1941-1942 Academic Catalog

DESCRIPTION OF COURSES 47 English Literature of the Restoration and 18th Century. (Exclusive of drama and fiction.) Queen Anne Prose: Swift and His Contemporaries. The Age of Johnson. (Exclusive of the novel.) FRENCH MISS NIESTRATH 1-2. BEGINNING FRENCH Colloquial practice, easy readings, grammar, composition, and dictation. Elective. Four hours a week throughout the year. 3-4. INTERMEDIATE FRENCH Composition, conversation, dictation, grammar. Study of texts from some of the best French novelists, short story writers and dramatists. Prerequisite, French 1-2 or two years of high school French. Elective. Four hours a week throughout the year. 6-6. ADVANCED FRENCH This course is intended to develop free oral and written ex– pression in French and to develop reading ability. Special emphasis upon French literature of the nineteenth century. Elective. Three pours a week throughout the year. 7-8. ADVANCED FRENCH This course is intended for advanced students who have taken course 5-6. Selected readings from French literature of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. 9-10. ADVANCE,D FRENCH A course for students who have had course 5-6. This course is arranged to meet the needs of students who wish a major in French. GEOLOGY PROFESSORS JURKAT AND HOSTETLER 1. PRINCIPLES OF GEOGRAPHY Consideration of the elements of natural environment, such as climate, soils, relief, natural resources, etc., and their relation to the economic life of man. Three hours, first semester. 2 ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY A study of man's activities in the production of economic commodities as related to his natural environment. Three hours, second semester. 3-4. GENERAL GEOLOGY Dynamic and historical geology. Field work required. Three hours a week. Two semesters.

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