1949-1950 Academic Catalog
301-302 Cicero's Orations Four hours credit. 311-312 Virgil Reading from the Aeneid. Four hours credit. 321 Cicero De Amicitia and De Senectute, with a review of inflected forms and syntax. Three hours credit. Not given every year. 322 Livy The transition from the Golden to the Silver Age is studied. Selections from £ook XXI are read. Three hours credit. Not given every year. 331 Horace Copious selections from the Odes, Satires, and Epiptles are made the basis for a study of Latin Poetry. Three hours credit. Not given every year. 332 Tacitus The life of Agricola and the history of Germany. Three hours credit. Not given every year. 341 Juvenal The origin, development, and purpose of the satire, and the morals and customs of the Romans under the Empire. Three hours credit. Not given every year. 342 Ovid’s Metamorphoses Three hours credit. Not given every year. 351 Cicero’s Letters Selections from the letters of Cicero. Three hours credit. Not given every year. 352 Private Live of the Romans A course dealing with dress, food, amusements, burial customs, etc., of the Romans. Not a translation. Three hours credit. Not given every year. 361 Virgil’ s Aeneid Books VII - XII. Three hours credit. Not given every year. •362 Pliny’ s Letters Selections from the letters of Pliny the Younger. Three hours credit. Not given every year. 371 Latin Prose Composition Opento those wishing a major or minor in Latin. Two to four hours credit. 372 Latin Literature A survey of Latin literature in translation. No knowledge of Latin r e quired. Two hours credit. 381 Mythology A comprehensive study in general mythology. Emphasis is placed upon Roman and Greek Mythology. Three hours credit. Not given every year. 39
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