CLASSICS / 69 ECI 7980-Research for Doctoral Dissertation (1-15) S/U. ENV 5625-Water Resources Eneineering Design (3) Prereq: ECI 4214 or consent of instructor. Design oriented courses based on methods developed in ECI 4214. Introduction to water resources systems and management. TTE 5006-Transportation Systems Planning (4) Prereq: graduate standing or consent of instructor. Analytical tech- niques for estimating future travel demands, planning, transportation facilities and locations. Review of transporta- tion technology and future systems. TTE 5105-Pavement Design (2) Prereq: TTE 4104 or consent of instructor. Design of flexible and concrete pavements. TTE 5256-Traffic Engineering (4) Prereq: TTE 4104 or equiva- lent. Traffic studies, operations, flow, signals, signs and markings; regulation of traffic, pedestrian and bicycle opera- tion, parking lot operations, highway lighting. TTE 5701-Geometric Design of Transportation Facilities (3) Prereq: TTE 4104 or consent of instructor. Geometric design criteria and controls of highways and intersections. TTE 6106-Soil Stabilization (2) Prereq: graduate standing or consent of instructor. Highway soil stabilization, methods of stabilization and behavior of materials. TTE 6107-Highway Safety Analysis (2) Statistics and charac- teristics of accidents, accident reconstruction, accident causation and reduction. TTE 6257-Traffic Control Systems (4) Prereq: TTE 5256. Traf- fic controller operation, computer controlled signal systems, modeling and optimization of traffic control systems, system selection implementation and management. TTE 6267-Traffic Flow Theory (3) Prereq: TTE 5256. Opera- tional techniques used to optimize traffic flow including control systems. Maintenance operations. Freeway opera- tions and control. Intersection channelization. TTE 6307-Freeway Design and Operations (3) Prereq: TTE 5256. Operations of freeway systems, effects of design, ad- vanced analysis techniques, freeway optimization tech- niques. TTE 6516-Transportation Planning Decisions (3) Prereq: ECI 4137 or equivalent. Decisions on public investment analysis methods, cost-benefit and delphi techniques, identification and assessment of physical, social, and economic impacts of transportation alternatives, costs of vehicle operations, acci- dents, value of time, safety, other factors. TTE 6526-Airport Planning and Operations (2) Prereq: TTE 6257. Location, configuration, air connections; ground, bag- gage, and freight movements; passenger transfers; aircraft delay analysis; airport access; parking needs; simulation of operations; flight scheduling and control. TTE 6606-Urban Transportation Models (4) Prereq: TTE 5006, ECI 4041 or consent of instructor. Calibration and ap- plication of UTPS computer models for urban transportation planning; land use and urban activity models for forecasting and allocation. H, CLASSICS College of Liberal Arts and Sciences GRADUATE FACULTY 1984-85 Chairman & Graduate Coordinator: G. L. Schmeling. Professor: G. L. Schmeling. Associate Professors: S. K. Dickison; K. V. Hartigan; D. G. Miller; L. A. Sussman. The Department offers a program leading to the Master of Arts with a major in Latin, which may be combined with a minor in Greek, history, or philoso- phy. LAT 6425-Latin Prose Composition (3) The translating of English passages into Latin and the imitation of various Latin prose styles of writing. LAT 6840-History of the Latin Language (3) LNW 5325-Roman Elegiac Poetry (3; max: 6) Readings from the elegies of Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, and Ovid. Elegy as a genre. (May be repeated with a change of content.) LNW 5335-Roman Orators (3; max: 6) A study of the theory and practice of Roman oratory through Latin readings in Cicero, Seneca, and Quintilian. (May be repeated with change of works.) LNW 5385-Roman Historians of the Empire (3; max: 6) Readings from the major historians of the period, Tacitus, and/or Suetonius. (May be repeated with change of read- ings.) LNW 5655-Roman Poets: Horace (3; max: 6) Horace's lyric poetry (the Odes). (May be repeated with change of poems.) LNW 5665-Roman Poets: Vergil (3; max: 6) A study of the poetic art of Vergil and its literary, historical, and political background. (May be repeated with change of readings.) LNW 5675-Roman Poets: Ovid (3; max: 6) Ovid's poetic art against its literary, historical, and political background. (May be repeated with change of readings.) LNW 5931-Comparative Study of Latin and Greek Liter- ature (3; max: 6) Study by genre types, variable. (May be re- peated with change of genre.) LNW 6015-History of Latin Literature (3) A comprehensive survey of the development of Latin literature from Plautus to Juvenal. LNW 6216-The Ancient Roman Novel (3; max: 6) Readings from Petronius and/or Apuleius. (May be repeated with change of readings.) LNW 6355-Roman Epistolography (3; max: 6) Selected let- ters from Cicero, Pliny, Seneca, Ovid, and Horace. Emphasis is on appreciation of Latin prose style. (May be repeated with change of content.) LNW 6365-Studies in Roman Satire (3; max: 6) Readings from one or more of the following writers: Horace, Persius, Petronius, Juvenal, Martial. (May be repeated with a change of readings.) LNW 6495-Late Latin Literature (3) Readings from one or more'of the following: Vulgate, Christian Church Fathers, Historia Apollonii, Peregrinatio Aetheriae, Harrington's Medieval Latin. LNW 6905-Individual Work (2-4; max: 10) Readings, con- ferences, and reports. Subjects in language, literature, and civilization,, for which there are no special course offerings. LNW 6910-Supervised Research (1-5; max: 5) S/U. LNW 6930--Proseminar in Classics (3) Introduction to the study of classical literature, history of scholarship, biblio- graphies, areas of the discipline. , LNW 6940-Supervised Teaching (1-5; max: 5) S/U. LNW 6971-Research for Master's Thesis (1-15) S/U. CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY College of Health Related Professions GRADUATE FACULTY 1984-85 Chairman: N. W. Perry, Jr. Graduate Coordinator: H. Davis. Graduate Research Professor: P. J. Lang. Pro- fessors: B. Barger; E. Cohen; L. D. Cohen (Emeritus); H. Davis; J. R. Goldman; M. Harrower (Emeritus); K. Heilman; F. D. McGlynn; W. L. Mealiea; B. G. Melamed; N. W. Perry, Jr.; A. S. Schumacher (Emer- itus). Associate Professors: R. K. Blashfield; E. B. Fen- nell; R. K. Hornberger; J. H. Johnson; S. B. Johnson; W. J. Rice. Assistant Professors: R. Bauer; D. Bowers; A. S. Bradlyn; M. H. McCaulley; J. Tucker; R. E. Vuchinich. The Department of Clinical Psychology is a unit of ,the College of Health Related Professions. The Department's programs are its predoctoral clinical psychology studies leading to the,Ph.D. degree in psy- chology; the Psychology Clinic, a teaching and a serv- ice unit of the Shands Hospital; a predoctoral in- ternship program; and postdoctoral studies and re- search. The Master of Arts and Master of Science de- grees are offered as part of the doctoral program stud- ies. The clinical psychology program has academic ties with other colleges and departments within the Uni- versity and with the training and service programs of the Veterans Administration Medical Center. Progress in the program is determined by de- partmental policies which are consistent with Ameri- can Psychological Association accreditation stan- dards.