Carr, Jr.; E. S. Deevey, Jr.; W. W. McPherson; A.Prieto; C. Wagley. Distinguished Service Professor: L. N. McAlister. Professors: C. O. Andrew; G. A. Antonini; H. R. Bernard; D. Bushnell; J. D. Casteel; C. N. Caviedes; R. C. Craven, Jr.; P. L. Doughty; J. K. Dow; T. C. Emmel; M. W. Gordon; M. J. Hardman-de-Bautista; P. E. Hildebrand; A. Hower; K. E. Kent; N. W. Macaulay, Jr.; W. D. Macdonald; K. Mathis; D. L. Niddrie; R. N. Pierce; H. L. Popenoe; R. R. Renner; H. I. Safa; C. N. Smith; G. A. D. Soares; A. Suarez. Associate Professors: A. F. Burns; D. A. Denslow, Jr.; J. J. Ewel; K. C. Ewel; P. Fein- singer; C. L. Hallman; L. S. Lieberman; M. L. Margolis; T. L. McCoy; A. R. Oliver-Smith; T. A. Nunez; L. A. Paganini; P.'M. Rice; J. F. Scott; J. R. Simpson; N. J. Smith; S. K. Smith; P. J. Van Blokland; H. Vera; C. H. Wood. Assistant Professors: A. O. Avellaneda; R. L. Jimenez; D. A. Pharies; S. E. Sanderson. Associate Research Scholar: F. M. Trueblood. The Center for Latin American Studies offers the follow- ing programs in graduate studies: (1) an interdisciplinary Master of Arts degree, (2) a Certificate in Latin American Studies for master's and doctoral students in conjunc- tion with disciplinary degrees in the graduate programs of the Colleges of Agriculture, Business Administration, Education, Fine Arts, journalism and Communications, Law, and Liberal Arts and Sciences. The graduate program in Latin American studies con- sists of over 168 courses with Latin American content taught in 27 departments of the above colleges. A description of the several degree and certificate pro- grams in Latin American studies may be found in the sec- tion Special Programs. Listings or courses other than those enumerated below may be found in individual departmental descriptions and the Bulletin of the Center for Latin American Studies. Copies of the Bulletin may be obtained from the Director, 319 Grinter Hall. LAS 6905-Individual Work (2-3; max: 9) Reading or research in topics focusing on a Latin American area, but cutting across disciplines. LAS 6938-Latin American Area Seminar (3; max: 9) Prereq: Latin American area concentration. LAS 6971-Research for Master's Thesis (1-15) S/U. LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES- GENERAL College of Liberal Arts and Sciences SED 6943-Internship in College Teaching (2, 4 or multiples of 2, up to the required total of 6)Prereq: permission ofgraduate major department. Required of all candidates for the Master of Arts in Teaching and the Master of Science in Teaching degrees. LINGUISTICS College of Liberal Arts and Sciences GRADUATE FACULTY 1982-83 Acting Director: J. W. Conner. Graduate Coordinator: C. C. Chu. Professors: W. S. Brown, Jr.; J. W. Conner; R. deBeaugrande; H. Der-Houssikian; C. J. Gellinek; J. C. Harder; M. J. Hardman-de-Bautista; H. Hollien; P. J. Jensen; N. N. Market; R. J. Scholes; S. Y. Su. Associate Professors: A. F. Burns; J. Casagrande; C. C. Chu; P. A. Kotey; K. M. McCarthy; D. G. Miller; H. B. Rothman; W. J. Sullivan, III; R. M. Thompson. Assistant Professors: A. Faber; J. Scott; T. Vance. Linguistics draws its faculty from ten participating LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES-GENERAL / 101 departments: African and Asian Languages and Literatures, Anthropology, Classics, English, Electrical Engineering, Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures, Humanities, Philosophy, Romance Languages and Literatures, and Speech. It offers a flexible program of study leading to the Ph.D. with a major in linguistics and two specializations at the M.A. level: (1) general linguistics, and (2) teaching English as a second language (TESL). Individualized doctoral programs may emphasize syn- tax, phonology, and linguistic change as either theoretical or descriptive constructs of one or more languages. A student may also work in any of the areas represented by the competence of the faculty. Entering graduate students with deficiencies in general linguistics, structure of English, phonetics and phonemics must fulfill these basic prerequisites to graduate work. Students pursuing graduate degrees will be able to sup- plement the courses listed below with pertinent courses of linguistic content offered through related departments. For detailed information on requirements as well as op- portunities for teaching and research assistantships or fellowships through Linguistics, please contact the Direc- tor, Program in Linguistics, 162 Grinter Hall. ENG 6571-American Social Dialects (3) Prereq: introductory linguistics course. Language variations, especially in relation to the ethnic and racial boundaries of American society. LIN 5715-Language Acquisition (3) Critical review of relevant theoretical and research literature. LIN 6118-History of Linguistics (3) Prereq: LIN 6222, 6322. Linguistic thought from pre-Socratic to the 20th century. LIN 6128-Historical Linguistics (3) Prereq: LIN 6222, 6322. Theory and methods of comparative historical linguistics. LIN 6129-Studies in Linguistic Change (3; max: 9) Prereq: LIN 6240, 6380, 6128. Recent issues in historical linguistics. LIN 6222-Introduction to Phonological Studies (3) Prereq: UN 3010. Insights into the phonological levels of language. Features, contrast, markedness. Solving of problems from natural languages. LIN 6240-Phonological Theory (3) Prereq: LIN 6222. Phonological analysis and construction of theoretical arguments. LIN 6241-Studies in Phonology (3; max: 9) Prereq: LIN 6240. Recent issues in phonology. LIN 6322-Introduction to Syntactic Studies (3) Prereq: LIN 3010. Insights into the grammatical level of language with prob- lems from natural languages. LIN 6377-Structure of a Specific Language (3) Prereq: intro- ductory linguistics course. Linguistic examination of one of the following: Aymara, Arabic, Cakchiqual, Eskimo, Armenian, Chinese, G5, Bulgarian, Polish, Swahili, Turkish, Twi, Quechua. LIN 6380-Syntactic Theory (3) Prereq: LIN 6322. Grammatical analysis and construction of theoretical arguments. LIN 6381-Studies in Syntax and Semantics (3; max: 9) Prereq: LIf 6380. Recent issues in syntax and semantics. LIN 6401-Contrastive Analysis (3) Theory of contrastive analysis and its application to second language acquisition. LIN 6435-Gathering and Analysis of Linguistic Data (3) Basic techniques and problems of data collection and analysis from various sources. LIN 6436-Seminar in Linguistic Field Methods (3; max: 9) Prereq: LIN 6435. Analysis of a particular language through an informant. LIN 6600-Sociolinguistics (3) Prereq: LIN 6222, 6322. Language in its social context. LIN 6622-Bilingualism in America (3) Psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic aspects of bilingualism, with implications for education. LIN 6720-Second Language Acquisition (3) The process of sec- ond language acquisition in childhood and adulthood. Com- parison with first language acquisition. Methods of predicting acquisition difficulties. Participation in experiment. LIN 6905-Individual Study (1-3; max: 20) LIN 6910-Supervised Research (1-5) S/U. LIN 6932-Special Topics (3; max: 27)