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Scientific German.
  
  
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Scientific German.

Students taking this course will study thoroughly Part I of Thomas's
Practical or Whitney's Compendious German Grammar and will read
Gore's, Hodges's, Dippold's or Brandt's Scientific German Reader (at
least two of these).

A student successfully passing his examination on these four scientific
books, together with exercises, Hosmer's Literature and the
Grammar, would be doing about the equivalent of the literary B. A.
German course and would be recommended for the B. A. diploma.

A lighter course (suggested above) would be valuable to Medical,
Biological, and general scientific students, but would lead to no degree.

Dictionary: Tolhausen's Technological (English, German and French definitions).


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Page 67

M. A. COURSE.

This course is a more specialized continuation of the B. A. course in
German on the same general lines, and is open to students who have
completed the B. A. or its equivalent. The historical study of German
is taken up; the masterpieces of German literature are systematically
studied in critical annotated texts; exercises oral and written continue
throughout the year; and the literature and life of Germany are
studied in some detail. Parallel reading is required. Three times a
week.

Text-Books.—Whitney's Compendious Grammar; Behaghel's Historical
Grammar; Stein's German Exercises; Goethe's Meisterwerke (Bernhardt);
Lessing, Schiller, Heine (annotated editions); Wenckebach's Meisterwerke
des Mittelalters; Francke's or Scherer's History of German Literature.

Dictionary: Whitney's, Heath's, Adler's or Flügel-Schmidt-Tanger.

Note: The work in the B. A. and the M. A. courses is so conveniently
divided and distributed by the three-term system that the student gets over
the ground without hardship or difficulty.

PH. D. COURSE.

A student of German, having completed the B. A. and M. A. courses
as above outlined, is now prepared to enter upon studies more advanced
still. German and English combine admirably for the doctorate as
"major" and "cognate minor" to each other, either from the German
or from the English point of view. Conference with the Professor is
requested for the purpose of arranging the student's studies. If German
is elected, Gothic, systematically studied through Wright's Primer,
Bernhardt's Gotische Bibel
and Skeat, is the foundation. Behaghel's
Hêliand (Saxon) may well follow this. A course in Old and Middle
High German, studied in the works and editions of Braune, Wright,
Sievers, Erdmann, and Henry, connects the Gothic and modern High
German, and gives ample philological as well as literary training to
the German specialist.

Frequent conference, stated examination, and original research form
essential parts of this course, which culminates in a dissertation on
some special linguistic or literary point connected with the study,
handed in before May 1 of the graduating year.

Ph. D. combinations suggested: German (major), English Language
(cognate minor), English Literature (second minor); English Language,
English Literature, German; English Literature, English Language,
German, etc.