2012-2014 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
    Mar 29, 2024  
2012-2014 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


Course descriptions are arranged alphabetically by the course prefix codes as listed below. For the purpose of brevity, course descriptions do not follow traditional rules of grammar and may consist of sentence fragments. 

 

Other Courses

  
  • FI 123 - Personal Finance


    Prerequisite: M 109  or equivalent. This course covers finance concepts and techniques as they apply to the day to day management of personal finances.  Students will learn how to set personal financial goals and the skills to achieve those goals. Topics include the time value of money, cash budgeting, retirement planning, home and auto purchases, education planning, estate planning, tax planning, investing (in bonds, stocks, and mutual funds), insurance, etc. The course employs MS Excel, financial planning software, and online applications in all topic areas.
      3 credits
  
  • RU 110 - Intensive Russian I


    Intensive Russian I is a six-hour course equivalent to Elementary Russian I and II combined. This course provides the foundation for communication in Russian. Language material will be presented in the context of themes relevant to daily life, and cultural materials in various media will play a central role in reinforcing linguistic skills. The course emphasizes aural and reading comprehension, basic conversation skills, pronunciation, writing, and the fundamental principles of Russian grammar. 6 credits

Accounting

  
  • A 101 - Introduction Financial Accounting


    Deals primarily with reporting the financial results of operations and financial position to investors, managers, and other interested parties. Emphasizes the role of accounting information in decision making. 3 credits
  
  • A 102 - Introduction Managerial Accounting


    Prerequisite: A 101  The application of accounting in relation to current planning and control, evaluation of performances, special decisions, and long-range planning. Stress is on cost analysis. Additional topics include income tax planning, product costing, and quantitative techniques. 3 credits
  
  • A 123 - Personal Finance


    Prerequisite: M 109  or equivalent. This course covers finance concepts and techniques as they apply to the day to day management of personal finances.  Students will learn how to set personal financial goals and the skills to achieve those goals. Topics include the time value of money, cash budgeting, retirement planning, home and auto purchases, education planning, estate planning, tax planning, investing (in bonds, stocks, and mutual funds), insurance, etc. The course employs MS Excel, financial planning software, and online applications in all topic areas.
      3 credits
  
  • A 220 - Intermediate Financial Acctg I


    Prerequisite: A 101  A rigorous examination of financial accounting theory and practice applicable to the corporate form of business organization. With an emphasis on reporting corporate financial status and results of operations, the course will include the principles governing and the procedures for implementing accounting valuations for revenue, expense, gain, loss, current assets, and deferred charges. 3 credits
  
  • A 221 - Intermediate Financial Acctg II


    Prerequisite: A 220  Continues the emphasis on corporate financial planning established in A 220. The principles and procedures applicable to accounting valuations for current liabilities, long-term liabilities, deferred credits, and stockholder's equity are examined. Special attention is directed to preparing the cash-flow statement. 3 credits
  
  • A 250 - Accounting Information Systems


    Prerequisite: A 101  This course provides a thorough introduction to basic systems theory, a firm working knowledge of systems analysis and design techniques, and an examination of various transaction cycles in the accounting system. Emphasis is on EDP environments. 3 credits
  
  • A 323 - Cost Accounting


    Prerequisite: A 102  An in-depth examination of the accounting principles and procedures underlying the determination of product costs for manufacturing concerns. Emphasis on job order costing systems. Other topics are: budgets, standard costing, and CVP analysis. 3 credits
  
  • A 422 - Intermediate Financial Acctg III


    Prerequisite: A 221  Advanced topics include income tax allocation, pensions and leases, accounting changes, price-level changes, installment sales and consignments, and revenue recognition. 3 credits
  
  • A 431 - Advanced Financial Accounting


    Prerequisites: A 221  and senior standing Advanced topics in financial reporting, including partnership accounting, consolidations, cost and equity methods, and purchase versus pooling methods. 3 credits
  
  • A 433 - Auditing and Assurance Services


    Prerequisites: A 250 , A 422  A general examination of the role and function of the independent auditor in the performance of the attest function. Emphasis will be placed on current auditing pronouncements, the audit report, statistical sampling, evaluation of internal control, and the determination of the scope of an audit. Rules and standards of compilation and review reports are presented. 3 credits
  
  • A 435 - Federal Income Taxation I


    Prerequisites: A 102  and senior standing An introduction to the federal income tax law including objectives, history, and sources of tax law and administration. Course coverage will be devoted to different types of tax payers including individuals, corporations, partnerships, limited liability entities, subchapter S corporations, and trusts and estates. The course will explore income tax concepts of accounting methods and periods, income, deduction losses, property transactions, fringe benefits, and retirement plans. 3 credits
  
  • A 436 - Federal Income Taxation II


    Prequisites: A 102  and A 435  Advanced studies in taxation including the tax consequences of the formation, operation, and termination of corporations, partnerships, and limited liability companies. Course coverage will also be devoted to the alternative minimum tax, related party transactions, estate and gift taxation, financial tax accounting concepts, and ethical responsibilities in tax practice. 3 credits
  
  • A 437 - International Accounting and Taxation


    Prerequisite: A 436  or equivalent. This course examines the basis and underlying framework of international accounting and taxation and applies those standards and theories to practice. Discussion will center upon the elements of global accounting from a financial, managerial, tax, and audit perspective. Highlights include the development and convergence of international accounting standards, taxation of transnational transactions, and quantifying and reporting financial risks such as foreign exchange and hedging transactions. The course also addresses a range of matters including transfer pricing, tax treaties, and tax incentives as well as other strategic accounting issues related to multinational corporations. 3 credits
  
  • A 445 - Forensic and Investigative Accounting


    Prerequisite: A 220 . An overview examination of investigative auditing techniques, criminology, and courtroom procedures for the forensic accountant. The course covers both litigation support and investigative accounting, examining the practical aspects of these two areas, as well as many of the new technological areas. The course also examines corporate compliance programs to comply with Sarbanes-Oxley and the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. 3 credits
  
  • A 450 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102 Prerequisite: A 102. Junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 451 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102 Prerequisite: A 102. Junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 452 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102 Prerequisite: A 102. Junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 453 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102 Prerequisite: A 102. Junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 454 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102 Prerequisite: A 102. Junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 455 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102  and junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 456 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102  and junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 457 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102  and junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 458 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102  and junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 459 - Special Topics


    Prerequisite: A 102  and junior-level standing required unless specified in course schedule description. Selected topics in accounting or taxation of special or current interest. 3 credits
  
  • A 593 - Honors Thesis: Accounting


    Students in this course will complete their Honors Thesis in consultation with their Honors Thesis advisor. 3.00 credits
  
  • A 597 - Practicum


    Prerequisite: A 220, minimum 3.0 major GPA Prerequisites: A 220, junior standing, and permission of department chair and dean. A course of study designed especially for the supervised practical application of previously studied theory in a group setting. Done under supervision of a faculty sponsor and coordinated with a business organization. 3 credits
  
  • A 598 - Internship


    Prerequisites: A 422  and Junior standing On-the-job experience of accounting in selected organizations. 3 credits
  
  • A 599 - Independent Study


    Prerequisites: A 102  and junior standing A planned program of individual study under the supervision of a faculty member. 3 credits

Arabic

  
  • AR 101 - Elementary Arabic I


    This course will introduce students to the basic skills of reading, writing, speaking, and listening in Modern Standard Arabic. Students will learn Arabic letters and sounds, write and create words and sentences, and be able to hold basic conversation in Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 102 - Elementary Arabic II


    Prerequisite: AR 101. Prerequisite: AR 101 or permission of instructor. This course will build upon the language, listening, and writing skills students developed in AR 101. Students will advance their knowledge of Arabic letters and sounds, words and sentences, and basic conversation. 3 credits
  
  • AR 110 - Intensive Arabic I


    Intensive Arabic I is a six-hour course equivalent to Elementary Arabic I and II combined. This course establishes a basic foundation in reading, writing, listening, and speaking Arabic with special attention to the alphabet and conversational rudiments. It also cultivates the ability to comprehend oral and written texts and produce brief units of spoken and written language with an awareness of the differences between modern standard Arabic and colloquial Arabic. 6 credits
  
  • AR 201 - Intermediate Arabic I


    Prerequisite: AR 102  or permission of the instructor This course builds upon the skills acquired in the first-year course sequence. Emphasis will be on mastering grammar, speaking skills, listening comprehension, and reading skills. Students will gain the confidence to converse with native speakers on a variety of topics; will be able to write simple texts on everyday themes; and will acquire the skills to read uncomplicated authentic texts, such as newpaper articles on familiar topics. 3 credits
  
  • AR 202 - Intermediate Arabic II


    Prerequisite: AR 201  or permission of the instructor This course is a second-year, upper intermediate course in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), which will continue to focus on the four skills of reading, writing, speaking, and listening. In this level, students will gain oral proficiency and should become comfortable to converse on familiar topics with a native speaker, to write short texts on everyday themes, and to read newspaper articles and short stories. Students will also be introduced to aspects of contemporary life and culture in the Arab world through films and cultural video clips. 3 credits
  
  • AR 220 - Intensive Arabic II


    Prerequisite: AR 110  or AR 102  , or consent of instructor. This course expands on the previously-acquired elementary foundation in speaking, listening, writing, and reading with special attention to conversational modern, standard Arabic and colloquial Arabic. It also includes readings on familiar subjects, practical and reflective written assignments, and discussions on essential cultural patterns. 6 credits
  
  • AR 301 - Advanced Arabic


    Prerequisite: AR 202  or comparable proficiency level as demonstrated in consultation with the instructor This course is intended to develop students' proficiencies in speaking, writing, listening, and reading so that they can be at a level necessary for advanced literature and culture courses. It will emphasize composition and oral discussion as well as concepts necessary for a sophisticated appraisal of literature and culture in the target language. This course will be conducted in the target language. 3 credits
  
  • AR 401 - Arabic Cultures Through Literature and the Media


    Prerequisite: AR 301  or comparable proficiency as demonstrated in consultation with the instructor This course is a comprehensive exposure to essential cultural issues and patterns as they have developed historically in the Arabic-speaking world. It will study how these issues manifest through representative works of literature as well as popular and highbrow cultural media such as music and film. The course will also provide a unique opportunity to produce in-depth cultural and literary analyses via oral discussion and written essays. Students will perform select written and oral activities in Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 420 - Elementary Media Arabic Translation


    Prerequisite: AR 301  or permission of instructor. Native speakers of Arabic may enroll in this class. This course is intended for speakers with advanced Arabic skills. The course will emphasize comprehension and accurate translation of contemporary texts drawn from Arabic- and English-language media (including written articles and video), stylistically appropriate use of syntax and connectors, and efficient dictionary use (including dictionaries organized in the trilateral Arabic root system). This course will also focus on strengthening students' ability to infer meaning from context and accurately summarize the important points of texts in the target language. By the end of the course, students should be capable of sustained written and spoken production of paragraph-level discourse in the target language. 3 credits
  
  • AR 421 - Advanced Arabic Translation


    Prerequisite: AR 420  or comparable proficiency level as demonstrated in consultation with the instructor. This course will build on the knowledge and skills which students gained in AR 420 and help them develop their skills to attain a high level of proficiency in translation by engaging them in different types of specialized translation from Arabic into English and vice versa. This will be accomplished through the use of a wide variety of texts: literary, legal, medical, technical, commercial, scientific, business, etc. Students will be trained to approach translation both as an art and a science by exploring the essential theories and concepts adopted in the process of translation by analyzing the nature and features of varieties of texts and by examining the interaction between content and form. Through intensive practical translation, discussions, and translation criticism, students will draw on linguistic points of view as well as on technical and creative writing. 3 credits
  
  • AR 450 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 451 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 452 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 453 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 454 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 455 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 456 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 457 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 458 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 459 - Special Topics


    Special topics of selected or current interest in the study of Arabic. 3 credits
  
  • AR 599 - Independent Study


    Prerequisite: consent of faculty member and department chair. Opportunity for the student, under the direction of a faculty member, to explore an area of interest. This course must be initiated by the student. 1-3 credit hours. 3 credits

Art/Visual Arts

  
  • AT 100 - Visual Thinking: Arts and Design Foundation


    This course is an intensive introduction to visual thinking designed for first-year students in the art, graphic design, and interior design majors. The course covers fundamental principles and elements of design in relation to line, color, composition, space, value, and visual observation, and how these relate to the fields of art and design in general. An emphasis will be placed on interdisciplinary learning, collaborative projects, and incorporate historical, cultural, and global points of view.  Department-wide lectures, readings, guest presentations, and field trips will supplement studio practice to engage students in exploring content while introducing them to the department faculty and their professions.
    The course requires 6 hours of weekly studio time as well as a 1.5 hour lecture period. Laboratory fee.
      6 credits
  
  • AT 101 - Introduction to Art


    This introductory survey course will include studio art practices, art history, and museum studies topics. Foundational studies in studio art will be addressed as well as an introduction to the areas of museum studies and professional gallery practices. Course work will include both hands-on studio projects and research-based assignments. 3 credits
  
  • AT 103 - Basic Design I


    A foundation course which includes exploration of two-dimensional visual elements: line, color, texture, pattern, value, shape, size, placement, figure-ground and their effective use. The course focuses on introductory concepts of two-dimensional design and a close examination of color theory through the interaction of form and color for greatest effectiveness in pictorial compositions. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 104 - Basic Design II


    Corequisite: AT 104L  This course complements AT 103 , with concentration on three-dimensional elements of design including positive and negative volumes, surfaces, structural systems, and other elements, employing a variety of materials. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 104L - Lab at 104


    Required laboratory to be taken concurrently with AT 104 . 0 credits
  
  • AT 105 - Basic Drawing I


    A basic-foundation course which includes a disciplined study in the fundamentals of drawing such as nature studies, perspective, exercises in coordination of hand and eye. 3 credits
  
  • AT 106 - Basic Drawing II


    Corequisite: AT 106L  A continuation of AT 105  with emphasis on perspective and depiction of three-dimensional space and form by two-dimensional means. Study of architectural forms, natural objects and landscape. 3 credits
  
  • AT 106L - Lab at 106


    Required laboratory to be taken concurrently with AT 106 . 0 credits
  
  • AT 107 - Introduction to Museum Studies


    This course initiates a broad introduction to the areas of museum studies and professional gallery practices. The first half of the course focuses on what a museum is, and examines the various types of museums and galleries (contemporary, non-profit, public, private, etc.) The second half investigates the various jobs and responsibilities that professionals have within museums as they work on exhibitions, education, research, collection management, development, and conservation. 3 credits
  
  • AT 201 - Painting I


    Problems in pictorial composition involving manipulation of form and color. Various techniques of applying pigment will be explored as well as mixing pigments, stretching and priming canvases. 3 credits
  
  • AT 202 - Painting II


    Corequisite: AT 202L  A continuation of AT 201  with further exploration of two-dimensional pictorial arrangements of form and color for greatest visual effectiveness. Students will be encouraged to develop their own personal idiom in the medium. 3 credits
  
  • AT 202L - Lab at 202


    Required laboratory to be taken concurrently with AT 202 . 0 credits
  
  • AT 207 - Exhibition Development I


    Prerequisite:AT 107  This course focuses on curatorial practice, content and audience research, and explores concepts of exhibition design. Students will engage in the process of developing an exhibition project timeline, exhibition budget, fundraising proposals, and promotional materials. The course includes presentations from professionals in the field. It focuses on initial development of an exhibition and leads into concepts and projects that will be executed in AT 208 . 3 credits
  
  • AT 208 - Exhibition Development II


    Prerequisite: AT 207 . This course builds upon the research-based curriculum of AT 207 , and focuses on the practical and hands-on aspects of exhibition development and design. Working from proposals developed in AT 207 , students will learn about producing exhibitions and produce an exhibition catalog. This course examines the methodology of obtaining artwork from artists, collectors, and other art institutions. Students will then learn collections management skills through art handling, installation, loans and condition reports, shipping artwork, and lighting. 3 credits
  
  • AT 209 - Digital Photography and Imaging I


    Corequisite: AT 209L  This course is an introduction to photographic methods, form, and content, with an emphasis on the digital photographic process and the "darkroom" of Photoshop. Students will learn how to use the camera, Photoshop, and printers to create original artwork. Through the duration of this course, we will look at photography as a medium and critically examine this form of art and the implications of digital technologies that have emerged to affect the photographic image. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 209L - Lab at 209


    Required laboratory to be taken concurrently with AT 209 . 0 credits
  
  • AT 210 - Digital Photography and Imaging II


    Prerequisite: AT 209  or permission of instructor. Corequisite: AT 210L  The purpose of this course is a continuation from AT 209 where we will examine advanced techniques of digital photography and explore the capabilities of Photoshop in greater depth. The course continues to critically examine imaging and digital photography as a medium of art expression. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 210L - Lab at 210


    Required laboratory to be taken concurrently with AT 210 . 0 credits
  
  • AT 213 - Color


    An intensive exploration of color perception and interaction with manipulation of form and color for greatest effectiveness in pictorial compositions. 3 credits
  
  • AT 225 - Photographic Methods


    Prerequisite: AT 209  An exploration of ideas, experiments, and investigations in alternative photographic processes. Includes toning, cyanotype printing, gum bichromate, platinum, and palladium. Also covered will be negative manipulation, hand-applied color, and pinhole cameras. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 231 - History of Art I


    Western art from cave art through the Middle Ages to Gothic. This course includes visual-based exploration of artworks through museum and gallery visits and seeks to understand expressive, social, cultural, political, and economic aspects of the cultures in which specific art styles and visual developments emerged. Includes economic and technological changes in the societies and their reflections in art. 3 credits
  
  • AT 232 - History of Art II


    This course is a visual and traditional exploration of Western art from the Renaissance to the twentieth century in Europe and America. Developments in art styles, content and subject matter are related to cultural, political, and historical contexts of the corresponding time period. In addition to in-class studies, this course takes advantage of visual-based learning experiences through museum and gallery visits. 3 credits
  
  • AT 302 - Figure Drawing


    Prerequisite: AT 105  or consent of instructor Study of drawing which concentrates on the human figure. 3 credits
  
  • AT 304 - Sculpture I


    The exploration of three-dimensional materials for maximum effectiveness in expressive design. Experimentation with clay, plaster, wood, stone, canvas, wire screening, metal, found objects. A basic understanding of major, fundamental methods: casting and carving. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 305 - Sculpture II


    A continuation of AT 304  with further exploration of three-dimensional materials and the possibilities they present for creative visual statements. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 309 - Photographic Design


    Prerequisite: AT 209  Introduction to basic materials and techniques of digital photography used in the fields of graphic design, advertising, and marketing. The relation between image and type as well as sequencing and the extended print will be explored along with collage, commercial photography, and basic bookmaking. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 310 - Photographic Lighting


    Prerequisite: AT 209  Aesthetic and technical elements of lighting and photography. Use of natural and artificial lighting systems and methods for working with digital photographic processes. Emphasis on the portrait and still life image as well as creative problem solving. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 311 - Digital Color Photography


    Prerequisite: AT 210  Theory and practice of digital color photography through critical and lab studies of the camera and working with digital photographic files on the computer. Study of current digital color photographic materials and processes. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 315 - Printmaking


    Corequisite: AT 315L  The expressive potential of the graphic image through the techniques of monoprints, etching, silkscreening, and photo/computer scanned printing processes. Laboratory fee. 3 credits
  
  • AT 315L - Lab at 315


    Required laboratory to be taken concurrently with AT 315 . 0 credits
  
  • AT 331 - Contemporary Art


    Focus on art since 1945. The developments of the present stem from ideas emanating from the 1870s–especially Impressionism; this course seeks to understand these connections. Emphasis on economic, historical, and technological developments. Appropriate for business, communication, history, and engineering students. 3 credits
  
  • AT 333 - Survey of African American Art


    Artistic creation by African-Americans in the United States from the Colonial period to the present. Consideration of African cultural influences. Analysis of modern trends in the work of black artists. 3 credits
  
  • AT 340 - Contemporary Issues of Art and the Environment


    This course is an interdisciplinary course that focuses on contemporary issues of art and the environment. Lectures, readings, and research will provide an overview of the history of artists working with the land as a medium, and focus on contemporary works and theories by artists such as Robert Smithson, Christo and Jean-Claude, Andy Goldsworthy, and Olafur Eliasson. Students will also work together in groups to create their own environmental art installations to interact with the campus landscape and address issues of sustainability. This course will include visiting artist lectures and field trips to local art venues. 3 credits
  
  • AT 401 - Studio Seminar I


    Prerequisites: AT 101 , AT 102, AT 201 , and AT 302  or AT 209 , and art electives Drawing on development through their previous study, students will concentrate on major projects in the areas of their choice. 1-4 credit hours. 3 credits
  
  • AT 402 - Studio Seminar II


    Prerequisite: AT 401  Continuation of Studio Seminar I. 1-4 credit hours. 3 credits
  
  • AT 403 - Special Topics


    NULL 3 credits
  
  • AT 405 - Special Topics


    NULL 3 credits
  
  • AT 406 - Special Topics


    NULL 3 credits
  
  • AT 407 - Special Topics


    NULL 3 credits
  
  • AT 408 - Special Topics


    NULL 3 credits
  
  • AT 409 - Special Topics


    NULL 3 credits
  
  • AT 410 - ST:Prof Pract for Interior Design


    ST:PROF PRACT FOR INTERIOR DESIGN 3 credits
  
  • AT 411 - ST: Construct Documents - Interiors


    ST: CONSTRUCT DOCUMENTS - INTERIORS 3 credits
  
  • AT 412 - ST:Interior Design Products & Specs


    ST:INTERIOR DESIGN PRODUCTS & SPECS 3 credits
  
  • AT 413 - ST:Vis Tch Id II


    ST:VIS TCH ID II 3 credits
  
  • AT 415 - ST:Portfolio Prd


    ST:PORTFOLIO PRD 3 credits
  
  • AT 416 - Special Topics


    Selected topics of special or current interest in applied art or history of art. 3 credits
  
  • AT 417 - ST: Architectural Drawing II


    ST: ARCHITECTURAL DRAWING II 3 credits
  
  • AT 418 - Special Topics


    ST:DIGITAL ILLUS 3 credits
 

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