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| UCART 4995 Special Topics in
Art: Iconology* |
J. Collins |
| 3 Credit Hours |
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Session 1 (Saturday, August 28, 2004 – Wednesday, October
20, 2004)
Day/Time: MW 8:25 pm – 10:40 pm
Room: R-117
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| Iconology is an interdisciplinary course which explores
the forms, symbols, images, and icons found in global
cultures, both past and present. This course analyzes both
sacred and secular icons through sacred
geometry, mythological systems, the languages of symbols,
and the archetypal patterns found in visual cultures.
Students will research nascent discoveries in neuro-science,
astronomy, evolution, physics, and art and architecture as
background for understanding why we create symbols, and
how these symbols shape our aesthetic understanding. Prerequisites:
UCCOM 1711 Composition I; UCCOM 1712 Composition II
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| UCBUS 4995 Special Topics in Business: Retailing* |
D. Tucker |
| 3 Credit Hours |
|
Session 1 (Saturday, August 28, 2004 – Wednesday, October
20, 2004)
Day/Time: TTH 6:00 pm – 8:15
pm
Room: L-203
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A course designed to acquaint the student with one aspect
of the marketing activity distribution known as
retailing. The course will involve looking at all the
activities necessary to sell goods and services to the
ultimate or final consumer. This will include an
examination of such retail activities as consumer markets
and behavior, retail site location, retail store
operations and management, pricing and communication
decisions, merchandising, decision analysis and
evaluation, and the regulatory, technological and ethical
environments in which retailing operates.
Prerequisites: UCCOM 1711 Composition I; UCCOM 1712 Composition II; UCBUS
3850 Introduction to Marketing
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| UCENG 4921 Special Topics in Drama: Modern American
Drama* |
B. Palmer |
| 3 Credit Hours |
|
Session 1 (Saturday, August 28, 2004 – Wednesday, October
20, 2004)
Day/Time: S 8:00 am -12:50
pm
Room: H-206
|
| This course focuses on the renaissance in the Broadway
theater that began in earnest during the immediate postwar
era, with the emergence to prominence of a talented
generation of playwrights, including Tennessee Williams,
Arthur Miller, William Inge, and Lillian Hellman. Readings
will include THE DEATH OF A SALESMAN, A STREETCAR NAMED
DESIRE, CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF, PICNIC, COME BACK, LITTLE
SHEBA, and THE LITTLE FOXES. Film versions will be viewed
and discussed when available. Prerequisites: UCCOM 1711
Composition I; UCCOM 1712 Composition II
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| UCENG 4922 Special Topics in Drama: Modern British
Drama* |
B. Palmer |
| 3 Credit Hours |
|
Session 2 (Saturday, October 23, 2004 – Thursday, December
16, 2004)
Day/Time: TTH 6:00 pm – 8:15
pm
Room: H-206
|
| Modern British Drama - An introduction to the study of
modern British theatrical writing and the production
institutions, particularly the West End and National
theatres, that support it. The course will begin with a
close look at early 20th century figures (particularly W.
Somerset Maugham and George Bernard Shaw), but we will
emphasize the figures of the 1950s theatrical renaissance,
including John Braine, Shelagh Delaney, and Harold Pinter,
and important contemporary playwrights, such as Wily Russell. Prerequisites: UCCOM 1711 Composition I; UCCOM
1712 Composition II
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| UCPSY 4995 Special Topics in Psychology: The
Understanding of
Schizophrenia* |
J. Carton |
| 3 Credit Hours |
|
Session 2 (Saturday, October 23, 2004 – Thursday, December
16, 2004)
Day/Time: TTH 8:25 pm – 10:40 pm
Room: H-202
|
| Schizophrenia is a relatively poorly understood disorder
that is one of the most perplexing and debilitating
psychological illnesses facing society. This is an
advanced seminar designed for students who are seriously
considering graduate training in clinical psychology.
Emphasis will be placed on current research findings and
detailed original accounts of the illness. Prerequisite: UCPSY 1701 Principles of Psychology
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