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Course Criteria
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2.00 - 4.00 Credits
Coordinated lecture (137) and lab (144) to develop ideas, experience, methodology, and skills used in the application of scientific methodology. Framework is consideration of fundamental principles of atomic and molecular structure, chemical bonding, properties of solutions, and chemical reactions. Gain skills in developing hypotheses, observing chemical phenomena, collecting data, and evaluating results critically. Credit not given for both CHM 137 and 141. IVB, LAB. Note: CHM 137 is offered at the regional campuses only.
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3.00 Credits
Various aspects of a dozen or more sports are treated using the laws of physics. Provides the non-science student with insight into principles governing motion, dynamics, and other elements of physics in sports. IVB.
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2.00 - 3.00 Credits
Covers same content as CHM 137, but assumes some previous study of chemistry. (See CHM 137.) Credit not given for both CHM 137 and 141. Prerequisite: one year of high school chemistry or permission of instructor. IVB, LAB. * Note: These courses require concurrent registration and carry separate course numbers.
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to multiplicity of voices in American culture as expressed in literary texts written in and about America: (141) from colonial period through 1865; (MPT 142) 1865 - 1945 (MPT 143) 1945 to present. IIB, H. CAS-B-LIT.
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3.00 Credits
Covers the same content as CHM 137, but assumes previous study in Chemistry and interest in chemistry as a major (See CHM 137). Credit not given for both 141M and 141 or 137. Prerequisite: One year high school Chemistry or permission of instructor. IVB.
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4.00 Credits
Foundations and operations of the American political system, with emphasis on "the people" and how they belong to, challenge, and change the system. How the competing values of unity and diversity influence American politics. IIC, IIIA.
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to major mass communication theories as a context to examining some major issues surrounding mass media in American society. IIC. CAS-C.
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to American literature and culture through the study of a small group of important writers. Selected authors represent a range of traditions and may include writers as diverse as Bradstreet, Franklin, Dickinson, Douglass, Whitman, Melville, Wharton, Twain, Cather, Baldwin, Faulkner, and Morrison. IIB. CAS-B-LIT.
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3.00 Credits
Explores the role that America's largest ethnic group has played in the history and culture of the United States. Topics include German settlements in Colonial America, the Eighteen-Forty-Eighters, and German-Americans in Hollywood. CAS-B-Others. IIB, IIIA, H.
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4.00 Credits
Introduction to and application of the principles, methods, and major theoretical orientations of sociology in providing a basic understanding of the social aspects of human life. Special attention given to diversity in U.S. cultures. IIC, IIIA. Credit is NOT given for both SOC 151 and SOC 152.
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