 209
GTH 209
SAY 333
SAY 322
GTH 135
GTH 135
'" * '" •
GTH 135
• *
• '" PAR 208
PAR 210
PAR 210
PAR 208
PAR 210
PAR 208
PAR 210
PAR 208
PAR 210
PAR 208
PAR 210
PAR 208
PAR 210
PAR 221
PAR 222
PAR 221
PRB 2
PAR 221
PRB 2
PAR 221
PRB 2
PAR 221
PAR 222
PAR 221
SPEECH - CO~TI~UED
101
101
101
101
101
101
110
110
110
119
110
110
110
110
111
III
140
140
140
140
140
140
140
140
140
170
220
AL
B8
BC
UA
A
B
C
D
G
U
A
B
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
U
A
A
*220 H B
220 C
220 D
220
220 F
220 u
230 A
230 B
235 A
260 A
AN LB
310 A
310 B
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
3
5
5
'" W F 1230
130
,. W F 130
M W F 230
,"" W F 230
700-825 PM
730
T HI 830
T TH
T TH
T
T TH
T TH
o
D
o
1030
1230
130
230
330
700-850 PM HAGAN
830
1130
730
830
930
o 1030
D 1130
o 1230
o 130
o
o
230
700-920 PM ~EVBRIGHT
230 2 HRS A hEEK *
830
o 930 BOSMAJIA~
D 1030
o 1130
o 130
o 230
T TH 700-920 PM MORTENSEN
D 830 PENCE
o 1030 MORTENSEN
M W F 1130 BOSMAJIAN
k W F
T TH
930 BIRO
930 BIRD
o 930 BENNETT
o 1130 TI FFANY
PAR 222
PAR 221
PAR 222
PA~ 221
PAR 222
PAR 208
PAR 210
PAR
PAR
PRB
221
221
PAR 221
PAR 206
PAR 212
PAR 210
PRB 2
PAR 221
PRS
PRS
PRB
PRB
P~B
PRS
PRB
PRB
PRB
SPC 115
PAR 212
PAR 212
PAR 212
PAR 212
PAR 212
PAR 212
PAR 212
PAR 222
PAR 222
PAR 206
PAR 208
PAR 208
SAV 331
SMI 107
99
SPEECH - CO~TI~UED
311 A
320 A
332 A
332 B
332 U
*339 A
H49 A
359 A
370 A
A
379 A
380 A
*384 A
400 A
409FJ FA
414
418
421
442
477
478
479J
488
t499
*499
500N
501
510
525
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
A
A
A
A
5
5
5
5
5
1-3
2
3
1-5
3
5
1-5
3
6
3
3
3
3
2
3
3
3
1-5
1-5
1-5
1-5
1-5
1-5
1-5
1-5
o
3
3
3/5
AUTUMN
o 830 PALMER
o 930 BURKS
o 830 SERENO
o 1030 CROkELL
T TH 700-920 PM
,..
T
T
104 W F
,.. W
.. W F
H W
~ W F
Ie W F
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M W F
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'" W F
* '"
* '" '" •
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H W F
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SERENO
D 230 DOUGLAS
D 330 POST
o
400-655 NYQUIST
930
1230 MINER
430-630 MINER
o 1130
1230 MINER
830 NILSEN
430
1230 BENNETT
430 S~APLEY
1030 PENCE
1130 WEVSRIGHT
1030
1030
230 •
TOMLINSON
1030 WILSON
*VOICE & PHONET
*PUB ADDRESS
*ARGUMNT & DISC
*ORAL INTERP
.TCH SPEECH
"'RADIO-TV SPCH
.SPEECH CORRCTN
.HEARING
1230 CROWELL
130 TlFFANV
130-330 BASKERVILLE
SMI 107
PAR 206
PAR 206
PAR 206
PAR 206
PRB 2
PRS
PAR 210
SPC 115
SPC 115
PAR 210
SPC
SPC
PAR
115
15
303
PAR 221
PAR 212
SPC 115
PAR 217
PRB 2
SPC 15
SPC 115
UWH CC610 UWH NN203
SPC 15
*
* • * '" '" '" * • * • * *
PAR 206
PAR 206
PAR 217
:t Permission signature required. See pages 3743 for any general permission requirements for the dcpanmcnu, schools, or coll.cges io wbose courses you wish ro register.
SPEECH - CONTINUED
543 A
*574 A
576 A
580 A
*584
587 A
*590 A
600 A
700 A
102 A
ZOOLOGY
o 111
*
118
118L
118L
118L
400
400L
400L
400L
A
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
AQ LB
AR LB
AS LB
AT LB
AU LB
AV LB
AW LB
AX La
AY LB
AZ LB
H BN LB
BO LB
H BP LB
BO LB
BR LB
A
ZN
ZO
ZP
A
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ZO
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3
1-5
3
5
1-5
3
2
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5
5
3
3
3
3
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* * *
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T TH
M W
T TH
TH
M W
T TH
T TH
~i W
M W
T TH
TH
130 KLYN
* MINER
830 KUNZE
o 930 YANTI S
* MINER
1130
930 NELSON
*
*
lL30 GRIFFITHS, BALL
830-1030
830-1030
830-1030
930-1130
930-1130
1030-1230
1030-1230
1030-1230
1230-230
1230-130
1230-230
1230-230
230-430
230-430
230-430
230-430
730-930 PM
M W 730-930 PM
T
T
T
T
o 830 MARTIN
1230-230 MARTIN
1230-230 MARTIN
230-430 MARTIN
1030 FLOREY
830-1230 FLO~EY
130-530 FLOREY
130-530 FLOREY
· ;!~: ~3s~ or course number. Sec course changes
PRB 2
SPC 15
SPC 115
SPC 15
SPC 15
SPC 15
PAR 221
'" * '" *
GUG
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JI-IN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
'" *
224
147
119
121
119
121
141
119
12l
119
121
119
121
121
119
121
119
119
121
101
249
249
JHN 249
JHN 6
JHN 252
JHN 252
JHN 252
100
ZOOLOGY - CONTINUED
400L
402
403
435
453
456
ZQ
A
A
AN La
AD LB
A
AA QZ
AN LB
AD LB
A
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
AQ LB
AR LB
A
AN LB
AO La
AP LB
AQ LB
AR LB
AS LB
AT LB
AU LB
A
*'t90 H a
*491 A
*491 H B
A
*506 A
520 A
*568 A
*518 A
AN LB
600 A
700 A
3
3
5
5
5
5
2
2
1-5
2
2
5
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w
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M W F
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'" W F
F
M W
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~ W F
M W
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T TH
M W
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M W
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T TH
M W
T TH
T TH
'"
*
F
F
* *
F
T TH
T TH
o
130-530 FLOREY
830 HATCH
1230 (LONEY
830-1130
130-430
930 OSTERUD
230
130-430
230-530
1130 SNYDER
830-1130
830-1130
1130-230
130-430
230-530
1130 FERNALD
830-1130
830-1130
930-1230
930-1230
130-430
130-430
130-430
130-430
'" CAHt.I
* CAHN
1230 CAHN
1230 CAHN
o WHITELEY
400-530 FARNER
400 GORBMAN
130 ORIANS
230-530
* '*
COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AOMINISTR~TION
ACCOUNTING
210 A M W 830
AN LB T TH 830
JHN 252
WSM 206
JHN 56
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JHN
JI-IN
JHN
JHN
152
152
56
214
224
224
6
154
154
154
154
154
101
JHN 216
JHN 218
JHN 216
JHN 218
JHN 216
JHN 218
JHN 216
JHN 218
* '"
* '*
o '"
• • JHN 56
JHN 240
GEB 224
GEB 224
* *
MLR 102
8LM 205
ACCOUNTING - CONTI~UED
210
210
210
AO L8
AP L8
8
8N LB
80 L8
8P L8
C
CN LB
CO Le
CP L8
o
ON L8
DO L8
DP LB
3
3
3
210 3
EN LB
EO LB
EP L8
210 3
210
210
210
210
220
220
220
230
230
230
230
230
230
230
230
301
301
301
FN LB
FO LB
FP L8
G
GN LB
GO L8
GP LB
u
v
w
A
AN LB
AO L8
AP LB
B
8N LB
BO LB
BP LB
U
A
B
C
o
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F
G
U
A
B
C
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
\oj F
W F
W F
T TH
W F
W F
W F
T TH
W F
W F
w F
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
M W
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
W F
W F
W F
T TH
If. W F
'" W F
M. W F
" W ~ W F
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"- \oj F
t-1 W F
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830
930
830
930
1030
1130
930
930
1030
1130
1130
1130
1230
130
1230
1230
1230
130
130
130
130
230
230
230
230
330
700-825 PM
700-825 PM
700-825 PM
930
930
930
1030
130
130
130
230
700-825 PM
830
630
930
1030
1230
130
230
100-825 PM
830
1030
1130
BLH 206
BlM 306
JHN 6
BLM 202
8LM 202
8LH 202
MLR 112
BLM 206
BlM 206
BLM 206
102
BLH 205
BLM 305
BLH 313
MLR 112
8LM 206
8lM 205
8LM 3LL
MLR 102
BU\ 205
BLM 206
BUI 202
SMI 318
BU~ 206
BlH 205
BLM 206
Blf04 202
alM 202
BLM 205
MLR 112
8LM 206
8LH 205
BlH 206
MLR
8U04
112
205
8LH 206
8LM 206
BLH 20b
8lH 202
8LM 306
BLH 202
BLH 202
BLM 209
BLM 209
BLH 202
8LH 209
BLH 214
BLH 209
8LM 209 101
ACCOUNTING - CONTINUED
301
301
302
302
30J
311
311
311
371
315
411
411
421
421
430
440
450
460
480
485
*520
571
572
*592
*604
700
702
D
u
A
B
A
A
B
U
A
A
A
B
A
B
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
A
A
A
A
A
B
C
A
A
A
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
4
3
3
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
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" W F
,., W F
If W F
M W
" W F
T TH
* ~TW
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130
700-825 PM
930
130
830
1030
1130
700-825 PH
* 130
830
M. W F 1030
o 930
T TH 130-330
11. W F 1030
~ W 1030-1200
M W F
", W F
M W F
r;. W F
r-: W F
101 W
w
*
TH
F
II.
'" * '"
1130
930
130
930
'" 800-930
330-500
130-300
330-530
* *
930-1130
930-1130
130-330
*
*
AUTUMN
BLH 214
8LM 209
BL'" 305
8LH 305
8LH 209
8LM 214
BLM 214
6LH 305
II< '"
BLH 402
8LM 305
BLH 305
8lH 209
BLH 305
BlM 306
BLH 203
8LM 305
BL'" 311
BU' 306
8LH 30b
* * 8LM 311
8LH 311
BLH 211
BLH 308
8LM 406
8lH 406
8LM 308
* * * * *
ADMIN THEORY & ORGANIlATNl BE;AVIOR
365
365
365
365
440
440
440
440
440
440
440
440
460
460
A
8
c
o
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
A
6
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
'" W F
Yo W F
'" W F
'" W F
!I; W F
~I W F
k W F
T TH
800-930
930-1100
1100-1230
130-300
130
730
830
930
l030
130
230
330
730-930
8LM 405
BlM 405
8LM 405
BlM 405
BLM 203
BLH 213
BlM 213
BLH 203
BLM 213
BlM 213
6LH 213
BLH 213
BLM 307
T TH 930-1l30 8LH 301 t Permission sigmnure required. See pages 37-43 ror lIny
general permission requirements for the deparlmtms, schools, or colleges in whose cour5CS. you wuh to register.
ADMIN THEORY & ORGANIlATNL BE~AVIOR - CONTINUED
460
460
460
460
*499
*550
*550
*550
*550
571
572
*575
*576
700
702
C
D
U
A
A
B
A
B
C
D
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
4
4
4
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
TH
T TH
T TH
" W
* T TH
W F
T
F
•
F
F
* *
930-1130
1130-130
130-330
700-900 PM
* 930-1100
130-300
930-1130
130-330
330-530
330-530
*
930-1130
130-330
330-530
'"
BL~ 213
BlM 301
BL~ 213
BLM 213
.. . BL... 401
BlM 401
BlM 30B
BlM 308
BLM 308
BlM 308
* :00
.. .. 8lM 308
6LM 308
BlM 308
.. :0<
* :00
BUSINESS AND ITS ENVIRONMENT - SEE BUSINESS. GOVERNMENT. AND SOCIETY
BUSINESS COMMUNICATIONS
301
301
301
410
A
B
C
A
4
4
4
5
BUSINESS ECONOMICS
300
300
300
300
300
300
300
301
301
301
301
439
A
B
C
D
E
G
A
8
C
o
A
A
A
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
3
4
lI.TW F
KTW F
~TW F
D
M W F
'I W F
M W F
'" W F
101 W F
M W F
" W F
"'T TF
,..T TF
li.T TF
"-T TF
I-.T TF
M ~ F
1030
1230
130
930
730 HESS
830 SCHAll
930 AL8ERTS
1130
1230
130
130
1030 CHAMBERS
1030 PIGOTT
1130 JOHNSON
130
830 BOUROuE
:00
930-1100 SCOTT
• New course or course number. See course changes pages 7-35.
BlM 416
BlM 416
Bl~ 416
BLM 416
BlI" 207
BlM 207
BlM 309
BlM 202
8LM 201
BLM 404
BlM 202
BLM 304
au" 309
BLM 304
8LM 304
BLM 303
* BlM 301
102
BUSINESS ECONO~ICS - C~NTINUE)
B 4
A 3
A 3
" W F
T TH
F
130-300 HESS
800-930 CHAMBERS
130-330 JOHNSON
BUSINESS. GOVERNME~T & SOCIETY
• 101
• 101
• 200
• 200
• 200
• lOO
• 200
• 200
• 200
• 200
• 307
• 403
• 403
• 444
A
AA Ql
AB Ql
AC QZ
AD QZ
u
A
B
C
o
E
F
G
U
A
A
8
A
AA QZ
A8 QZ
At QZ
AD QZ
AI: QZ
AF QZ
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
5
5
4
'" W F
TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
930 Me KEAN. WHEELER
830 EASTMAN
930 EASTMAN
930
1130
~ W 700-920 PM
M W F
" W F
'" W F
BOORD
D 730 GARVEY
830-1000 GRAHA'"
1000-1130 :;OLDBERG
1030-1200 JAMIESON
1130-100 HERMANN
~ W 100-230 GRAHAM
'". W 230-400 HERMANN
"- W F 530-700 HERMANN
'" W F 830
T TH
T TH
T TH
M W
T TH
T TH
SEC~EST
o 730 HAY
D 830 CARR
e30 STRONG. IiART LANr;NESS
1030 STRO~G
1130 LANGNESS
1230 HART
130
130 STRO~G
230 HART
BLM 405
BlM 401
BLM 211
SAV 233
BL~ 312
BlM 312
8U" 212
BlM 312
BU4 304
8LM 204
BLH 204
BLM 204
BLH 402
BLM 204
BLM 204
BL~ 204
BLH 204
BLM 404
BLM 309
BLM 309
ARC 201
8L'" 212
BLM 212
8LM 212
BLM 212
8UI 214
8L'" 214
BUSINESS, GOVERNMENT & SOCIETY - CONTINUED
• 444
"499
• 598
.. 100
.n02
u
A
A
B
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
'" '" 3
T TH 700-855 PM STRONG
* '" T TH 130-300
JAMIESON
M W 330-500
101
* TH
T
* *
'"
MARCUS
130-330 MARCUS
130-330 GOLDBERG
'" *
130-330 ROBINSON
130-330 JACQIJEMIN
'" '" '"
BUSINESS LAW _ SEE BUSINESS,GOVERNMEHT ,AND SOCIETY
BUSINESS POLICY
410
470
410
470
470
470
470
480
FINANCE
350
350
350
350
420
420
423
450
453
460
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
A
A
B
A
8
C
D
A
B
A
A
A
A
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
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T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
M w F
101
F
lloT TF
MT TF
MT TF
MT TF
T TH
", \oj
'" \oj
'" \oj
T TH
730-930
730-930
930-1130
1130-130
1130-130
130-330
130-330
130-330
930-1130
130-330
930 HALEY
1130
130
230
1230-200 PIGOTT
230-400 C. HENNING
230-430 HALEY
830-1030 HIGGINS
1030-1230 HIGGINS
930-1130 DAMBROSIO
BlM 402
'" * BlM 401
BlM 307
6lM 308
BlM 406
'" '"
BlH 211
BLM 406
* *
'" '" *
8LM 203
BLH 213
8LH 203
8LM 203
BLM 401
6LH 307
BLH 203
BLf04 307
BLM 308
BlH 406
BlH 303
BLH 303
6lH 303
BlH 303
BlH 212
BlM 212
BLH 312
Bl"'- 405
BLM 405
BLf04 404
103
FINANCE - CONTINUED
461 A 4 T TH
A 3
A 3
A 3 T
A 3 W F
A 3 T
571 A 3 '" 572 A 3
A '" * 700 A '"
230-400 DAMBROSIO
'" 330-500
HIGGINS
130-330 ARCHER
130-300 ALBERTS
330-530 DAMBROSIO
'" '" '"
AUTUMN
BlH 312
'" '" BlH 401
BLH 211
BLM 314
8lH 406
'" '" '" '" '" '" '" '"
702 A 3 * '" '" '" GENERAl BUSINESS - SEE BUSINESS, GOVERNMENT. AND SOCIETY
INTERNATIONAL BUSI~ESS
310 A
310 B
370 A
470 A
A
A
*521 A
A
A
A
700 A
702 A
HARKET ING
301
301
301
301
301
301
301
301
301
350
• 361
381
401
401
.411
.411
415
421
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
U
A
A
A
A
B
A
B
A
A
5
5
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
'" '" 3
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
" W F
T TH
'" /I. 101
F
* *
'" * *
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T TH
,..TWT
H W
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T TH
T TH
T Ttl
"'.T TF
MT TF
,. T TF
kT TF
~TW F
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930-110Q
130-300
1100-1230
930-1130
'" 330-500
130-330
'" *
'" * *
730-930
730-930
930-1130
930-1130
1130
1230-230
1230-230
230-430
700-855 PM ETCHESON
1230-230
1130
1030
830
1230
930
230
230-430
830-1030
6LM 207
BU" 207
BLH 207
BLM 207
'" '" BlM 203
BlM 409
'" '" '" '" '" '" '" '" '" '"
BlH 302
6LH 302
BlM 302
6LH 302
8LH 302
BlH 302
BLM 302
BlM 302
BU" 302
BLH 312
BLM 313
8LH 313
BlM 313
6lM 313
8LM 313
BLH 404
BLH 302
BLH 414 t Permission signalure required. See pages 37-43 for any
general permission requiremenlS for Ihe depanmcou, schools. or colleges in whcne courses you wish 10
register.
MARKETING - CONTINUED
421
491
491
*499
*510
*520
*571
*604
700
702
8 4
A 4
B 4
A 3
A 3
A 3
A 3
A 3
A '" A '" A 3
OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
301
301
301
301
301
301
442
*499
*520
571
572
*604
100
702
A 3
B 3
C 3
o 3
3
U 3
A 3
A 3
A 3
A 3
A 3
A
A * A 3
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T TH
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to'. Ii F
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PERSONNEl&INDUSTRIAl REL
301
301
301
301
301
301
310
345
450
*499
*520
571
572
*604
700
702
A
B
C
o
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A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
3 M Ii F
3 M W F
3 /A Ii F
3 10'. Ii F
3 /.A Ii F
3
5
3 T TH
5 M Ii f
3
3
3 * 3 * :0< *
3
D
1230-230
1030-1230
230-430
130-300
330-530
'" * * '"
830
1030
1130
130
230
100-825 PM
1030
'" 330-530
* '"
*
730
830
930
1130
130
700-825 PH
930
1130-130
130-330 130
130-330
'" '" '" '"
• New course or course number. See course: changes pages 7·35.
8LM 414
BLM 209
8LM 204
'" * 6LM 311
8LH 409
'" '"
'"
BlM 304
6lM 404
BLH 309
BLH 309
8LM 309
8LH 303
8lH 411
* 8LH 406
* '" * '" '"
8lH 4U
8lM 411
BLI'! 404
BLH 411
8lH 411
8LM 405
8lM 4U
8114 213
8lH 203
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'" '" '"
'" '" :0< '"
104
QUANTITATIVE METHODS
200
zoo
200
200
200
200
200
201
350
450
460
410
*510
*544
*550
*511
*604
H02
A
B
C
o
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F
U
A
AA QZ
A8 QZ
AC QZ
AD QZ
AE QZ
AF QZ
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
4
4
4
4
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
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T TH
T TH
T HI
T TH
T TH
!-(T TF
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"·T TF
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w
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REAL ESTATE - SEE URBAN DEVELOPMENT
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
<t 301 A 4 !oIT TF
G 395 A 4 "'TWT
Q*496 A 3 F
0*520 A 3 T
A 3
0*572 A 3 '* 0*604 A
0*100 A * '" OH02 A 3
730 DIEH~
830
930 SHARPE
1230
330
430
530
1230 DAELlENBACH
830-1030
930-1130
l130-130
1230-230
130-330
130-330
1130-100 PAGE
230 DAElLENBACH
1030 TAMURA
930
1230 TAMURA
930-1100 BELL
130-330
330-600 MEIER
'"
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930 lESSINGER
1130 WHEELER
230 lESSINGER SEYFRIED
330-530 SEYFRIED
'" * '*
BlM 303
8LM 303
BlM 303
BLM ;'03
BlM 303
BlM 303
8lM 303
SAV 233
8lM 204
BLI-' 305
BLI4 207
BlM 204
BlM 207
BLM 309
8lM 213
Bl'" 304
eLM 303
BLM 304
'* BLM 404
BlM 401
BLM 40b
BlM 211
'" '* '"
'" '"
* '"
eLM 402
BLl-1 404
BlH 203
8LM 203
'" * oj!
II< '" '*
RISK AND INSURANCE
310
*499
*571
*512
A
A
A
A
A
TRANSPORTATION
310
310
372
471
*499
*520
*571
*572
*604
700
702
A
U
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
5
3
3
3
'"
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
'"
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COLLEGE OF EDUCATION
EDUCATION
180
182
280
288
*288
288
*289
*289
304
A
A
A
A
8
C
A
8
A
AA QZ
AB QZ
AC QZ
AO QZ
AE OZ'
3
5
3
1
3
3
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M W F
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'"
o 1030 w. Ll TTLE
700-920 PM W. Ll TTLE
830
1130
130-330 w. Ll TTLE
'"
'" *
830-li30 830-1130
8AILY
830-1130 FOR 0 T ONLY
BAILY
130-430 BAILY
130 830-1130 OR 930-1230
BOROUGHS, FOSTER HOLBEIN
o 800-1200 T TH 200-400
SEPT 3-18 BOROUGHS, HOLBEIN
o 800-1200 T TH 200-400
SEPT 3-1B BOROUGHS, HOLBEIN
SMI 304
'* .:.
8LM 301
8LH 301
8LH 301
BLM 301
8LH 409
* * * '* .:.
MEB GEB
ME8
EGA
HUB >I<
*
* *
104 229
105
110
184
*
>I<
>I<
'" '* '" .:. BOROUGHS, FOSTER
o 800-400 * '* SEPT 3-25
PoT T 830 HLR 301 HAUCK
W F 830 HLR 104
W F 830 MLR l06
W F 830 MLR 302A
W F 830 HLR 3028
W F 830 HLR 310
105
EDUCATION - CONTINUED
304
304
308
308
308
308
318
320
322
324
325
326
326
329E
3295
329X
330
331
332
336
339
342
3431:
3435
343X
8
8A QZ
8S QZ
8C QZ
80 QZ
BE QZ
C
CA QZ
C8 QZ
CC QZ
CO QZ
CE QZ
A
B
C
U
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
EA
SA
XA
A
A
A
AA QZ
A
A
A
EA
SA
XA
5
5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
5
2
2
3
3
3
3
~ w F
T lH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
~T T
w F
W F
W F
W F
" F
10\ W F
T TH
T TH
lilt
T TH
II. W
)I W F
!'. W F
,., W F
M W F
'" W F
)I, W F
T
M W F
T TH
.... W F
M W
I'. W F
930 EVANS
930
930
930
930
930
230
230
230
230
230
230
730
930-1100 CLARK
430-600
700-900 PM
130 MAC DONALD
130-330 RAVEN. STOOPS
'" RITTER
230 BRIGGS
230 BRIGGS
130 SEIDMAN
230 E. SMITH
330 NOSTRAND
330 NOSTRAND
330 NOSTRAND
1030 RABURA
330-530
930 HC ADAMS
1030 Me ADAMS
1130 GAI~ES
930 PEEK
930 NELSON
b30 FRIEORICH
830 FRIEDRICH
630 FRIEDRICH
AUTUMN
HLR 301
SAV 131
SAV 241
SAV 329
SAV 335
SAV 341
MLR 301
MLIt 106
MLR 302A
HLR 3018
HLR 310
~AV L51
MLR 301
HLR 301
MLR 301
MLR 301
MLR lOb
ART '"
*
8LH 413
BLH 413
HLR 202
MLR 112
DEN 209
DEN 209
DEN 209
SAV 333
SMI 304
RAI 310
RAt 310
HUT 116
EOP 302
PAR 222
8LM 203
8lH 203
6lH 203
:: Permission signature required. Sec pages 37-43 for any general permission requiremenu for the departments, schools, or colleges in whose courses )'ou wish to register.
EDUCATION - CONTINUED
*346J A
366 A
370S SA
370S SB
370S SC
*371E EA
KA
*371S SA
XA
374E EA
374E EB
374E EC
37~'~ HA
375H' HB
375H' HC
375M MA
375M MB
375M MC
375S SA
375S SB
375S SC
376 A
376 B
376 C
377 A
377 B
378 A
379 A
379 B
• 382 A
3 ~ W F
3 T TH
2 TH
2 TH
2 T
5-15 ,..,
5-15 ~
5-15 '"
5-15 "
3 ". W F
3 TH
3 T TH
3 T TH
3 T TH
3 '" W F
3 fo.\ W F
3 ,., W F
3 M W
3 M \oj F
3 " W F
3 M W F
3
3 " W F
3
3
3
330-530 NORMANN
130-300 HAC DONALD
830 OLSTAD
830-1030 BAUDIN
230-430 OLSTAD
MUS 330
MLR 106
MlR 202
MlR 106
SMI 109
430 SMI 120 • D 800-400 ~
BOROUGHS, FOSTER
430 SMI 120 ~ o 800-400 ~
BOROUGHS, FOSTER
430 SMI 120 D 800-400 ~
BOROUGHS, FOSTER
430 SMI 120
* D 800-400 ~
BOROUGHS, FOSTER
830 ,",ONSON
230-345 SEBESTA
230-345 MONSON
830-945 Kl TTElL
830-945 MAC DONALD
230 KJ TTELl
930 KALTSOUNIS
230 HUNKINS
230-345 HAMil
830 BEISENHERZ
1030 BUCHANAN
230 TUCKER
930-1130 KOENIG, STOOPS
1130-130 KOENIG, STOOPS
330-530 KOENIG, STOOPS
D 930 SWANSON
D 1030 CUNHA
MLR 316
MLR 202
MLR 407
ME8 231
SMI 303
MLR 102
MLR 202
RAI 212
MlR 316
MlR 202
MLR 202
MlR 202
ART
ART • ART
MUS 313
MUS 313
3 T TH 130-330 HUT
3
3
5
HORNE
~ W F 1030 VOPNI
" W F
'" W F
230 LEPSE
130-430 BAILY
MLR 102
MLR 407
MEB 250
• New course or course number. See course changes paga 7·35.
EDUCATION - CONTINUED
387 A 1-5
38& A 3 PI, W F
• 401 A 3 " W F
• 401 B 3
403 A 3 TH
404 A 3 T TH
404 B 3 T
405 A 3 ,. W
408 U 3
A 3 T TH
409FJ fA 6 " W
410 A 3
410 B 3
411 A 3
420 A 3 TH
421 A 3
*422 A 3-5 ~
BA 3 TH
430 A 3 M
445 U 3 T
447 A 3 T
450 A T
455 A 3 M W
455 B 3 TH
458A AU
465 A 3
467 A 3
471E EA 4-16 '"
471S SA 4-16 ,..,
471X XA 4-16 ,.,
4758 BA 3 T
475fJ FA 3
106
• BAILY
1130 BAllY
130 FEA
430-630 MEACHAM
430-630 FARGO
830-1000 FARGO
430-630 HAYDEN
1030-1200 AfflECK
700-945 PM POWERS
1030-1200 AFflECK
430
130-300 GROSS
430-630 GROSS
1030-1200 LOVI TT
430-630 MAC DONALD
430-630, *
430-630, ~
430-630
700-900 PM BAllY
430-630
430-630 THE(lPHILUS
930-1100 DRISCOLL
430-700 BLACKWELL
700-1000 PM, * DRISCOll
430-630 ANDERSON
430-630 HIJNK I NS
430 D 800-400
BOROUGHS, FOSTER
430 o 800-400
BOROUGHS, FOSTER
430 D 800-400
BOROUGHS, FOSTER
430-630 VOPNI
230-430 GRANBERG
MEB 243
MLR 112
GTH 210
fo.ILR 102
MlR 407
SMI 107
MLR 106
ML~ 202
HLR 106
PAR 221
MlR 104
MLR 102
fo'LR 302A
MLR 202
I'LR 106
* MLR 106
MlR 112
ME8 252
MLR 112
MlR 102
MlR 407
MLR 407
MlR 407
MlR
MLR
SMI
*
SMI ~
SMI ~
MLR
RAI
407
202
120
* 120
*
120
*
202
218
:DUCATION - CONTI~UED
*475104
477
479
480
488
488
*490
490
490
492
*499
*500
*501A
MA
U
A
A
A
B
A
B
C
A
A
A
AA
504A AA
*505 A
*50b A
*507 A
*509 A
511 A
515J A
515J B
*519 A
*520 A
527 A
530 A
533 A
534 A
*53b A
*540 A
A
542 A
544 A
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2-5
3/6
3
3
5
2-10
3
3
3
1-2
1-2
3
3
3
3
3
3
1-6
5
5
3
5
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
T TH
130-300 TRI U STUDENTS KALTSOUNIS, JAROLIHEJI.
700-1000 PM SEBESTA
130-300, II<
1030-1200 BlJRGESS
1030-1200 TOSTBERG
130-300
po! W F 1030 TRI U STUDE~TS SAX
'" W F 1130 KLOCKARS
M W 430-600 KLOCKARS
M
T TH 130-300 BURGESS
T TH 1030 TRI U STUDENTS MC CARIN
T TH 130-300 FEA
D 130 THALBERG
* • HUNT
II< II<
W 430-630 HUNT
T 430-630
TH
T
\oj
LOVITT
1230-230 ISLAND
230-430 FORSTER
400-630 TORKELSON
400-630 TORKELSON
"30-630 ANDERSON
II, W 430-600 BOLTON
T TH
• ",TWT
T TH
W
.430-630 SCH~EIDER
430-600 STRAYER
• ANDERSON, STRAYEP
1030-1230 MEACHAM
430-630
430-630 SALYER
D 930 ISLAND
MLR 404C
MLR 407
MLR 104
MLR 202
MLR 302B
foILR 3028
MLR 404C
MLR 202
S~I 102
HLR 302A
'" II<
• • MLR 404C
MLR Hb
MLP 307
• • II<
MLR 106
MLR 310
MLP 310
HL~ 310
HLR 420
foILR 420
foILR
MLR
ARC
foILR
•
MLR
foILR
MLR
MLR
104
307
101
307
• 31b
302B
302B
316
107
AUTUMN
EDUCATION - CONTINUED
544 8
A
A
548 A
550 A
552 U
553 A
555 A
A
557 U
558 A
*562 A
A
578E EA
587 A
591 A
591 8
591 C
*599 A
*bOO A
*100 A
*102 A
5 ". W
3-6 T TH
2-12
430-630 8RAMMER
330-530 8ROWN
* BROWN, FORSTER FREEHILL
5 ... W 430-630 FREEHILL
3 M 430-630 MADSEN
3 M 730-930 PM REITAN
3 TH 430-630
3 W 430-630 SCHILL
3-10. II< REITAN
3 TH 730-930 PM SCHILL
3 T 230-430 MADSEN
3-9 • •
TH
3 TH
3 T
3 T TH
3
3 M W
II<
• II< • 3
HUNKINS
230-430 BROWN
430-630 KALTSOUNIS
430, II<
100-230 CLARK
330-530 SAX
430-600 CLARK
II<
II<
'"
HLR 316
MLR 316
II< II<
HLR 407
MLR 302B
MLR 310
MLR 310
MLR 302A
II< II<
MLR 310
MLR 310
• • MLR 318
II,LR 302A
foILR 302A
ML~ 310
MLR 302A
MLR 310
'" '" '"
'" • BUSINESS EDUCATION - SEE SECRETARIAL STUDIES, PAGE 130
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING
AERONAUTICS & ASTRONAUTICS
200 A 2
300 A 3
300 B 3
320~ A o
AN LB
AO LB
AP L8
T TH
M W F T
!oI W F T
T
W
TH
1130
830 830-1030
DECHER
830 830-1030
RAE
130 OATES
230-530 OATES
230-530 PARI'ERTER
230-530 DECHER
GUG 317
GUG 306
GUG 405
GUG 317
GUG 106
GUG 106
GUG 106
: Permission signature required. See pages 37-43 for any general permission requirements for the departments, schools. or ooUeges in whose courses you wish to register.
AERONAUTICS & ASTRONAUTICS - :ONTINUED
330 A
330 8
390N A
391N A
392
400
410
420
430
440
460
480
503
504
507
519
520N
523
532
542
550
555
557
565
567
567
576
580
600
700
702
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
A
A
A
A
A
A
3
3
o
o
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2-5
3
3
3
3
o
1-3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2-5
'" * 3
~ W F TH
1'1 W F TH
TH
TH
TH
M W F
M W F TH
T TH
,., W F
M W F
/I W F
'" W F
'" M W F
~ W F
M W F
TH
* ,., W F
II, W F
M W F
M W F
'" W F
M W F
W F
M W F
* * '" '"
930 830-1030
OILL
930 830-1030
HOLSAPPLE
1230 EASTMAN
1230 EASTMAN
1230 EASTMAN
1030 HERTZBERG
1230 130-330
JOPPA
1230 BOLLARO
230 MARTIN
930 JOPPA
330 EASTMAN
830 FYFE
* 130
STREET
930 AHLSTROM
930 STREET
800-930
330-500
* 130
1130 MARTIN
1130 FYFE
* BOLLARD
* 830
PEARSON
830 HOLSAPPLE
1230 PEARSON
230-400 KEVORKIAN
1030 DILL
*
* *
• New course or course number. See course changes pages 7·35.
GUG 306
GUG 405
GUG 317
GUG 317
GUG 317
GUG 317
GUG 306
* *
GUG 306
GUG 317
GUG 306
GUG 411
'" * GUG 411
GUG 411
GUG 404
GUG 409
GUG 317
* * GUG 306
GUG 405
GUG 404
* '" * •
GUG 404
GUG 317
GUG 317
GUG 404
GUG 306
* '" * * '" '" • •
108
CHEMICAL ENGINEERI~G
210 A ,., F W
325 A 3 /I. W F
435 A 3 '" W F
436 A T
AN LB T
AD LS
AP LB TH
440 A 3 /I W F
465 A 3 /II W F
470 A 3 II> W F
499 ZN 1-6 TH
499 ZO 1-6
499 H ZP 1-6
520..., A o
523 A 0-3
525 A 3 ~: W F
530 A 3 ,., W F
570 A 3 /I W F
*599 A 1-3
*599 8 1-3 *
*600 A * 700 A * *
CIVIL ENGINEERING
201 A 2 T TH
AA QZ M
AB QZ T
AC QZ W
AD QZ TH
AE QZ F
291 A 3 T
AA QZ T
AS QZ M
H AC QZ T
AD QZ T
291 B 3 T F
1130 1130-130 DAVID
1030 FINLAYSON
930 HEIDEGER
1230 SLEICHER
130-530
130-530
130-530
1030 SLEICHER
1130 JOHANSON
830 SAR!<ANEN
830-1230
130-530
• 330-530
330-530
930 BERG
1030 SATHER
1130 ALLAN
'" BERG
* BERG
*
1030 HORWOOD
230 HORWOOD
230 HORWOOD
230 HORWClOD
230 HOR\ojOOD
230 HORWOOD
1030
930-1130
230-430
330-530
630-820
1130
8NS
8NS
BNS
BNS
BNS
BNS
eNS
BNS
BNS
BNS
6NS
BNS
'" B...,S
BNS
BNS
BNS
B...,S
•
•
MOR
MOR
115
117
117
117
835
B35
835
203
203
203
125
125
'" 117
117
203
llS
117
•
* •
214
228
MOR 226
MOA 228
~OR 228
MOR 228
ECS
MOA MOR
MOR MOR
MOR MOR
MOR MOR
ECB
101
221 223
221 223
221 223
221 223
101
CIVIL ENGINEERING - CONTINUED
291
291
292
292
292
293
293
293
293
316
316
316
320
BA QZ
BS QZ
H BC QZ
BD QZ
C
CA QZ
C8 QZ
H CC QZ
CD QZ
U
A
AA QZ
AB QZ
H AC QZ
AD QZ
B
BA QZ
aa QZ
ac QZ
H BD QZ
C
CA QZ
CB QZ
H CC QZ
CD QZ
A
B
C
o
A
a
C
A
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
TH 830-1030
TH 1230-230
T 330-530
W 330-530
,.. T 1230
1130-130
T 230-430
T 330-530
M 630-820
T TH 630-755
T F 1030
TH 930-1130
w 230-430
TH 330-530
TH 630-820
M T 1130
T 830-1030
1230-230
330-530
TH 330-530
F 1230
TH 1130-l30
TH 230-430
TH 330-530
w 630-820
10\ WTF 830
". WTF· 1030
M WTF
MTW F
M W F TH
~ W F T
lot W F TH
M W F T
1230
130
830 730-1130
COLCORD
930 130-530
COLCORD
130 130-530
VERESS
930 930-1230
SAWHI LL
MOR 221 HOR 223
MOR 221 MOR 223
14011 221 MOR 223
MOR HOR
ECB
221 223
101
MOR 221 MOR 223
HOR 221 MOR 223
MOR MOR
MOR HOR
221 223
221 223
HOR 228
ECB 101
MOR 221 MOR 223
MOR 221 MOR 223
MOR MOR
MOR MOR
ECB
MOR MOR
MOR MOR
221 223
221 223
101
221 223
221 223
MOR 221 MOR 223
MOR 221 MOR 223
ECB
'"'OR MOR
MOR MOR
MOR foIOR
101
221 223
221 223
221 223
MOR 221 MOR 223
MOR
'"'OR
MOR
MOR
MOR
MOR
MOR
HOR
228
228
228
228
108
108
108
228
109
AUTUMN
CIVIL ENGINEERING - CONTINUED
320 U 4
342 A 4
342 B 4
342 C 4
342 D 4
342 E 4
342 F 4
345 A 3
345 B 3
350 A 3
363 A 3
363 B 3
364 A 3
366 3
380 A 2
380 a 2
381 3
382 A 3
405 A 3
405 u 3
41u A 2
415 A 3
445 A 3
446 A 3
44b a 3
451 A 5
451 a 5
455 A 3
456 A 4
T TH
M W F T
... W F TH
'" W F T
~. W F T
~ W F TH
M W T
'" F TH
~ F TH
10'. W F
p.o, W F
~ W F
T TH
'" W F
T TH
T TH
" W F
TH
T
TH
'" W F
T TH
'" F T
M F TH
~ W F TH
,.. W F TH
M F TH
,. WT T
700-1000 PM SAkt-lILL
930 830-103C,
930 830-1030
1030 130-330
1130 830-1030
1130 230-430
1230 1030-1230
&30 830-1030
Ct-lENOhETH
830 1030-12.30 STRAUSSER
930 930-1130
CARLSON
130-330 MI LLER
330-530 141 LLER
130-430 TERREL
330-530 MEESE
830-1030 WESSMAN
130-330 NICHOLLS
130-330 NICt-lOLLS
130-330 HI TTET
330-500 S TANFIELc;,
700-920 Pfol. * CLARK
830-1030 SAWHILL
330-500 VERESS
130-330
630 830-1030
RICHEY
930 830-1030
CAMPBELL
930 830-1030
60GAN
1130 1030-1230 BOGAN
130 1230-230 OGLESBY
830 830-1130
CHRISTMAN
MaR 219
HYD 316
HYD 320
HYD 316
HYD 320
HYD 316
HYO 320
HYO 316
HYO 320
MOR 214 MOR 314
MOR 214
MOR 214
MOR 219
MOR 219
MOR 215
MOR 224
MOR 323B
MOR 215
MOR 215
MOR 215
MOR 219
MOR 108
HYD 312
H'tD 312
HYO 312
MaR 224
MOR 219
MOR MOR
f40R MOR
315 314
315 314
t Permission signnrute required. See pages 37-43 for noy general permission reqWretm!DCS for the depnrunenu, schools. or colleges in whO$C courses you wish to register.
CIVIL ENGINEERING - CONTINUED
458 A
461 A
461 A
483 A
483 B
485 A
*498 A
*499 A
505 A
510 A
F
H
M
*520 T
*520 w
522 A
527J A
527J B
530 A
531 A
542 A
559 A
560 A
566 A
570 A
573 A
576 A
580 A
581 A
588 A
592 A
*599 A
3
3
3
3
3
3
1-5
2-5
2
2
3
3
3
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2-5
/I; F \oj
TW F
T TH
... W F
~ W F
M W F
., T TH
T
., *
T
~ W F
T TH
foI W F T
~ W F
M W F
T TH
/I. W F
,... W F
'" W F
", W F
T TH
T TH
'" W F
,... W F
.,
1230 1230-230 CHARLSON
1030 ROSSANO
1030-1230 ff,EESE
130-330 CLANTON
130-330 RHODES
330-530 CLAt<fTO~
.,
., 130
HENNES
830-1030 SAWHI LL
., 130-330
HARTZ
230 EkSE
1230 CHRISTMAN
930 EkSE
830 STAt<fFIELD
330-500 CLA~K
1230 1130-130 VERESS
1030 COLCORD
e30 NECE
1030, * MAR
230-430 ROSSANO
130 SHERIF
930 SERGEV
830 HARTZ
1130 EVANS
730-930 VASARHELYI
930-1130 VASARHELYI
1030 MATTOCK
930 EVANS
.,
· ;!: ~3~ or course number. See course changes
MOR 315
"'OR 315
MOR H6
MOR 224
MOR 219
MOR 224
., ,.
., ,. MOR 212
HGR 108
,. ,. ,.
"OR 216
MOR 113
MOR 214
MOR 216
MOR 224
MOR 224
108
MOR 108
MOR 219
MOR 212
MOR 315
MOR 212
MOR 215
MOR 215
MOR 224
/oleR 212
MOR 212
MOR 224
MOR 212
* *
110
CIVIL ENGINEERING - CONTINUED
*599 T 2-5
W 2-5
A
HOO A * H02 A 3
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
231 A 5
AA OZ
A8 OZ
231 H B 5
H BA OZ
231 C 5
CA OZ
231
233
~34
234
303
303
304
304
305
315
315
C8 OZ
u
UA OZ
US OZ
A
AA OZ
AB OZ
ZN
ZO
A
AA OZ
AB OZ
AN LB
AD LB
AP LB
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ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING - CONTINUED
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362
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:t Permission signature tuIuired. See pages 3743 for my general permission tuIuiremenu for the depanmenu. schools. or colleges in whose courses you wish to register.
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING - CONTINUED
572
575
586
589
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GENERAL ENGINEERING
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• New toune or cowse number. See course changes pages 7·35.
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GENERAL ENGINEERING - CONTINU:D
111
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HUMANISTIC-SOCIAL STUDIES
265
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HUMANISTIC-SOCIAL STUDIES - C~NTI~UEO
331
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MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
201
202
203
204
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215
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261
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AUTUMN
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING - CONTINUED
308
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t Permission signature required. See pages 37043 for any general permission requirements for the departments. schools, or colleges in whose courses you wish to register.
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING - CONTINUED
364
36 ..
403
410
loll
415
417
430
430
432
434
436
443
468
468
469
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490
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• New course or course number. See course chllOgt!S pages 7·35.
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104
103
103
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251
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234
234
246
•
•
114
CERAMIC ENGINEERING
201 A
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351 A 4 ~ W F
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112
112
316
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318
316
318
134
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318
316
112
322
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134
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561
571
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RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING PROJRAM
AEROSPACE STUDIES
101 A
101 B
101 C
101 D
211 A
211 B
211 C
321 A 3
321 B 3
321 C 3
431 A 3
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5
MILITARY SCIENCE - ALL M S STUDENTS MUST RESERVE ONE OF THE FOLLOWING TIMES FOR DRILL: F 730. 830. 930. 1030 AMY
DRILL TEAM M W 330-530 AMY SUNDAY * AMY
t Permission signature required. Sec puges 37··H for any general permission requirements for the departments, schools, or colleges in whose courses you wish to regiSter.
MILITARY SCIE~CE - CONTINUED
101
101
101
101
101
IG2
103
201
201
202
203
301
301
301
301
302
303
401
401
402
403
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B
C
D
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A
A
AA QZ
AB QZ
B
BA QZ
BS QZ
Be QZ
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A
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D
A
A
A
B
A
A
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111 A
111 B
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2
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3
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3
3
2
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• New course or course: number. See course ch:mge$ pages 7-35.
116
NAVAL SCIENCE - CONTtN~ED
211 A 3
211 B 3
311 A 3
311 B 3
311 c 3
411 A 3
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421 A 3
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COLLEGE OF fISHERIES
fISHERIES
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311 A
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604
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482
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604
700
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204
306
310
374
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A
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AP LB
A
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A
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117
AUTUMN
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415 A 4
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! PcrrniS$ion signarure rcquin:d. Sec pages 37-H (or'lny general permission requirementS (or the dcpanmenlS, ~~~:;. or colleges in whose courses you wisb to
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A 1-5 '" A 1-5 '"
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330-530 BOFFMAN
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330-530 MANSFIELD
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