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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Canada as a French colony, as a British colony, and as a nation evolving through dominion status as an independent entity (with ties to both Anglophone and Francophone nations) and seeking a viable existence with the United States despite the vast difference in population size. (Occasionally)
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3.00 Credits
P: course in physical or general geology. Gives the student an elementary understanding of various geologic controls and processes that have produced the topographic features. Regional concept stressed rather than individual landforms. The continent is divided into geomorphic regions based on similar geologic controls and geomorphic histories.(Occasionally)
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3.00 Credits
Studies foreign political systems of Western and non-Western countries. Includes comparative political analysis, organized by topics, emphasizing nongovernmental as well as governmental power. Discussion will include economics systems, social classes, national groupings, constitutions, bureaucracies, political parties, armies, elements of political culture, and types of political change. (Occasionally)
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3.00 Credits
P: MATH M007 or equivalent. Introduction to chemistry, includes chemical and gas laws, atomic and molecular structure, energy, equilibrium, kinetics, states of matter, and applications in chemical processes. Usually taken concurrently with CHEM C121. Lectures and discussion. The two sequences, CHEM C101-CHEM C121 and CHEM C102-CHEM C122, usually satisfy programs that require only two semesters of chemistry. Admission to advanced courses on basis of CHEM C101, CHEM C121, CHEM C102, CHEM C122 granted only in exceptional cases. May be taken without credit in preparation for CHEM C105. Credit given for only CHEM C101 or CHEM C105. (Fall, Spring, often in Summer I or Summer II)
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3.00 Credits
P: CHEM C101. Continuation of CHEM C101. Usually taken concurrently with CHEM C122. The chemistry of organic compounds and their reactions, followed by an extensive introduction to biochemistry. Lectures and discussion. (Spring, occasionally in Summer I or Summer II)
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3.00 Credits
P: two years of high school algebra or MATH M014, one year of high school chemistry; CHEM C125 recommended concurrently. Basic principles, including stoichiometry, atomic and molecular structure, bonding, gases, and solutions. Lectures and discussion. Credit given for only CHEM C101 or CHEM C105. (Fall, Spring)
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3.00 Credits
P: CHEM C105, CHEM C126 recommended concurrently. Chemical equilibria with emphasis on acids, bases, solubility, and electrochemistry; elementary thermodynamics; chemical kinetics; descriptive chemistry; and coordination compounds. Lectures and discussion. (Spring, Summer II)
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2.00 Credits
P or C: CHEM C 101. An introduction to the techniques and reasoning of experimental chemistry. (Fall, Spring, often in Summer I or Summer II)
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2.00 Credits
P: CHEM C101, CHEM C121; P or C: CHEM C102. Continuation of CHEM C121. Emphasis on organic and biochemical experimental techniques. (Spring)
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2.00 Credits
P or C: CHEM C105. An introduction to laboratory experimentation with emphasis on the collection and use of experimental data, some properties of solutions, stoichiometry, molecular geometry, and synthesis. (Fall, Spring)
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