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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
08F, 09F: 2A Laboratory-Field To Be Announced Forests undergo great changes, both locally and globally. They are home to plants and animals in relation to both climatic and cultural/economic constraints. We examine such global issues by focusing on local forest ecology, native and imported plants and animals, agroforestry, and other topics of mutual concern. At least half of class meetings will be outside following study plots, mapping plant and soil patterns, "reading" forest histories, and observing animal signs and behaviors . Dist: SLA . Conkey.
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3.00 Credits
08F, 10S: 12 Laboratory: Monday 3-5 This class is concerned with surficial landforms on the earth's surface, the processes responsible for their formation, and their spatial and temporal distribution. The course is designed to present a wide overview of geomorphic principles and processes. Dist: SLA. Magilligan.
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3.00 Credits
09S: 10 Laboratory: Monday 3-5 Role of surface water and fluvial processes on landscape formation; magnitude and frequency relationships of flood flows; soil erosion, sediment transport, and fluvial landforms. This course examines the links between watershed scale processes such as weathering, denudation, and mass wasting on the supply of water and sediment to stream channels on both contemporary and geologic timescales and further evaluates the role of climate change on the magnitude and direction of shifts in watershed and fluvial processes. Dist: SLA. Magilligan.
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3.00 Credits
08F, 09F: 12 An introduction to Greek and Roman influences on Western Literature. Readings may include: Homer's Iliad, Euripides Bacchae , Plato ? Phaedru s, Shakespeare 's Troilus and Cressi da, Pop e's Rape of the L ock, Goet he's Wer ther, M ann's Death in V enice, and Wolf's Cas sandra. The course alternates between lectures and discussion sections, with emphasis on students' class participation and essay wEnrollment restricted to 60 first-year students. Dist: LIT; WCult: W. Brown, Rainer, Shookman.
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3.00 Credits
09W, 10W: 12 A continuation of the introduction to Greek and Roman influences on Western Literature begun in Humanities 1. Readings may include: Virgil's Aeneid, Seneca' s Phaedra , Dante ? Infern o, Racine 's Phaed ra, Balza c's Girl With the Golden E yes, Sh aw's Arms and the Man, Nabo kov's Pale Fire, Bo rges's The Book of Sand and Shakespeare's Memory, and Sijie's Balzac and the Little Chinese Se amstress. The course alternates between lectures and discussion sections, with emphasis on students' class participation and essay
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3.00 Credits
Harpsichord and organ also taught by petition.
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3.00 Credits
Woodwind Individual Instruction:Flute,Oboe,Clarinet,Bassoon,Saxophone
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3.00 Credits
Brass Individual Instruction:Trumpet,French Horn,Trombone,Tuba
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3.00 Credits
String Individual Instruction:Violin,Viola,'Cello,Bass Viol,Electric Bass,Classical and Electric Guitar
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3.00 Credits
Voice Individual Instruction
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