Office of The RegistrarWilliams College

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Winter Study Courses 2004

 

WINTER STUDY PROGRAM

REMINDERS ABOUT WSP REGISTRATION

All students who will be on campus during the 2003-2004 academic year must register for WSP. Registration will take place in the early part of fall semester. If you are registered for a senior thesis in the fall which must be continued through Winter Study by departmental rules, you will be registered for your Winter Study Project automatically. In every other case, you must complete registration. First-year students are required to participate in a Winter Study that will take place on campus; they are not allowed to do 99's.

Even if you plan to take a 99, or the instructor of your first choice accepts you during the registration period, there are many things that can happen between registration and the beginning of Winter Study to upset your first choice, so you must list five choices. You should try to make one of your choices a project with a larger enrollment, not that it will guarantee you a project, but it will increase your chances.

If you think your time may be restricted in any way (ski meets, interviews, etc.), clear these restrictions with the instructor before signing up for his/her project.

Remember, for cross-listed projects, you should sign up for the subject you want to appear on your record.

For many beginning language courses, you are required to take the WSP Sustaining Program in addition to your regular project. You will be automatically enrolled in this Sustaining Program, so no one should list this as a choice.

The grade of honors is reserved for outstanding or exceptional work. Individual instructors may specify minimum standards for the grade, but normally, fewer than one out of ten students will qualify. A grade of pass means the student has performed satisfactorily. A grade of perfunctory pass signifies that a student's work has been significantly lacking but is just adequate to deserve a pass.

If you have any questions about a project, see the instructor before you register.

Finally, all work for WSP must be completed and submitted to the instructor no later than Thursday, January 29th. Only the Dean can grant an extension beyond this date.

WINTER STUDY 99'S

Sophomores, juniors and seniors are eligible to propose "99's," independent projects arranged with faculty sponsors, conducted in lieu of regular Winter Study courses. Perhaps you have encountered an interesting idea in one of your courses which you would like to study in more depth, or you may have an interest not covered in the regular curriculum. In recent years students have undertaken in-depth studies of particular literary works, interned in government offices, assisted in foreign and domestic medical clinics, conducted field work in economics in developing countries, and given performances illustrating the history of American dance. Although some 99's involve travel away from campus, there are many opportunities to pursue intellectual or artistic goals here in Williamstown.

99 forms are available online:

http://www.williams.edu/Registrar/winterstudy/99direct

The deadline for submitting the proposals to faculty sponsors is Thursday, 25 September.

Winter Study Course Offerings

AMES 031 Senior Thesis

AAS 030 Senior Project

AMST 010 "The Fatherland in Cleats:" Soccer and Identity in the Americas (Same as History 010)

AMST 011 Violence, Testimony, and the Culture Wars: Speaking, Truth, and Power (Same as Political Science 011)

AMST 012 Why New Englanders Eat What They Eat (Same as Philosophy 011 and History 019)

AMST 016 A Failure of Trust: American Indians Seek an Accounting from the U.S. Government (Same as History 016)

AMST 030 Senior Honors Project

AMST 031 Senior Thesis

ANSO 011 Berkshire Farm Internship

ANSO 012 Children and the Courts: Internship in the Crisis in Child Abuse

ANTH 013 Deciphering Ancient Maya Civilization

ANTH 025 Archaeological Excavation at the Paleolithic Site of Attirampakkam, India (Same as Chemistry 025)

ANTH 031 Senior Thesis

SOC 012 Organizational Communications

SOC 021 Williams in New York

SOC 031 Senior Thesis

ARTH 010 "Taking the Waters" Then & Now: A History of Spa Culture (Same as History of Science 010)

ARTH 011 Breaking Ground: Women Architects in America (Same as Women's and Gender Studies 011)

ARTH 012 Master Drawings

ARTH 013 Images of War CANCELLED!

ARTH 014 Fictionalizing the Artist: =Genius and Gender in Films about Artists (Same as Women's and Gender Studies 014)

ARTH 015 Materials of the Artist: Uncovering Fakes and Forgeries (Same as Chemistry 015 and ArtS 015)

ARTH 016 Exploring Regional Museums: Nuts and Bolts and Behind the Scene Tours

ARTS 023 The Art and History of Knitting (Same as Mathematics 016 and History 023)

ARTH 025 Oriental Rugs: Art and Commerce (Same as Economics 025) CANCELLED!

ARTH 026 Contemporary Art in Los Angeles

ARTH 031 Senior Thesis

ARTH 033 Honors Independent Study

ARTS 010 CULTURES OF RHYTHM (Same as Theatre 013)

ARTS 011 Refiguring the Body

ARTS 012 Japanese Traditional Art: Kusaki-Zome and Weaving (Same as Japanese 012)

ARTS 013 Abstracting and Translating: Sculpture to Drawing

ARTS 014 Figure Drawing

ARTS 015 Materials of the Artist: Uncovering Fakes and Forgeries (Same as Chemistry 015 and ArtH 015)

ARTS 016 Collage

ARTS 017 Contemporary Mexican Women Film-Makers (Same as English 035, Spanish 012 and Women's and Gender Studies 012)

ARTS 018 Dreams, Art, and the Personal Narrative

ARTS 019 Meet the Right Side of Your Brain: Drawing as a Learnable Skill (Same as Physics 012)

ARTS 020 Pinhole Photography

ARTS 033 Honors Independent Project

ASST 031 Senior Thesis

CHIN 088 Sustaining Program for Chinese101-102

CHIN 011 Business Chinese: It is More Than Just a Chinese Business

CHIN 012 Chinese Painting and Culture

CHIN 013 Chinese Cinema: Transculturation and Modernity

CHIN 031 Senior Thesis

JAPN 088 Sustaining Program for Japanese 101-102

JAPN 011 Theatre of the Body: A Transcultural Model for Physical Theatre Performance (Same as Theatre 011)

JAPN 012 Japanese Traditional Art: Kusaki-Zome and Weaving (Same as ArtS 012)

JAPN 031 Senior Thesis

ASTR 011 Image Processing in Science and Medicine

ASTR 031 Senior Research

ASPH 031 Senior Research

BIOL 010 Electron Microscopy

BIOL 011 Envisioning a Sustainable Future (Same as Environmental Studies 011)

BIOL 012 Overcoming Cultural Barriers to Healthcare in the U.S.

BIOL 013 Life as an Algorithm (Same as Computer Science 013)

BIOL 014 Orchids! (Same as Environmental Studies 014)

BIOL 016 Molecular Medicine, from Bench to Bedside (Same as Chemistry 013)

BIOL 017 The New England Forest (Same as Environmental Studies 017)

BIOL 018 The Mind of a Poet: The Psycho-Biological Bases of Creativity (Same as Neuroscience 018 and Psychology 019)

BIOL 019 Picturing Our Past (Same as Special 018, Environmental Studies 018, and INTR 019)

BIOL 020 The Green Revolution (Same as Economics 027 and Environmental Studies 027)

BIOL 022 Introduction to Biological Research

BIOL 025 History and Philosophy of Biology: The Galapagos Islands (Same as Philosophy 025)

BIOL 031 Senior Thesis

CHEM 011 Science for Kids (Same as Special 011)

CHEM 012 Learning and Teaching Chemistry in Spanish (Same as Spanish 014)

CHEM 013 Molecular Medicine, from Bench to Bedside (Same as Biology 016)

CHEM 014 Emergency Medical Technician-Basic

CHEM 015 Materials of the Artist: Uncovering Fakes and Forgeries (Same as ArtH 015 and ArtS 015)

CHEM 016 Glass and Glassblowing

CHEM 018 Introduction to Research in Biochemistry

CHEM 019 Introduction to Research in Environmental Science (Same as ENVI 020)

CHEM 020 Introduction to Research in Inorganic Chemistry

CHEM 023 Introduction to Research in Organic Chemistry

CHEM 024 Introduction to Research in Physical Chemistry

CHEM 025 Archaeological Excavation at the Paleolithic Site of Attirampakkam, India (Same as Anthropology 025)

CHEM 031 Senior Research and Thesis

CLAS 010 Sappho's Poetry in Greek: Eros the sweet-bitter (Same as Compartive Literature 013 and Women's and Gender Studies 010)

CLAS 011 Writing With Wedges II: Introduction to Sumerian

CLAS 031 Senior Thesis

COMP 010 Living by Words: Surviving and Thriving in the Art and Sport of Rhetoric (Same as English 010, Leadership Studies 012, and Special 012)

COMP 011 Surrealist Photography

COMP 012 Proust: In Search of Lost Time (Same as French 012 and English 024)

COMP 013 Sappho's Poetry in Greek: Eros the sweet-bitter (Same as Classics 010 and Women's and Gender Studies 010)

COMP 014 Jungle Fever: The Amazon in Literature and Film (Same as Spanish 011 and Environmental Studies 022)

COMP 031 Senior Thesis

LIT 031 Senior Thesis

CSCI 010 C, UNIX and Software Tools

CSCI 013 Life as an Algorithm (Same as Biology 013)

CSCI 031 Senior Honor Thesis

CMAJ 031 Senior Thesis

ECON 010 East Asia: Miracle and Crisis

ECON 011 Public Speaking

ECON 012 Women and Development (Same as Women's and Gender Studies 017)

ECON 014 Accounting

ECON 016 How to Buy a Car

ECON 017 Business Economics

ECON 018 For Richer or Poorer: A Multimedia View of Historical Economic Performance

ECON 019 Finding the Right Neighborhood

ECON 020 Globalization and Developing Countries

ECON 022 Finance and Development

ECON 025 Oriental Rugs: Art and Commerce (Same as ArtH 025)

ECON 027 The Green Revolution (Same as Biology 020 and Environmental Studies 027)

ECON 030 Honors Project

ECON 031 Honors Thesis

ENGL 010 Living by Words: Surviving and Thriving in the Art and Sport of Rhetoric (Same as Comparative Literature 010, Leadership Studies 012, and Special 012)

ENGL 011 Anxious Allegories: Horror and Sci-Fi Films

ENGL 012 Looking at Contemporary Documentary Photography

ENGL 013 Gender and Science Fiction (Same as Women's and Gender Studies 013)

ENGL 014 Turnpike Vernacular

ENGL 015 The Hours and Mrs. Dalloway

ENGL 016 Sebald

ENGL 017 Film Direction

ENGL 018 David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest

ENGL 019 Artificial Preservatives

ENGL 020 Henry James: The Golden Bowl

ENGL 022 Environmental Journalism: The Payoffs and Perils (Same as Environmental Studies 013)

ENGL 023 Charles Brockden Brown, "Father of the American Novel"

ENGL 024 Proust: In Search of Lost Time (Same as Comparative Literature 012 and French 012)

ENGL 025 Contemporary Film: New Voices Above and Below the Radar

ENGL 027 My Favorite Director

ENGL 028 German Cinema (Same as German 010 and Philosophy 010)

ENGL 029 Film as Radical Political Critique (Same as Political Science 010)

ENGL 030 Honors Project: Specialization Route

ENGL 031 Honors Project: Thesis

ENGL 034 Jungle Fever: The Amazon in Literature and Film (Same as Comparative Literature 014, Environmental Studies 022, and Spanish 011)

ENGL 035 Contemporary Mexican Women Film-Makers (Same as ArtS 017, Spanish 012 and Women's and Gender Studies 012)

ENGL 036 Writing from Where You Live (Same as Environmental Studies 012)

ENGL 037 Latina and Latino Migration Stories: Puerto Rico Women Write (Same as History 012 and Women's and Gender Studies 015))

ENGL 038 Fly Fishing in American Literature (Same as History 013)

ENGL 039 Objective Journalism During Times of Conflict (Same as Political Science 014)

ENGL 040 Humor Writing (Same as Mathematics 010)

ENVI 010 Geology of the National Parks (Same as Geosciences 010)

ENVI 011 Envisioning a Sustainable Future (Same as Biology 011)

ENVI 012 Writing from Where You Live (Same as English 036)

ENVI 013 Environmental Journalism: The Payoffs and Perils (Same as English 022)

ENVI 014 Orchids! (Same as Biology 014)

ENVI 015 Corporate Leadership and Social Responsibility (Same as Leadership Studies 010)

ENVI 016 The Lay of the Land-A Survey of the Business of Land Conservation

ENVI 017 The New England Forest (Same as Biology 017)

ENVI 018 Picturing Our Past (Same as Special 018, Biology 019, and INTR 019)

ENVI 019 Landscape Photography (Same as Geoscience 012)

ENVI 020 Introduction to Research in Environmental Science (Same as Chemistry 019)

ENVI 022 Jungle Fever: The Amazon in Literature and Film (Same as Comparative Literature 014, English 034, Spanish 011)

ENVI 025 Mapping a Caribbean Fringing Reef Complex (Same as Geosciences 025)

ENVI 027 The Green Revolution (Same as Biology 020 and Economics 027)

ENVI 028 Mapmaking and Ambiguity (Same as Geosceinces 014)

ENVI 031 Senior Research and Thesis

GEOS 010 Geology of the National Parks (Same as Environmental Studies 010)

GEOS 012 Landscape Photography (Same as Environmental Studies 019)

GEOS 014 Mapmaking and Ambiguity (Same as Environmental Studies 028)

GEOS 025 Mapping a Caribbean Fringing Reef Complex (Same as Environmental Sudies 025)

GEOS 031 Senior Thesis

GERM 088 Sustaining Program for German 101-102

GERM 010 German Cinema (Same as English 028 and Philosophy 010)

GERM 011 The Future of "Old Europe"

GERM 025 German in Germany

GERM 030 Honors Project

GERM 031 Senior Thesis

HIST 010 "The Fatherland in Cleats:" Soccer and Identity in the Americas (Same as American Studies 010)

HIST 011 Racism and the Colonial Legacy in Modern Europe

HIST 012 Latina and Latino Migration Stories: Puerto Rico Women Write (Same as English 037 and Women's and Gender Studies 015)

HIST 013 Fly Fishing in American Literature (Same as English 038)

HIST 015 How to Survive "Regime Change" and "Pre-Emptive Attacks" in Latin America, and be a Journalist at the Same Time

HIST 016 A Failure of Trust: American Indians Seek an Accounting from the U.S. Government (Same as American Studies 016)

HIST 017 History in Pieces

HIST 018 Genre-Bending: Literature and Politics in the Modern Middle East

HIST 019 Why New Englanders Eat What They Eat (Same as American Studies 012 and Philosophy 011)

HIST 023 The Art and History of Knitting (Same as ArtS 023 and Mathematics 016 )

HIST 031 Senior Thesis

HSCI 010 "Taking the Waters" Then and Now: A History of Spa Culture (Same as ArtH 010)

INTR 019 Picturing Our Past (Same as Special 018, Biology 019, and Environmental Studies 018)

LEAD 010 Corporate Leadership and Social Responsibility (Same as Environmental Studies 015)

LEAD 012 Living by Words: Surviving and Thriving in the Art and Sport of Rhetoric (Same as Comparative Literature 010, English 010, and Special 012)

LEAD 018 Wilderness Leadership

LEAD 019 Justice and Public Policy (Same as Political Science 019)

LGST 010 Legal Realism and the Search for Law

LGST 012 The Death Penalty and the Problem of Innocence

LGST 013 The Second Amendment: Liberty and Gun Control (Same as Special 013)

MATH 010 Humor Writing (Same as English 040) CANCELLED!

MATH 011 Lessons in Go

MATH 012 Introductory Photography: People and Places

MATH 013 Beginning Modern Dance (Same as Special 023)

MATH 015 The Science of Deception (Same as Psychology 014)

MATH 016 The Art and History of Knitting (Same as ArtS 023 and History 023)

MATH 017 Onstage! (Same as Special 017) CANCELLED!

MATH 018 Modern Dance-Muller Technique (Same as Special 020)

MATH 030 Senior Project

MATH 031 Senior Thesis

MUS 010 Chamber Music Performance

MUS 012 Ensembles in Classic American Musical Theatre (Same as Theatre 012)

MUS 013 Theolonious Monk Ensemble

MUS 014 Congolese Music and Dance

MUS 015 The Contemporary Singer/Songwriter

MUS 021 Individual Vocal and Instrumental Instruction (Can only be taken IN ADDITION to a regular WSP course)

MUS 031 Senior Thesis

NSCI 018 The Mind of a Poet: The Psycho-Biological Bases of Creativity (Same as Biology 018 and Psychology 019)

NSCI 031 Senior Thesis

PHIL 010 German Cinema (Same as English 028 and German 010)

PHIL 011 Why New Englanders Eat What They Eat (Same as American Studies 012 and History 019)

PHIL 012 Ethics Bowl: Case-based Reasoning in Ethics

PHIL 016 Civil Rights Law (Same as Political Science 016)

PHIL 025 History and Philosophy of Biology: The Galapagos Islands (Same as Biology 025)

PHIL 031 Senior Thesis

PHYS 010 Light and Holography

PHYS 012 Meet the Right Side of Your Brain: Drawing as a Learnable Skill (Same as ArtS 019)

PHYS 013 Automotive Mechanics

PHYS 015 Electronics

PHYS 016 Teaching with Technology

PHYS 022 Research Participation

PHYS 031 Senior Thesis

POEC 031 Honors Thesis

PSCI 010 Film as Radical Political Critique (Same as English 029)

PSCI 011 Violence, Testimony, and the Culture Wars: Speaking, Truth, and Power (Same as American Studies 011)

PSCI 012 Hollywood's Version of Politics

PSCI 013 European Integration, Globalization and International Business

PSCI 014 Objective Journalism During Times of Conflict (Same as English 039)

PSCI 015 The Development of Inuit Art

PSCI 016 Civil Rights Law (Same as Philosophy 016)

PSCI 017 Film and Politics in Mexico

PSCI 019 Justice and Public Policy (Same as Leadership Studies 019)

PSCI 021 Power, Authority and Decisionmaking in the Public Sector

PSYC 010 Mental Illness in Film CANCELLED!

PSYC 011 Rat Olympics

PSYC 012 Dreams, Problem-Solving and Self-Understanding

PSYC 014 The Science of Deception (Same as Mathematics 015)

PSYC 015 Principles of Psychotherapy

PSYC 016 The Examined Life

PSYC 017 Teaching Practicum

PSYC 018 Institutional Placement

PSYC 019 The Mind of a Poet: The Psycho-biological Bases of Creativity (Same as Biology 018 and Neuroscience 018)

PSYC 031 Senior Thesis

REL 010 The Zen Monastic Experience (CANCELLED)

REL 012 The Spirit and Practice of Yoga: Coming into Alignment

REL025 Explorations in Solidarity: A Meeting of Minds and Hearts in Rural and Urban Nicaragua

REL 031 Senior Thesis

RLFR 088 Sustaining Program for French 101-102

RLFR 010 Asterix the Gaul: French Culture through the Prism of the Comic

RLFR 012 Proust: In Search of Lost Time (Same as Comparative Literature 012 and English 024)

RLFR 030 Honors Essay

RLFR 031 Senior Thesis

RLIT 088 Sustaining Program for Italian 101-102

RLSP 088 Sustaining Program for Spanish 101-102

RLSP 011 Jungle Fever: The Amazon in Literature and Film (Same as Comparative Literature 014, English 034 and Environmental Studies 022)

RLSP 012 Contemporary Mexican Women Film-Makers (Same as Arts 017, English 035 and Women's and Gender Studies 012)

RLSP 014 Learning and Teaching Chemistry in Spanish (Same as Chemistry 012)

RLSP 030 Honors Essay

RLSP 031 Senior Thesis

RUSS 088 Sustaining Program for Russian 101-102

RUSS 025 Williams in Georgia (Same as Special 025)

RUSS 030 Honors Project

RUSS 031 Senior Thesis

THEA 010 Giant Puppet Fauvel

THEA 011 Theatre of the Body: A Transcultural Model for Physical Theatre Performance (Same as Japanese 011)

THEA 012 Ensembles in Classic American Musical Theatre (Same as Music 012)

THEA 030 Senior Production

THEA 031 Senior Thesis

WGST 010 Sappho's Poetry in Greek: Eros the sweet-bitter (Same as Classics 010 and Comparative Literature 013)

WGST 011 Breaking Ground: Women Architects in America (Same as ArtH 011)

WGST 012 Contemporary Mexican Women Film-Makers (Same as ArtS 017, English 035 and Spanish 012)

WGST 013 Gender and Science Fiction (Same as English 013)

WGST 014 Fictionalizing the Artist: Genius and Gender in Films about Artists (Same as ArtH 014)

WGST 015 Latina and Latino Migration Stories: Puerto Rico Women Write (Same as English 037 and History 012)

WGST 016 Preliminary Introduction to American Sign Language (Same as Special 016)

WGST 030 Honors Project

SPEC 010 Quest for College: Early Awareness in Berkshire County Schools

SPEC 011 Science for Kids (Same as Chemistry 011)

SPEC 012 Living by Words: Surviving and Thriving in the Art and Sport of Rhetoric (Same as Comparative Literature 010, English 010, and Leadership Studies 012)

SPEC 013 The Second Amendment: Liberty and Gun Control (Same as Legal Studies 013)

SPEC 016 Preliminary Introduction to American Sign Language (Same as Women's and Gender Studies 016)

SPEC 017 Onstage! (Same Mathematics 017)

SPEC 018 Picturing Our Past (Same as Biology 019, Environmental Studies 018, and INTR 019)

SPEC 019 Medical Apprenticeship

SPEC 020 Modern Dance-Muller Technique (Same Mathematics 018)

SPEC 023 Beginning Modern Dance (Same as Mathematics 013)

SPEC 024 Eye Care and Culture in Caribbean Nicaragua

SPEC 025 Williams in Georgia (Same as Russian 025)

SPEC 027 Teaching and Writing at Theodore Roosevelt High School (CANCELLED)

SPEC 028 Teaching Practicum, the Bronx and Manhattan

SPEC 029 Junior High School Teaching Practicum, the Bronx and Manhattan

SPEC 035 Making Pottery on the Potter's Wheel

SPEC 036 Teaching Practicum: St. Aloysius School, Harlem

SPEC 037 To Face Suffering

SPEC 038 Giving It Away: How We Help Others

SPEC 039 Composing A Life: Finding Success and Balance in Life After Williams

AFRICAN AND MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES

AMES 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by candidates for honors by the thesis route in African and Middle Eastern Studies.

AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDIES

AAS 030 Senior Project

To be taken by students registered for Afro-American Studies 491 who are candidates for honors.

AMERICAN STUDIES

AMST 010 "The Fatherland in Cleats:" Soccer and Identity in the Americas (Same as History 010)

(See under History for full description.)

AMST 011 Violence, Testimony, and the Culture Wars: Speaking, Truth, and Power (Same as Political Science 011)

(See under Political Science for full description.)

AMST 012 Why New Englanders Eat What They Eat (Same as Philosophy 011 and History 019)

(See under Philosophy for full description.)

AMST 016 A Failure of Trust: American Indians Seek an Accounting from the U.S. Government (Same as History 016)

(See under History for full description.)

AMST 030 Senior Honors Project

To be taken by students registered for American Studies 491 or 492.

AMST 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by candidates for honors by the thesis route in American Studies.

 

ANTHROPOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY

ANSO 011 Berkshire Farm Internship

A field placement at Berkshire Farm Center and Services for Youth in Canaan, New York. Berkshire Farm Center is a residential treatment facility for troubled, at-risk adolescent boys who have been remanded to the Farm by the Family Court. These youths come primarily from lower socio-economic strata, are very ethnically diverse, and hail from both urban and rural areas throughout New York State. The problems that they bring to Berkshire Farm are multiple. These include: the psychological scars of dysfunctional families, including those of physical, emotional, and sexual abuse; chemical dependency; juvenile delinquency; inability to function in school settings; and various other issues. Residential treatment is a multi-modal approach that includes anger-replacement training, social skills training, and behavioral modification.
Williams students will commute to Berkshire Farm and work under supervision in one of the following areas: school, cottage life, chemical dependency unit, research, recreation, performing arts, or in individual tutoring.
Requirements: students will keep a journal reflecting on their experiences, and a weekly seminar with the instructor will draw on service learning experience. Students will also be required to submit a final 10-page paper at the end of the course.
Prerequisites: interview with instructor. Enrollment limit: 15-please note: all queries about this course should be directed to the instructor, who can be reached at 518-781-4567 ext. 322.
Cost to student: none.

LARI BRANDSTEIN (Instructor)
NOLAN (Sponsor)

Lari Brandstein is Director of Volunteer Services at Berkshire Farm Center and Services for Youth.

ANSO 012 Children and the Courts: Internship in the Crisis in Child Abuse

The incidence of reported child abuse and neglect has reached epidemic proportions and shows no signs of decreasing. Preventive and prophylactic social programs, court intervention, and legislative mandates have not successfully addressed this crisis. This course allows students to observe the Massachusetts Department of Social Services attorney in courtroom proceedings related to the care and protection of children. Students will have access to Department records for purposes of analysis and will also work with social workers who will provide a clinical perspective on the legal cases under study. The class will meet regularly to discuss court proceedings, assigned readings, and the students' interactions with local human services agencies. Access to an automobile is desirable but not required; some transportation will be provided as part of the course.
Requirements: full participation, a journal, and a 10-page paper to be submitted at the end of the course.
Enrollment limit: 15-please note: all queries about this course must be directed to the instructor, Judge Locke (phone messages may be left at 458-4833).
Meeting time: TBA.
Cost to student: $25 for books and photocopies.

JUDITH LOCKE (Instructor)
NOLAN (Sponsor)

Judith Locke is Associate Justice of the Juvenile Court, Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

ANTHROPOLOGY

ANTH 013 Deciphering Ancient Maya Civilization

Ancient Maya civilization of the first millennium A.D. was one of the most advanced and complex societies of pre-Hispanic Central America. Its art, monuments, ruined cities and writing have fascinated art historians, visitors and scholars alike. After a short introduction to Maya civilization and archaeology, the course will focus on the Maya hieroglyphic writing systems. We will then apply the principles of Maya epigraphy to translate a variety of texts from stone monuments and from elaborate and beautiful polychrome vases of important sites such as Tikal, Dos Pilas, Aguateca, Yaxchilan, and Palenque. The final project will consist of creating your own stela about your life using the Maya hieroglyphic writing system.
Requirements: two or three small papers.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 20 (expected: 10).
Meeting time: afternoons; 2 or 3 sessions per week of two-or three hours.
Cost to student: $120 for books.

FOIAS

ANTH 025 Archaeological Excavation at the Paleolithic Site of Attirampakkam, India (Same as Chemistry 025)

(See under Chemistry for full description.)

ANTH 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Anthropology 493-494.

SOCIOLOGY

SOC 012 Organizational Communications

Students will examine the central role communication plays in a variety of organizations including business, government, education, and non-profits. This discussion course will be taught using the case-based approach and simulations to provide understanding of how theory translates into practice. We will use cases developed by the Harvard Business School and Harvard Negotiation Project. Cases will focus on interpersonal communication, group dynamics, negotiation and conflict resolution, communicating change, influence and persuasion, and ethics. Students will be responsible for learning how to diagnose specific organizational communication problems and developing appropriate responses for effectively managing organizational communication. You will be expected to improve on how well you demonstrate effective critical thinking, problem-solving, and communication skills.
Format: Case discussion and role-playing. Students will be expected to meet in small study groups in the afternoon or evening before class to discuss their findings with other classmates and to "warm up" for the class case discussions.
Students will be evaluated on their ability to work together in problem set reviews, preparation of two summary papers of five pages each, and active case discussion in the classroom. (Students will be expected to do 85% of the talking in class.)
Enrollment is limit: 20.
Meeting time: mornings; Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 10 a.m. to noon.
Cost to student: $50 for cases and reading materials.

JO PROCTER (Instructor)
ROBERT JACKALL (Sponsor)

Jo Procter is the college's news director. She has an M.S. in communications, has taught in Simmons College Graduate Program in Communications, and was previously assistant director of Boston University's Doctoral Program in Business Administration.

SOC 021 Williams in New York

The program will offer five internships in New York City in key institutional/occupational arenas. These are still being arranged, but they will include internships at a major newspaper, a policy institute, and a museum. Students will live at the Williams Club. There will be a weekly seminar where students will analyze their field experiences against the backdrop of key readings. There will also be some joint field trips. The Gaudino Fund will provide modest scholarships for the five students selected for the program on the basis of a competition. These scholarships will cover only part of the costs of the Winter Study and students are expected to cover the rest. Financial aid students may apply to the College for additional assistance.
Requirements: 10-page paper.
Prerequisites: Sociology 207 New York New York; which will be offered Fall 2003. Enrollment limit: 5 (expected: 5).

JACKALL

SOC 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Sociology 493-494.

ART

ART HISTORY

ARTH 010 "Taking the Waters" Then & Now: A History of Spa Culture (Same as History of Science 010)

(See under History of Science for full description.)

ARTH 011 Breaking Ground: Women Architects in America (Same as Women's and Gender Studies 011)

The course would concern itself with the role of women as architects in a traditionally male dominated field. It would begin with the role of the wife in shaping the "look" of the house; to the winning entry of Sophia Hayden's Woman's Building in the Chicago Columbia Exposition in 1890; to the break through work of Julia Morgan for William Randolph Hearst and ultimately to more modern and progressive architects and urban designers of today. Guest lectures will be delivered by architects in current practice, and a field trip will be scheduled.
Requirements: one 10-page paper and reading as assigned.
Enrollment limit: 15.
Meeting time: mornings; 3 times a week for two hours.
Cost to student: $40-50 for course materials.

PATRICIA BROWN GLENN `75 (Instructor)
M. LEWIS (Sponsor)

Patricia Brown Glenn `75 holds a Masters in Renaissance and Baroque Art from the University of Chicago. Glenn has taught art and architectural courses at all levels at the University of Missouri at Kansas City for the past 15 years. She has also authored two books for middle readers: the award winning Under Every Roof and Discover America's Favorite Architects. Currently, Glenn is working on a book about female architects for adult readers.

ARTH 012 Master Drawings

This course will provide an introduction to European master drawings, from the Italian and German Renaissance to the present day, primarily through the study of actual works in the distinguished collection of the Clark Art Institute. We will begin with the materials, technique and function of drawing in the artist's working process. Then we will discuss how these informal working sketches became desirable to collectors, a subject of critical study, and eventually a key factor in the practice of connoisseurship, a fundamental discipline in traditional art history. We will also consider finished drawings produced for exhibition and sale, the effect of the invention of photography in the nineteenth century, and the changing role of drawing through the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Above all, we will consider the nature of style in drawing and in the finished paintings or objects created through it in relation to the personality of the individual artist and his development.
The course, depending on enrollment and other factors, will include field trips to Cambridge, to spend a day in the drawings study of the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard, and to New York, to view the January exhibitions of drawings at major auction houses and dealers.
Evaluation will be based on classroom performance and a 10- to 15-page research paper, or (subject to approval by the instructor) a substantial artistic project.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 15. Preference given to advanced Art majors.
Meeting time: afternoons; 6 two-hour sessions at the Clark after an introductory classroom meeting, with one or two extra meetings for discussion and research preparation, as needed. There will be two full-day field trips.
Costs to student: $60 in textbooks; approximately $30-40 expenses for the field trips.

MICHAEL MILLER (Instructor)
M. LEWIS (Sponsor)

Michael Miller has worked in the field of drawings as a curator at the Cleveland Museum of Art, an independent dealer, and a teacher at Oberlin College and New York University. He holds a Ph.D. in Classics and an M.A. in Fine Arts from Harvard University and combines his interests in language, literature and art in his research and teaching. He has published articles on Pintoricchio, Raphael, Peruzzi, and Michelangelo, and others, as well as numerous reviews and contributions to exhibition catalogues. He is also active as a fine art photographer.

ARTH 013 Images of War

CANCELLED!

ARTH 014 Fictionalizing the Artist: Genius and Gender in Films about Artists (Same as Women's and Gender Studies 014)

Films based on artists' lives have done a great deal to shape our impressions of the creative individual. This course will explore this issue, studying films about artists from the Renaissance to the modern period including Michelangelo, Vincent Van Gogh, Camille Claudel, Frida Kahlo, and Jackson Pollock. We will focus on the construction, in these films, of a notion of artistic genius, paying particular attention to the role played by gender. Our discussions will be based on the films themselves as well as comparative material-biographical and art historical readings on the various artists.
Evaluation will be based on class participation and a 10-page paper.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 12.
Meeting time: afternoons; 2 three hour sessions per week. Some film viewing will be required outside class hours.
Cost to student: approximately $40 for books and copied materials.

SOLUM

ARTH 015 Materials of the Artist: Uncovering Fakes and Forgeries (Same as Chemistry 015 and ArtS 015)

(See under Chemistry for full description.)

ARTH 016 Exploring Regional Museums: Nuts and Bolts and Behind the Scene Tours

This course will introduce the holdings and operation of selected regional museums through weekly museum excursions. All aspects of museums will be discussed, though an emphasis will be on investigating the preservation of museum objects, as well as how museums operate. The class will begin with an introduction to museum work and a tour of the Williams College Museum of Art. The class will continue with twice-weekly museum excursions, short lectures and at least one tour of an art conservation laboratory. Tours will include behind-the scenes views and meetings with key personnel, as well as time looking at the exhibitions. The class will visit MASS MoCA, the Chapin Library, the Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery, the Clark Art Institute, the Norman Rockwell Museum, the Albany Institute of History and Art, and others. The class will also travel to Boston or New York, (the museum selected will depend on the current exhibition schedule). Evaluation will be based on participation in all museum visits and lectures and one researched presentation or 10-page paper.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 10.
Cost to Student: $125-150, for books, handouts, costs associated with admission to Museums, and possibly one overnight field trip. The cost and schedule of the museum visits will be available during enrollment and at the first class.

LORI K. VAN HANDEL (Instructor)
LEWIS (Sponsor)

Lori van Handel is a conservation specialist who directs Heritage Conservation Services, a local conservation firm. From 1994 to 2000 she was Associate Conservator at the Williamstown Arts Conservation Center.

(See under Special for full description.)

ARTS 023 The Art and History of Knitting (Same as Mathematics 016 and History 023)

(See under Mathematics for full description.)

ARTH 025 Oriental Rugs: Art and Commerce (Same as Economics 025)

(See under Economics for full description.)

ARTH 026 Contemporary Art in Los Angeles

CANCELLED!

ARTH 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by students registered for ArtH 493, 494.

ARTH 033 Honors Independent Study

To be taken by candidates for honors by the independent study route.

ART STUDIO

ARTS 010 CULTURES OF RHYTHM (Same as Theatre 013)
An intensive theory/production workshop that studies musical representation as well as the collective process of music and dance video. The result recording will be part of a larger on-going project about Rumba music in NYC. From a performance studies angle, the workshop explores how to collaborate in an interdisciplinary manner. During the first week we will study theories of representation in relationship to fictional, documentary, ethnographic and experimental video making. In second week we will do intensive specialized camera workshop in the recording of music and dance performance resulting in the recording of choreography designed for this class in Williams College. The third week requires a 2-day video shoot at a NYC professional sound studio. Internationally recognized musicians will be recording a Rumba project and the students will have the opportunity to record their sessions. During the final week we will edit a series of short pieces. The editing of final projects could be an individual or team effort. Prerequisites: some experience in one of the following, dance, music and/or art video, lighting background; knowledge doing camera work and Final Cut or Media 100 editing.
Enrollment limit: 8. Permission by the instructor required.
Meeting time: T, W, R, plus two Fridays, 2pm - 4pm.
Cost: $480.00 which includes cost of field trip to NYC.
JOTTAR

ARTS 011 Refiguring the Body

This course is a studio seminar exploring various approaches to and uses of the body. Students will investigate and interrogate issues of nude/naked, subject/object, self/other, and a variety of themes, such as gender/sex/sexuality, death, and power, as they relate to representing the body. Drawing and collage techniques will be used in relationship to twentieth century and contemporary developments, attitudes and styles.
Requirements: model sessions in the studio, critique, slide discussions. Evaluation will be based on participation in discussion sections, effort, attendance, the quality of work produced, and the final exhibition of work.
Prerequisites: any 100-level Art History or Art Studio course. Enrollment limit: 16. Open to all, with preference given to Art majors.
Meeting time: afternoons; six hours of instruction and model sessions.
Cost to student: $75 for materials.

KARIN STACK (Instructor)
TAKENAGA (Sponsor)

Karin Stack is an artist who works with prints, drawings, and photographs. She earned her B.A. from Wesleyan and her M.F.A. from Colorado State University. She taught at Amherst College for three years.

ARTS 012 Japanese Traditional Art: Kusaki-Zome and Weaving (Same as Japanese 012)

(See under Asian Studies-Japanese for full description.)

ARTS 013 Abstracting and Translating: Sculpture to Drawing

Can the constructed object or installation serve as model, structure or source for drawing? This course will explore the relationship between the sculpted object or installation and the drawing. By abstracting from nature with non-traditional materials, students will develop a three dimensional vocabulary of patterns, networks, or volumetric forms (less than 2x2x2') that can be used as foundation for two-dimensional works. The first part of the course will be an introduction to building sculptures using simple means of attachment, such as hot glue, tape and wire. Students will do research outside of class to find source material for the three dimensional works (living organisms, books, the internet). The final project "drawings" may refer to, originate from and/or incorporate sculptural elements, but are not limited to these interpretations. There will be a mandatory class trip to Mass MoCA.
Evaluation will be based on regular attendance and class participation. Requirements: several small assignments, a daily journal/sketchbook, and a final project for an open studio or exhibition.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 12. Preference given to Art majors.
Meeting time: afternoons; 3 times per week. Students will also be expected to work during open studio hours.
Cost to student: $75-$100.

KRISTINE TAYLOR `01 (Instructor)
TAKENAGA (Sponsor)

Kristine Taylor is a painter/sculptor who works in North Adams, MA and received the Hutchinson Memorial Fellowship in Art after graduating from Williams College in 2001.

ARTS 014 Figure Drawing

In this course students will develop representational, technical, and expressive skills through studies in drawing from live models. We will inform our practice in drawing through the study of accomplished figure drawings from the history of western art. Creating your own studies "in the manner of" such drawings, you will learn to develop methods suitable for varied approaches to the human figure. In addition to working directly from the model during class meetings, you will also be expected to develop drawings outside of class times, including anatomical studies, self portraiture, and working up figure sketches into more elaborate compositions. In addition to studio work we will allow some time for brief slide lectures and for critique.
Evaluation will be based on the level of achievement in her/his drawings, attendance, participation, and effort. Satisfactory performance in the course will require a commitment of at least 6 hours per week in addition to class meetings.
Prerequisites: ArtS 100. Enrollment limit: 15.
Meeting time: mornings; six hours each week. .
Cost to student: approximately $75 for materials and model fees.

LEVIN

ARTS 015 Materials of the Artist: Uncovering Fakes and Forgeries (Same as Chemistry 015 and ArtH 015)

(See under Chemistry for full description.)

ARTS 016 Collage

The term collage is from the French verb coller, meaning "to glue." Throughout art, film and literature of the twentieth century we regard the process of making collage an aggregate of ideas, materials and textures; a work composed of both borrowed and primary material. The assembled information produces a montage that permits meaning to slip the metaphoric conventions of a unified surface and linear logic. This studio examines several stations in which collage creates patterns that address social, political, and psychological conditions.
Prerequisites: Drawing I.
Meeting time: nine hours in class plus outside studio assignments.
Cost to student: $80 lab fee plus individual purchases of additional studio supplies.

EPPING

ARTS 017 Contemporary Mexican Women Film-Makers (Same as English 035, Spanish 012 and Women's and Gender Studies 012)

(See under Romance Languages-Spanish for full description.)

ARTS 018 Dreams, Art, and the Personal Narrative

This class is a laboratory in which one's artistic identity (style, process, technique, inspiration, and visual language) will be supplemented by the practice and tracking of dreams. How can we use the unconscious to access a deeper, poetic site of creativity? The class will be based on a mixture of art practices and dreaming techniques; creative field studies and studio assignments, group dreamwork, and critique will be grounded in lectures in the science and theory of dreams and slide presentations. How have dreams inspired artists such as Remedios Varo, Max Ernst, Matta, Maya Deren, Bill Viola, and Frederico Garcia Lorca? We will also look at the role dreams play in the art of non-western cultures such as Islam, India, indigenous America, and Aboriginal Australia. How do dreams question our sense of self, our relationship to time, and ways we construct meaning from non-linear fragments of information? What are persistent themes that arise in both our art and dreams? A final group exhibition will document our findings. The use of and exploration in any artistic media is encouraged. Students are responsible for their own materials.
Evaluation will be based on willingness to try new techniques, participation in group discussions and activities, keeping a dream journal, and successful completion of studio assignments and readings.
Prerequisite: while not required, it is recommended that students have Drawing I or Drawing II. Enrollment limit: 10.
Meeting time: mornings; 3 two hour sessions per week, and one evening for two hours.
Cost to student: $50 for materials.

JENNIFER BRAMAN `95 (Instructor)
EPPING (Sponsor)

Jennifer Braman `95 is an artist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her drawings, sound installations, and performance work investigate the creative language of the unconscious. She received her MFA degree as well as a certificate in Dream Studies from John F. Kennedy University. She currently works as the program advisor for the University's Department of Arts and Consciousness.

ARTS 019 Meet the Right Side of Your Brain: Drawing as a Learnable Skill (Same as Physics 012)

(See under Physics for full description.)

ARTS 020 Pinhole Photography

Anyone who has been involved in traditional photography has at one point or another been fascinated by the mysteries of pinhole photographs. This course will introduce the students to methods of making pinhole cameras and making images from these cameras. It is also a darkroom course. Students will learn how to process their film and print from both paper and film negatives. The student will be required to make two different types of cameras and be required to present a portfolio of 15 to 20 successful pinhole images. There will be specific shooting assignments that will teach them to recognize the special and very specific characteristics of a pinhole image.
Evaluation will be based on final portfolio.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 10.
Cost to student: $150 for lab fee.

ANTHONY SALAZAR (Instructor)
LALEIAN (Sponsor)

Anthony Salazar received his MFA from Hunter College in 1998. He taught photography at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York in the fall 2000. Anthony is currently a practicing photographer and the Photography Technician in the Art Department at Williams College.

ARTS 033 Honors Independent Project

Independent study to be taken by candidates for honors in Art Studio.

ASIAN STUDIES

ASST 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by all students who are candidates for honors in Asian Studies.

CHINESE

CHIN S.P. Sustaining Program for Chinese 101-102

Students registered for Chinese 101-102 are required to attend and pass the Chinese Sustaining Program.
Requirements: regular attendance and active class participation.
Prerequisites: Chinese 101.
Meeting time: mornings; Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays 9-9:50 a.m.
Cost to student: one Xerox packet.

LANGUAGE FELLOW

CHIN 011 Business Chinese: It is More Than Just a Chinese Business

This course is NOT an advanced-level Chinese language course. Rather, it is designed to provide fundamental training in Chinese language to people who are interested in doing business with China in the future. In this course, we will learn the proper pronunciation of Mandarin Chinese, the official language in China and Taiwan. You will also gain basic understanding of the Chinese syntax and writing system, which can also be the basis for future language learning when necessary. In addition, a wide range of knowledge necessary for effective cross-cultural communication in the business context, such as social etiquette, business practices, and interpretation of verbal and non-verbal statements will be covered. Local merchants with extensive experience in conducting business with Chinese communities will be invited as guest speakers to share their insights with the class.
Evaluation will be based on class preparation, tests, and the completion of assignments.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 15.
Meeting time: mornings; 3 two-hour sessions per week.
Cost to student: the cost of one Xerox packet.

C. CHANG

CHIN 012 Chinese Painting and Culture

This course provides a wonderful opportunity to explore Chinese art by fostering appreciation and understanding of the aesthetics of Chinese painting. Students will gain a broad knowledge of Chinese art as well as the basic skills to facilitate further practice. More specifically, students will learn how to use gradations of black ink, one of the major techniques in Chinese painting, on rice paper. Students will also learn how to draw the "four gentlemen" series, which stands for the four seasons of the year: plum blossom, mountain orchid, bamboo, and chrysanthemum. Techniques used in Chinese landscape painting, such as drawing of mountains, trees, and water, will also be covered.
In addition to the techniques of Chinese painting, students will also be introduced to elements that are integral parts of Chinese painting, such as calligraphy, seal, and unique methods of mounting. This is a course of exploratory nature and requires no previous background in art.
Evaluation will be based on class participation and the final presentation of work.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 12.
Meeting time: afternoons; 2 three-hour sessions per week.
Cost to student: $30 for materials.

YINGLEI ZHANG (Instructor)
C. CHANG (Sponsor)

Yinglei Zhang is a Chinese artist and teacher. She has a B.A. in Chinese language and literature, an advanced certificate in Chinese classical literature, and a M.A. in Art Education. She has taught Chinese at Green Mountain College in Poultney, VT. She has also been teaching Chinese Painting and Calligraphy and The Art of Chinese Tea at Frog Hollow, Middlebury College, Saint Michael's College, and many other institutions near Middlebury, VT, where she currently resides.

CHIN 013 Chinese Cinema: Transculturation and Modernity

This course is designed to explore visual forms of cultural creativity with an eye on transculturation and modernity through the genre of Chinese Cinema. Selected films are viewed outside of class. Topics may range from love and romance, saga and human tragedy, cult, warriors and martial arts, melodrama and allegory of life. In class, students are required to participate in and to lead panel discussions in the forum. Discussions involve cinematic motifs, symbolism in filmic narration, directorial control and expression, and evidence of transculturation from solo Chinese shadow plays to contemporary mass productions driven by today's transnational market capitalism.
Evaluation will be based on two 5- to 6-page papers (film critiques) and active participation in and leading of small-group film review and in-class panel discussions each meeting.
Meeting time: panel discussions, 1-3 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays; film review and small group meetings, 1-3 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays.

Cost to student: $30 for course reading packet (course website).

DOMIZIO

CHIN 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by all students who are candidates for honors in Chinese.

JAPANESE

JAPN S.P. Sustaining Program for Japanese 101-102

Students registered for Japanese 101-102 are required to attend and pass the Japanese Sustaining Program.
Requirements: regular attendance and active class participation.
Prerequisites: Japanese 101.
Meeting time: mornings; Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays 9-9:50a.m.
Cost to student: one Xerox packet.

LANGUAGE FELLOW

JAPN 011 Theatre of the Body: A Transcultural Model for Physical Theatre Performance (Same as Theatre 011)

This course is designed for anyone that wishes to increase their performative skills by engaging in exercises adapted from contemporary and traditional Japanese arts. The course draws from butoh, noh, and aikido to propose a training model for physical theatre performance. Performance training may have profound value for people pursuing disciplines both within and outside of the performing arts.
The goals of this course are sweeping in their scope: 1) increased power, presence, and flexibility; 2) increased integration of breath and movement; 3) increased kinesthetic sense, including postural and structural awareness in movement; 4) increased `performative fluency' or the capacity to embody an idea in performance. The method will be intensive studio instruction in specific kata (or `roadmaps' for movement), limb and joint mobilizations, and tightly structured improvisations.
This will be a highly physical class, consisting of exercises that move through the space, and those that require direct physical interaction among students and between instructor and student. The students are encouraged to maintain optimum health during the term of this course and to arrive to each class on time, fed, rested, and otherwise prepared to enter into a prolonged period of physical and mental engagement. Each class will be structured to account for the students' physiological progression from hour to hour (i.e., we will not attempt to stretch cold muscles or begin with activities that are highly aerobic, but rather will follow a sequence that accounts for the participants' evolving body state). Loose, comfortable and layered (to account for climate) clothing is a must. We will work mostly in bare feet.
Evaluation will be based on their daily commitment to in-class activities, and the quality and timely completion of outside assignments. Assignments will include reading materials addressing core issues from a variety of viewpoints; written summaries of one or more of those selections; regular journal writing; and a short in-class presentation.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 15. No prior performance training necessary, however students should come to class prepared to enter into an extended period of mental and physical engagement.

JAPN 012 Japanese Traditional Art: Kusaki-Zome and Weaving (Same as ArtS 012)

In this class, students will learn traditional Japanese dyeing techniques using dyes from plants. After dyeing the threads, students will make two tapestries. Each student's first project will be to make a tapestry using a cardboard loom. Their second project will be to make a wall tapestry using the "tie-dye" technique. Both tapestries will be designed by the student. This class requires no previous artistic training. The technical exercises in this class will be done through several projects under the supervision of the instructor.
Grading will be based on the completion of three projects with a journal describing each one. Students will participate in an exhibition at the end of the class where their work will be displayed.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 15 per section. Two sections.
Meeting time: morning section, 10a.m.-noon, Monday, Wednesday and Thursday-afternoon section, 1:30-3:30p.m., Monday, Wednesday and Thursday.
Cost to student: $40 lab fee.

KABASAWA

Kyoko Kabasawa, a Japanese textile and dyeing artist, teaches at Asai Gakuen University in Hokkaido. In addition to a number of prizes awarded in Japan, she won an originality award in Hawaii's Hand weavers' Hui 45th Anniversary Biennial Exhibition in 1998, temari award in Hawaii's Hand weavers' Hui 46th Biennial Exhibition in 2000


Meeting time: mornings and afternoons; Monday through Thursday 10a.m.-1p.m. (10-12 hours per week).
Cost to student: approximately $40 for materials and course packet.

TOM O'CONNOR (Instructor)
KAGAYA (Sponsor)

Tom O'Connor has been an actor and movement artist for twenty years. Currently, as a visiting researcher with the National Institute of Multimedia Education in Chiba, Japan, he is studying training methods in contemporary and traditional Japanese arts.

.

JAPN 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by all students who are candidates for honors in Japanese.

ASTRONOMY

ASTR 011 Image Processing in Science and Medicine

Images have long been fundamental in the sciences such as astronomy. With the discovery of x-rays this became true in medicine as well. Digital imaging has become a staple throughout our society but the nature and processing of a scientific image differs from that of an image obtained for artistic or commercial purposes. This course will cover the principles and practice of image processing as applied to the sciences and medicine, particularly to astronomy and to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We will discuss how images are acquired, including transformations from raw data to meaningful images. We will cover images, their generalization to dimensions other than two, and many fundamental operations that may be applied to enhance features or extract particular kinds of information. Students will obtain their own images using one or more of the following: an MRI scanner, an astronomical telescope, or an electron microscope. Students will learn to use one or more image processing software packages, and will have the opportunity to create their own software.
Evaluation will be based on attendance, weekly assignments, and a final project which will be presented both in written form and as an oral presentation at a simulated scientific conference.
Prerequisites: Mathematics 105 or 106, or equivalent. Enrollment limit: 10. Preference given to students with experience in a programming language.
Meeting time: mornings; 3 two-hour sessions per week. Other times include a field trip to a medical MRI facility (9a.m.-5p.m.), a night of observing on the Hopkins Observatory 24" telescope (7p.m.-10p.m.), and a visit to the electron microscope on campus.
Cost to student: approximately $90 for books and shareware fees.

STEVEN SOUZA (Instructor)
KWITTER (Sponsor)

Steven Souza earned his Ph.D. in astronomy from the State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1979, and is currently Observatory Supervisor and Instructor in Astronomy at Williams College. He spent 13 years at GE Global Research in Niskayuna, NY, where he did research in MRI for medical applications.

ASTR 031 Senior Research

To be taken by students registered for Astronomy 493, 494.

ASTROPHYSICS

ASPH 031 Senior Research

To be taken by students registered for Astrophysics 493, 494.

BIOLOGY

BIOL 010 Electron Microscopy

Students will undertake an independent project to investigate a topic of their choice using the transmission and scanning electron microscopes. They will do their own sample preparation, operate the two electron microscopes, and take micrographs of relevant structures. Class time will give a brief overview of the theory and operation of the microscopes and microtomes. In addition, students will learn how to develop and print their film from the TEM, and learn how to manipulate the digital images from the SEM in Adobe Photoshop. (Do you want your erythrocytes red or blue?)
The lab is scheduled to receive a new SEM this summer that will allow observation of wet samples as well as conventional dried samples , and will extend the limits of research potential for the scope.
Requirements: brief reading assignments, a guest speaker, and a 10-page paper with 8 well focused micrographs.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 8. No preference given.
Meeting time: afternoons; 3 two-hour sessions per week, plus scope time.
Cost to student: $40 for text and readings.

NANCY PIATCZYC (Instructor)
H. WILLIAMS (Sponsor)

Nancy Piatczyc received her B.S. in Biology from Tufts University. She attended the school of Electron Microscopy in Albany, NY. She is a trained electron microscopist who operates and maintains the electron microscope facility at Williams.

BIOL 011 Envisioning a Sustainable Future (Same as Environmental Studies 011)

If humanity is to survive the next century, a massive movement towards ecological sustainability must occur. What is a sustainable lifestyle like? Will we have to sacrifice? How do we get there from here? In this course, we will first look at key technologies and resource management issues required for (and also driving!) the movement towards sustainability, including energy, water and agricultural practices. By considering the ramifications of these issues, it will be possible to envision in some detail what a sustainable lifestyle must be like. We will then consider how the mindset and practices of the developed world must evolve to allow the sustainability movement to truly take hold. Students will read several short background papers before each class.
Requirements: reading of several short background papers before class, a 10-page paper or equivalent project on a topic of their choice, and, in the last week of Winter Study present a 15-minute summary of this independent research.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 16. Preference will be given to Environmental Studies concentrators.
Meeting time: mornings; Monday, Wednesday, Thursday 10 a.m.-12 p.m., and Tuesdays should be held open for field trips beginning at 10 a.m; return times will vary and may be as late as 4 p.m.
Cost to student: $15 for purchasing a packet of photocopies papers, and may need to subsidize field trip costs.

SILVIO EBERHARDT (Instructor)
H. WILLIAMS (Sponsor)

Silvio Eberhardt holds B.S. degrees in Electrical Engineering and Biology from Lehigh University where he also pursued a minor in "Humanities perspectives in Technology") and a Ph.D. degree from The Johns Hopkins University. For the past 10 years he has taught computer engineering at Swarthmore College and Villanova University. During that time, he has avidly researched sustainable technologies for renewable energy systems, home construction (he participated in building a straw-bale/cob medical clinic near Ontario last summer), and food production (he has been running indoor hydroponic systems for the last 3 years). He plans to dedicate the rest of his career to sustainability.

BIOL 012 Overcoming Cultural Barriers to Healthcare in the U.S.

Does everyone in the United States have equal access to healthcare? Many cultural and socioeconomic barriers can interfere with effective care. This course is designed to expose the student to a variety of situations in which healthcare delivery is difficult. Relying on brief readings, guest speakers and experiential field trips, students will explore the problems and potential solutions specific to some cultures and conditions within American society, including poverty, migrant workers and Native Americans, GBLT, and others.
Evaluation will be based on class participation and the completion a project to be presented at a poster session at the end of the course. Access to transportation would be helpful but is not required.
No prerequisites, but previous experience in any aspect of healthcare is encouraged. Enrollment limit: 14. Preference given to upperclassmen.
Meeting time: Wednesday EVENINGS, as well as weekly field trips scheduled on Wednesdays and Fridays.
Cost to student: $30 for reading materials.

BARBARA ROSENTHAL, M.D. (Instructor)
H. WILLIAMS (Sponsor)

Dr. Rosenthal is a clinical instructor at UVM College of Medicine in Burlington. She received her undergraduate degree from Cornell and her MD degree from Upstate Medical Center in Syracuse. She is Board Certified in Family Practice and is licensed in Vermont, New York, Wisconsin, and Maine.

BIOL 013 Life as an Algorithm (Same as Computer Science 013)

(See under Computer Science for full description.)

BIOL 014 Orchids! (Same as Environmental Studies 014)

This course explores the world of orchids. First we will consider the aesthetics of orchids and how this fueled both the exploration for new species in the nineteenth century and the production of modern hybrids. Next we will study the biology of orchids particularly the structural and physiological adaptations that have permitted these plants to inhabit sites as diverse as the treetops of tropical forests and the frozen meadows of New England. The complex relationship between flower structure and the behavior of pollinators is of special interest. The fascinating world of the orchid hybridizer will be examined. How is it possible to combine four genera to make one plant? The commercialization of orchids led to the destruction of many natural populations. Is it possible to protect and possibly reestablish endangered species through the cultivation and propagation of orchids from seed? Orchid hybridization and the discovery of methods for the tissue culture of rare plants have revolutionized the commercial availability of orchids. Globalization has affected the orchid industry. We will discuss these recent trends and what it means for those hoping for a career with orchids.
Students will be given the opportunity to examine living plants and flowers of various orchid genera. We will demonstrate the techniques for growing the plants in the greenhouse and within the home. Mature specimens will be repotted and students will deflask seedlings and set up community pots.
Two field trips are planned, one to Mountain Orchid of Ludlow, VT, a leader in growing cloud forest species, and the second to Conway Orchids of Conway, MA, a grower of championship Cattleya hybrids.
Students will be required to write a 10-page paper or develop an equivalent oral presentation to the class on the orchid topic of his/her choice, and production of a poster. The poster will be displayed at an orchid show we will present on the last day of Winter Study (students will be required to be present for the show and to help set it up).
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 14.
Meeting time: mornings; Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 10 a.m.-noon; two field trips will be TBA.
Cost to student: approximately $50, which includes field trips and textbook.

C.J. GILLIG (Instructor)
H. WILLIAMS (Sponsor)

C.J. Gillig, Technical Assistant in the Department of Psychology at Williams College, received his B.A. in Biology from St. Mary's University of San Antonio, Texas and his Ph.D. in Zoology from UMass, Amherst. Although he now works in the Department of Psychology he has remained interested in biology and specializes in orchids. He has a mixed collection representing numerous genera. He is a member of the American Orchid Society and the Amherst Orchid Society.

BIOL 016 Molecular Medicine, from Bench to Bedside (Same as Chemistry 013)

(See under Chemistry for full description.)

BIOL 017 The New England Forest (Same as Environmental Studies 017)

(See under Environmental Studies for full description.)

BIOL 018 The Mind of a Poet: The Psycho-Biological Bases of Creativity (Same as Neuroscience 018 and Psychology 019)

Recent advances in Neuroscience, Artificial Intelligence, Psychology and Behavioral Ecology have allowed us a glimpse onto the bases of the creative process which supplements prior anecdotal and biographical accounts from scientists and artists. This course will provide a survey of the field with special emphasis on the commonalities between creativity in art and science. We will explore the mechanisms underlying this seemingly unique human characteristic by taking a look at creativity by artists, scientists and individuals with specific psychopathologies such as manic depression, as well as by other types of "minds" from animals to machines.
Requirements: active participation, readings, attendance, and a 10-page paper.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 20.
Meeting time: mornings.
Cost to student: none.

LUIS F. SCHETTINO (Instructor)
H. WILLIAMS (Sponsor)

Luis F. Schettino received his B.S. in biology from the Autonomous Metropolitan University in Mexico City, his M.S. in psychology from Rutgers-New Brunswick and Ph.D. in neuroscience from Rutgers-Newark. Besides his interest in cognition and creativity, he has also published two books of poetry translations into Spanish.

BIOL 019 Picturing Our Past (Same as Special 018, Environmental Studies 018, and INTR 019)

(See under Special for full description.)

BIOL 020 The Green Revolution (Same as Economics 027 and Environmental Studies 027)

(See under Economics for full description.)

BIOL 022 Introduction to Biological Research

An experimental research project will be carried out under the supervision of the Biology Department. It is expected that the student will spend 20 hours per week in the lab at a minimum, and a 10-page written report is required. This experience is intended for, but not limited to, first-year students and sophomores, and requires the permission of the instructor.
Prerequisites: Biology 101. Enrollment limit: 15.
Meeting time: mornings.
Cost to student: none.

THE DEPARTMENT

BIOL 025 History and Philosophy of Biology: The Galapagos Islands (Same as Philosophy 025)

(See under Philosophy for full description.)

BIOL 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Biology 493, 494.

CHEMISTRY

CHEM 011 Science for Kids (Same as Special 011)

Are you interested in teaching? Do you enjoy working with kids? Do you like to experiment with new things? Here is a chance for you to do all three! The aim of this Winter Study Project is to design a series of hands-on science workshops for elementary school children and their parents. Working in teams of 2-4, students spend the first two and a half weeks of Winter Study planning the workshops. This involves deciding on a focus for each workshop (based on the interests of the students involved) followed by choosing and designing experiments and presentations that will be suitable for fourth-grade children. On the third weekend of Winter Study (January 24, 25) we bring elementary school kids with their parents to Williams to participate in the workshops. You get a chance to see what goes into planning classroom demonstrations as well as a sense of what it's like to actually give a presentation. You find that kids at this age are great fun to work with because they are interested in just about everything and their enthusiasm is infectious. You also give the kids and their parents a chance to actually do some fun hands-on science experiments that they may not have seen before, and you are able to explain simple scientific concepts to them in a manner that won't be intimidating. It is a rewarding experience for all involved.
Evaluation will be based on participation in planning and running the workshops. Each group is expected to prepare a handout with descriptions of the experiments for the kids, parents, and teachers.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 25. You need not be a science major; all that is needed is enthusiasm.
Meeting time: mornings; 3 three-hour sessions per week. The workshop is run on the third weekend of Winter Study (January 24, 25) and attendance from 9a.m. to 3p.m. is mandatory that weekend. There are also one or two brief meetings held in the fall term for preliminary planning.
Cost to student: none.

BINGEMANN and SCHOFIELD

CHEM 012 Learning and Teaching Chemistry in Spanish (Same as Spanish 014)

This course is designed for to students interested in taking courses in chemistry or physical sciences in a Spanish speaking country. Also, it targets students interested in teaching science in high school with predominant Hispanic population. Depending on language fluency, the class is divided into subgroups, and topics in chemistry are assigned. After the first week, each group is responsible for short presentations and short reports. During the last week, each group discusses a complete chemistry unit. This course uses the Spanish translation of "Chemistry'' by Professor Raymond Chang and readings from Scientific American. The course emphasizes on class planning, preparation and presentation as well as the use of multimedia.
Evaluation will be based on class participation, presentations and a final 10-page paper.
Prerequisites: at least intermediate Spanish fluency is required; any science background will be helpful but not required. Enrollment limit: 16.
Meeting time: afternoons; 3 two-hour sessions per week.
Cost to student: $100 for textbook and copied materials.

PEACOCK-LÓPEZ

CHEM 013 Molecular Medicine, from Bench to Bedside (Same as Biology 016)

This course offers a novel opportunity for advanced undergraduates (intent upon graduate study in molecular biology or medicine) to engage thought leaders involved in the development of target-specific monoclonal antibodies and clinicians utilizing anticytokine therapies in the treatment of immune-mediated disease. Classroom review of new developments in molecular medicine is followed by visits to corporations involved in the design/manufacture of biologics (Biogen, Amgen, Abbott and Centocor have been contacted). Opportunities for clinical observation (outpatient infusion therapy for inflammatory polyarthritis) will be available in the offices of Berkshire Rheumatology Associates.
Evaluation is based upon participation in didactic, clinical and industry sessions, in addition to the preparation of a research paper which emphasizes the regulatory and investigative efforts involved in bringing molecular therapeutics from bench to bedside.
Prerequisites: Biochemistry (cellular biology and molecular immunology are recommended, but not required). Enrollment limit: 10.
Meeting time: afternoons; 2 two-hour didactic sessions per week; half-day clinical sessions will be arranged for students interested in office-based infusion, with opportunities to engage patients in discussion of rheumatologic disease. A minimum of two full-day roadtrips, featuring discussion with scientific directors and members of the research teams of prominent biopharmaceutical companies, are required of course participants.
Cost to student: $50 for reading materials.

JONATHAN D. KRANT, M.D. (Instructor)
PEACOCK-LÓPEZ (Sponsor)

Jonathan Krant is an Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Massachusetts, and runs the teaching program in rheumatology at Berkshire Medical Center. He is a board-certified rheumatologist, and performed post-graduate residency and fellowship training at Yale, Dartmouth and UCSF. Dr. Krant lives on a farm in South Williamstown.

CHEM 014 Emergency Medical Technician-Basic

A course designed to prepare students for the Massachusetts EMT exam and to provide training to become certified as an Emergency Medical Technician. The course teaches the new national standard curriculum which makes reciprocity with many other states possible. This is a time-intensive course involving approximately 130 hours of class time plus optional emergency room observation and ambulance work. Students will learn, among other skills, basic life support techniques, patient assessment techniques, defibrillation, how to use an epi-pen, safe transportation and immobilization skills, as well as the treatment of various medical emergencies including shock, bleeding, soft-tissue injuries, and child birth. In order to reduce the number of class meetings required during Winter Study Period, the course will hold a few meetings beginning in the fall semester. These class meetings, which are mandatory, with the following schedule: 1 November (orientation), 2 November, 15 November, 16 November, and 30 November.
Evaluation will be based on class participation and performance on class exams, quizzes and practical exercises.
Prerequisites: it is recommended that students have American Heart Association Level C BLS Provider CPR Cards or American Red Cross BLS provider CPR cards before entering the EMT Class. A CPR class will be offered in October for those students wishing to take the EMT class who don't already have CPR cards. Enrollment limit: 24.
Meeting time: mornings and afternoons; schedule TBA in October.
Cost to student: $350/student plus approximately $75 for textbook.

KEVIN GARVEY (Instructor)
L. PARK (Sponsor)

Kevin Garvey is a Massachusetts state and nationally approved EMT-I (Intermediate) and an EMT-IC (Instructor/Coordinator). He had been involved with Emergency Medical Services for 15-20 years. Mr. Garvey currently works for Baystate Health Systems as an RN (registered nurse) and EMT-I and also works as an EMT-I for Village Ambulance in Williamstown. Mr. Garvey is also an EMT training instructor at Greenfield Community College.

CHEM 015 Materials of the Artist: Uncovering Fakes and Forgeries (Same as ArtH 015 and ArtS 015)

Many artists' materials (in the form of support, pigments, coatings, and binding media) existed in very specific times throughout history. Knowing this, we can create a timeline and begin to date art objects by examining their material and how each object was manufactured. In this class, we choose an object of questionable authenticity and immerse ourselves in it. For example, a painting of questionable authenticity will have the pigments analyzed, the media analyzed, an x-ray will be taken, showing the paint strokes and method of application. In some cases, a technique called an infrared reflectography will be utilized to view the underdrawing-the artist (or forgers) original sketches. Visual examinations combined with sophisticated analytical instrumentation will be used to identify the materials of the object and its method of manufacture. Instruments may include: x-ray fluorescence analysis, Fourier transform infrared spectrometer, x-ray diffraction, gas chromatography, and scanning electron microscope. All classes will be held at either the Williamstown Conservation Center under the direction of the analytical chemist and conservator, or in the Bronfman Science Center.
Evaluation will be based upon class participation and a 10-page final paper.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 10.
Meeting time: mornings; 2 three-hour sessions per week.
Cost to student: $20 for reading materials.

KATE DUFFY (Instructor)
LOVETT (Sponsor)

Kate Duffy is Department Head of Analytical Services at the Williamstown Art Conservation Center.

CHEM 016 Glass and Glassblowing

This course provides an introduction to both a theoretical consideration of the glassy state of matter and the practical manipulation of glass. We do flameworking with hand torches for at least 12 hours per week. While no previous experience is required, students with patience, good hand-eye coordination, and creative imagination will find the course most rewarding. The class is open to both artistically and scientifically oriented students.
Evaluation will be based on class participation, exhibition of glass projects, a 10-page paper, and a presentation to the class.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 10. Preference given to juniors and sophomores. Interested students should contact Professor Thoman by e-mail prior to registration.
Meeting time: mornings; five days per week.
Cost to student: $50 for supplies.

THOMAN

CHEM 018 Introduction to Research in Biochemistry

An independent experimental project in biochemistry is carried out in collaboration with a member of the Department with expertise in biochemistry. Biochemistry is a branch of chemistry that deals with the molecular details of living systems including the interaction of biologically important molecules. In the Chemistry Department, studies are underway to investigate the structure/function relationship of proteins, the interaction between proteins and RNA and DNA, DNA structure and repair, and the molecular basis of gene regulation.
Requirements: a 10-page written report.
Prerequisites: variable, depending on the project (at least Chemistry 151) and permission of the Department. Since projects involve work in faculty research labs, interested students must consult with one or more of the faculty instructors listed below and with the Department Chair before electing this course. Non-science majors are invited to participate.
Enrollment limited to space in faculty research lab.
Meeting time: mornings.
Cost to student: none.

GEHRING, KAPLAN, and LOVETT

CHEM 019 Introduction to Research in Environmental Science (Same as Environmental Studies 020)

An independent experimental project in environmental science is carried out in collaboration with a member of the Department with expertise in environmental science. Current research projects include studies of atmospheric chemistry related to global warming and acid deposition, heavy metals in the local environment, and further development of laboratory techniques for Environmental Studies 102 (Introduction to Environmental Science).
Requirements: a 10-page written report.
Prerequisites: a one-semester science course and permission of the Department. Since projects involve work in faculty research labs, interested students must consult with one or more of the faculty instructors listed below and with the Department Chair before electing this course. Non-science majors are invited to participate.
Enrollment limited to space in faculty research lab.

Meeting time: mornings.
Cost to student: none.

THOMAN

CHEM 020 Introduction to Research in Inorganic Chemistry

An independent experimental project in inorganic chemistry is carried out in collaboration with a member of the Department with expertise in inorganic chemistry. Opportunities for research in inorganic chemistry at Williams include the study of transition metals in biological systems (enzymes, proteins), and as building blocks for new materials with interesting electronic (magnetic, conducting) and optical properties. Students working in this area will gain expertise in the synthesis of new compounds and their characterization by modern spectroscopic techniques.
Requirements: a 10-page written report.
Prerequisites: variable, depending on the project (at least Chemistry 101) and permission of the Department. Since projects involve work in faculty research labs, interested students must consult with one or more of the faculty instructors listed below and with the Department Chair before electing this course. Non-science majors are invited to participate.
Enrollment limited to space in faculty research labs.
Meeting time: mornings.
Cost to student: none.

L. PARK and SCHOFIELD

CHEM 023 Introduction to Research in Organic Chemistry

An independent experimental project in organic chemistry is carried out in collaboration with a member of the Department with expertise in organic chemistry. One representative project involves isolation of the bioactive constituents of Southeast Asian dart poisons from their natural sources and the elucidation of their three-dimensional structures. Another line of investigation probes new and efficient methods for the creation of molecules of medicinal interest. Some targets include the kavalactones-the active principles of the herbal extract KAVA KAVA which is promoted as an alternative anti-anxiety remedy, and octalactin A-an interesting 8-membered ring compound isolated from marine microorganisms that has shown significant toxicity toward human cancer cells.
Requirements: a 10-page written report.
Prerequisites: variable, depending on the project (at least Chemistry 151) and permission of the Department. Since projects involve work in faculty research labs, interested students must consult with one or more of the faculty instructors listed below and with the Department Chair before electing this course. Non-science majors are invited to participate.
Enrollment limited to space in faculty research labs.
Meeting time: mornings.
Cost to student: none.

MARKGRAF and T. SMITH

CHEM 024 Introduction to Research in Physical Chemistry

An independent experimental project in physical chemistry is carried out in collaboration with a member of the Department with expertise in physical chemistry. Current research projects in the Department include computer modeling of non-linear, chaotic chemical and biochemical systems, molecular modeling of water clusters, laser spectroscopy of chlorofluorocarbon substitutes, and experimental studies of the oxidation of sulfur dioxide on atmospheric aerosols.
Requirements: a 10-page written report.
Prerequisites: variable, depending on the project (at least Chemistry 151) and permission of the Department. Since projects involve work in faculty research labs, interested students must consult with one or more of the faculty instructors listed below and with the Department Chair before electing this course. Non-science majors are invited to participate.
Enrollment limited to space in faculty research labs.
Meeting time: mornings.
Cost to student: none.

BINGEMANN, PEACOCK-LÓPEZ, and THOMAN

CHEM 025 Archaeological Excavation at the Paleolithic Site of Attirampakkam, India (Same as Anthropology 025)

This course will travel to Attirampakkan, a site in Southern India that has so far yielded well-preserved cultural artifacts of Lower, Middle and Upper Paleolithic deposits, including an Acheulian living floor and animal footprints in association with artifacts. Excavations at the site are sponsored by Earthwatch, which specializes in sending talented and interested amateurs to help professional scientists. It is one of relatively few opportunities for Williams students to participate in professional archaeological research. The excavating season is January and February, making it ideal for a Winter Study trip.
The vast majority of human prehistory studies have focussed either on Africa or Europe. While there have been occasional investigations in the Indian subcontinent (the first stone tool was found by a British geologist in 1863), systematic studies have only been started in the last 10 years. The goal of the project, of which Attirampakkan is a major part, is to build up a picture of the region in prehistory that will allow paleoanthropologists to test models of hominid behavioral strategies. One question is whether these are affected by climate change in ways also seen in other parts of the world.
When students return to campus after the holidays, we will spend several days in orientation activities related both to the site itself and to the practical aspects of field archaeology. They will spend approximately two weeks, plus travel, on site and return to Williamstown to write up the results of their work. While on site they will participate in all aspects of excavation including digging, cleaning artifacts, curating them and analyzing collections. Dr. Shanti Pappu, the archaeologist on this site, will lead discussions on Indian prehistory to supplement the earlier references. Students will keep a daily journal as well as a field notebook. Potential analyses include determining the appropriate attribution of material to a given Paleolithic period, correlating artifacts with possible sources of raw material, and interpreting the geology of the site in terms of climate change. However the primary result for students is the knowledge of what `real' archaeologists do.
Enrollment limit: 6.
Cost to student: approximately $3300 (includes airfare).

ANNE SKINNER (Instructor)
L. PARK (Sponsor)

Dr. Skinner's research is in applications of chemistry to archaeology and paleoanthropology. Her primary interest is dating fossil material. She has previous excavation experience, as well as a research background in paleoanthropology.

CHEM 031 Senior Research and Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Chemistry 493, 494.

CLASSICS

CLAS 010 Sappho's Poetry in Greek: Eros the Sweet-Bitter (Same as Comparative Literature 013 and Women's and Gender Studies 010)

Sappho of Lesbos (early 6th century bce) enjoys a privileged status in almost any history of sexuality or history of love poetry. Although only a small portion of her large poetic corpus has survived to us, we have retrieved enough to appreciate why Plato called Sappho "the tenth Muse" and why Solon, the great Athenian lawgiver who was himself a poet, responded to one of Sappho's poems upon hearing it for the first time: "Let me hear it again so that I may learn it and die." Readers of English translations respond to Sappho's poetry with similar enthusiasm, but no translation can fully capture the effects of her word choice, word order, syntactic shifts, sounds and rhythms. No translation can convey the passion, or the restraint, of her every poetic gesture in Greek. This course is intended for students who do not know any ancient Greek but who would like to read Sappho's poetry in Greek. We will not pretend to "learn Greek" in a month. Rather, this course will provide an introduction to Aeolic Greek, the dialect in which Sappho composed her poems. Through a specially prepared set of lessons, students will learn the Greek alphabet (really very easy) and just enough grammar, syntax, and vocabulary to read closely a selection of Sappho's poetry in Greek and to discuss problems of translation. (Sappho's syntax is unusually straightforward, even simple, so students need not worry about having to learn Greek's complex constructions.) We will also explore the dynamics of eros in her poetry and consider questions that this poetry, and its original occasions for performance, raise for the histories of not only sexuality and love poetry but even the education of young women and men.
Requirements: attendance at all classes, short quizzes on grammar and vocabulary, and preparing and presenting to one another translations and critical discussions of several poems and a number of fragments.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 12. Preference given to majors (or intended majors) in Comparative Literature, English, foreign languages (including Latin but not Greek), and Women's and Gender Studies.
Meeting time: mornings, 4 times a week for one and a half to two hours per session.
Cost to student: $15 or less.

HOPPIN

CLAS 011 Writing With Wedges II: Introduction to Sumerian

The war with Iraq and the recent looting of the antiquities museum in Baghdad make the study of ancient Mesopotamian culture all the more pressing. This course will present an introduction to the Sumerian language in the context of its ancient Mesopotamian culture, and to cuneiform, the world's first writing system. Sumerian, which is not related to any other language, ancient or modern, provides a unique opportunity to study the way language works. The writing system, which was invented by Sumerian speakers around 4000 BCE and later adapted to different languages, was used for more than three millennia and is preserved on thousands of clay tablets and stone monuments in museums around the world. In this course we will learn the basics of the language and read original documents (including some in the Williams Art Museum) and become familiar with the history and the material culture of the region, which has long been known as the "Cradle of Western Civilization."
Requirements: weekly assignments from a language textbook and one 4- to 5-page research paper. This course presents an in-depth exploration of a topic touched on in Writing With Wedges: Language and Literature of Mesopotamia (2003); it is appropriate both for students who took that course and students who are new to the subject.
Prerequisites: love of language and an affinity for puzzles. Enrollment limit: 12.
Meeting time: afternoons, six hours a week (3 two-hour sessions).
Cost to student: $45 for textbook.

SALLY MOREN FREEDMAN (Instructor)
KRAUS (Sponsor)

Sally Moren Freedman received her Ph.D. in Assyriology in 1977 from the University of Pennsylvania and continued at the university as a research associate in the Babylonian section of the University Museum while lecturing in the Oriental Studies Department. She went on to teach Old Testament Studies at Princeton Theological Seminary.

CLAS 031 Senior Thesis

May be taken by students registered for Classics 493, 494.

COMPARATIVE LITERATURE

COMP 010 Living by Words: Surviving