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SCHOOL OF GERMANIC LANGUAGES.
  
  
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SCHOOL OF GERMANIC LANGUAGES.

Associate Professor Faulkner.

Required for Admission to the Work of the School: in German;
the General Entrance Examination; in English Language, the General
Entrance Examination and, in addition, English Literature 1A,
or its equivalent.

The following courses are offered for the session of 1910-1911:

For Undergraduates.

German 1A: Beginners may take this course. Elementary
grammar and prose-composition; special training in pronunciation and


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simple conversational German; reading of about 600 pages of German
prose, with conversational exercises and composition work in
free reproduction, based on texts read. Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday,
1-2. Cabell Hall.

Students entering in January, with one to two years of preliminary
training in German, may profitably register for German 1A,
and will be given credit for the work of the first term, on the successful
completion of the remaining two terms.

German 2B: Course 1A (or its equivalent) prerequisite.—Review
of German grammar, with written exercises illustrating the chief
difficulties of the language, as a basis; Deutschland in Wort and
Bild (Schweitzer's Deutsches Lesebuch für Quarta und Tertia);
German Lyric and Ballad Poetry since 1730; the Roman and the
Novelle (Storm, Keller, Sudermann); the German drama (Schiller,
Hebbel, Hauptmann); conversational exercises and composition work
in free reproduction, based on texts read, throughout the session.
Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 10-11. Cabell Hall.

Students entering in January, with three years or more of preliminary
training in German, may profitably register for German 2B,
and will receive full credit for the course by successfully completing
the work of the second and third terms of the current session, and that
of the first term in the session next ensuing.

English Language 1B: English Literature 1A (or its equivalent)
prerequisite.—Old English: Smith's Old English Grammar and Reader.
Middle English: Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. Old and Middle Engish
Literature: Lectures on the history and development of English
Literature from its beginning to 1400, with collateral reading. History
of English: Emerson's History of the English Language; Greenough
and Kittredge's Words and their Ways in English Speech.
Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 9-10. Cabell Hall.

For Graduates and Undergratuates.

German 3C: Course 2B (or its equivalent) prerequisite.—In this
course all lectures and class-work are in German. Hence students
desiring to enter the course with advanced standing, will be required
to give satisfactory evidence of ability to understand spoken German.
The work of the course is arranged as follows:

First Term: Der deutsche Roman in seinen typischen Erscheinungen;
Second Term: Die Tragödie der Klassiker; Third Term:
Goethe's Faust, I. und II. Teil. Seminary-work: First Term: Wilhelm


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Meister's Lehrjahre; Second Term: Wallenstein; Third Term: Faust.
Lectures, Tuesday and Thursday, 10-11. Seminary, Saturday, 10-11.
Cabell Hall.

Students with adequate preparation, may register for any term
of this course.

Courses Primarily for Graduates.—Students desiring to elect German
as major or primary-minor subject for the Ph. D. degree, or to
elect English Language for the M. A. or the Ph. D. degree are requested
to confer with the professor, either personally or by letter,
before the beginning of the session in which they intend to enter
the graduate school.