94 / FIELDS OF INSTRUCTION EUH 5468-Germany: The Republic and the Third Reich (4) Prereq: permission of instructor. Advanced study of the history of Germany from the 1930s through World War II, emphasiz- ing the methods by which Hitler gained and maintained power. Not open to students who have taken EUH 4464 or equivalent. EUH 5517-Elizabethan England, 1509-1660 (4) Prereq: per- mission of instructor. Advanced study of topics in English history from the reign of Elizabeth through the restoration of the Stuarts. Not open to students who have taken EUH 4511 or equivalent. EUH 5519-Restoration England, 1660-1793 (4) Prereq: per- mission of instructor. Advanced study of topics in English history from the Stuart restoration through the reign of George Ill. Not open to students who have taken EUH 4513 or equivalent. EUH 5546-Topics in British History (3) EUH 5657-European Military History (4) Prereq: permission of instructor. Advanced study of topics in European military history with emphasis on the seventeenth and eighteenth cen- turies. Not open to students who have taken EUH 4650 or equivalent. EUH 5934-Topics in European History (3) EUH 6126-The Middle Ages (4) EUH 6213-Europe, 1500-1763 (4) EUH 6289-Readings, Modern Europe (3) EUH 6298-Seminar in the History of Modern European Thought (4) EUH 6342-Europe Since 1763 (4) EUH 6508-England (4) HIS 5055-Topics in Public History (3; max: 6) May be repeated with change of topic. HIS 5905-Special Studies in the History of Science (3; max: 6) HIS 6060-Historical Method (3) Introduction to the methods of research used by professional historians. HIS 6061-Introduction to Historiography (3) Examines the development of schools, theories, and philosophies of history since the Enlightenment. HIS 6063-Introduction to Quantitative History (3) HIS 6077-Seminar in Oral History (4) Methods of oral history and their application. HIS 6084-History, Philosophy, and Purposes of Museums (3) HIS 6489-Seminar in History of Science (4) Seminar will be arranged topically. Subject matter will be selected either accord- ing to period (example: 17th century science) or as a concep- tual unit (example: history of modern evolutionary theory). May be repeated with change of topic. HIS 6905-Individual Study (1-3; max: 12) HIS 6910-Supervised Research (1-5) S/U. HIS 6940-Supervised Teaching (1-5) S/U. HIS 6950-Practicum in Public History (1-6; max: 6) S/U. HIS 6971-Research for Master's Thesis (1-15) Required of all candidates for the M.A. degree. S/U. HIS 7289-Comparative History (4) SHIS 7980-Research for Doctoral Dissertation (1-15) Required of all candidates for the Ph.D. degree. S/U. LAH 5438-Modern Mexico (4) Prereq: permission of instruc- tor. Advanced study of topics in Mexican history from inde- pendence in 1821 to the present with emphasis on the Diaz dictatorship and the Mexican Revolution. Not open to students who have taken LAH 4433 or equivalent. LAH 5475-The Caribbean, Nineteenth and Twentieth Cen- turies (4) Prereq: permission of instructor. Advanced study of the development of the Hispanic and non-Hispanic Caribbean with emphasis on events since 1930. Not open to students who have taken LAH 4472 or equivalent. LAH 5527-Gran Colombian Nations (4) Prereq: permission of instructor. Advanced comparative study of the patterns of political, cultural and socioeconomic development in Colom- bia, Venezuela, and Ecuador from'independence to the present. Not open to students who have taken LAH 4520 or equivalent. LAH 5627-Brazil to 1822 (4) Prereq: permission of instructor. Advanced study of the development of Portuguese society in South America and the origins of the Brazilian nation. Not open to students who have taken LAH 4620 or equivalent. LAH 5637-Brazil Since 1822 (4) Prereq: permission of instruc- tor. Advanced study of the history of Brazil since independence with emphasis on the uniqueness of the nation and its internal diversity. Not open to students who have taken LAH 4630 or equivalent. LAH 5934-Topics in Latin American History (3) LAH 6934-Seminar in Colonial Spanish America (4; max: 8) LAH 6936-Seminar in History of Brazil (4) LAH 6938-Seminar in Modern Spanish America (4) HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE College of Agriculture GRADUATE FACULTY 1982-83 Chairman: M. J. Burke. Fruit Crops Chairman: M. J. Burke. Graduate Coordinator: D. W. Buchanan. Ornamental Horticulture Chairman: W. J. Carpenter. Graduate Coordinator: C. R. Johnson. Vegetable Crops Chairman: D. N. Maynard. Graduate Coordinator: C. B. Hall. Professors: L. G. Albrigo; C. E. Arnold; J. A. Attaway; R. H. Biggs; H. H. Bryan; D. W. Buchanan; M. J. Burke; C. W. Campbell; D. J. Cantliffe; W. J. Carpenter; C. A. Conover; T. E. Crocker; H. W. Ford; J. F. Gerber; W. Grierson; C. B. Hall; T. E. Humphreys; L. K. Jackson; J. N. Joiner; R. C. Koo; S. J. Locasio; G. A. Marlowe; J. D. Martsolf; D. N. Maynard; R. T. Poole; H. J. Reitz; T. J. Sheehan; W. B. Sherman; J. Soule; I. Stewart; W. E. Waters; T. A. Wheaton; G. J. Wilfret; W. J. Wiltbank. Associate Professors: C. R. Barmore; M. J. Bassett; W. S. Castle; A. E. Dudeck; F. S. Davies; G. W. Elstrom; D. D. Gull; L. C. Hannah; B. K. Harbaugh; D. L. Ingram; M. A. Ismail; C. R. Johnson; K. E. Koch; S. R. Kostewicz; P. M. Lyrene; D. B. McConnell; T. A. Nell; A. C. Purvis; J. R. Shumaker; B. Tijia; J. M. White; M. J. Young. Assistant Professors: C. P. Andrews; J. E. Barrett; P. Busey; T. L. Davenport; B. Dehgan; J. A. Dusky; R. J. Henny; D. J. Huber; R. L. Hummel; G. A. Moore; S. K. O'Hair; J. P. Syvertsen. The Departments of Fruit Crops, Ornamental Horti- culture, and Vegetable Crops offer a joint program in Horticultural Science leading to the Master of Agriculture, Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy degrees with specialization in fruit crops, ornamental horticulture, or vegetable crops. Areas of emphasis include crop physiology and bio- chemistry, seed physiology, crop breeding and genetics, environmental science, crop production and manage- ment, landscape horticulture, and post-harvest physiology, biochemistry, handling, and horticultural taxonomy. New graduate students should have sound under- graduate training in horticulture or plant science which should include undergraduate credits in fruit crops, ornamental horticulture, vegetable crops, or general horticulture and botany, mathematics, chemistry, soils, entomology, and plant pathology or equivalent. Student interest and available guidance and facilities will deter- mine the area of emphasis within a given specialization for the thesis or dissertation problem. It is possible to con- duct certain types of research for the Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy degrees at one of the Agri- cultural Research and Education Centers or Agricultural Research Centers of the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. FRC 6233-Advanced Citriculture (3) Citrus growing, emphasiz- ing the problems by varying sites, soils, climates, rootstocks, and cultivars. FRC 6252-Advanced Tropical Fruit Crops Culture (3) Prereq: FRC4251. Assessment of major horticultural problems and appli- cation of research results to tropical fruit crop culture.