Catalog of North Texas State University: 1982-1983, Undergraduate Page: 80
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80/Mathematics
451. Newspaper Management, Problems
and Ethics. 3 hours. Ethical, financial
problems in editing and managing a newspa-
per; press freedom, ethics and law;
newspaper financing, cost of publication,
accounting, plant management, cir-
culation. Prerequisite: Journalism 231, 232.
462. Law of the Press. 3 hours.
Laws governing newspapers; civil, criminal
law; news as property; regulatory
provision of state and federal statutes.
470. Staff Photography. 3 hours.
Students assigned to positions on publica-
tions staff; professional camera
equipment, processing techniques, shoot-
ing methods. Laboratory hours
fluctuate to fit times of events to be
photographed and publications
deadlines. Prerequisite: Journalism 270,
370. Lab fee $5.00.
472. Critical Writing for Newspapers.
3 hours. Reviewing plays, music, art,
books and similar art forms. Prerequisite:
Journalism 231, 232, or consent of
the department. Offered in alternate years.
475. Color Press Photography. 3 hours
(3;3). Personalized instruction in
color photography for publications.
Students will shoot and process trans-
parencies and negatives and produce
prints from both processes. Empha-
sis is placed on magazine and newspaper
photographs. Students will purchase
own supplies. Prerequisite: Journalism 370
or consent of department.
482. History of American Journalism.
3 hours. Main trends, economic,
social, political factors and people that
produced the American newspaper.
One major research project.
485. Magazine Production: 3 hours.
History of American magazines; production
sequence of a publication, composi-
tion and printing methods, layout problems,
writing to fit, cost-quality factors,
rewrite, copyreading, styling, writing, titles,
blurbs, captions, fitting galleys into
layouts. Prerequisite: Journalism 270, 332
or consent of the department.
486. Magazine Editing and Management.
3 hours. Principles, philosophy and
practice of magazine editing. Functions of
the editor, including management of
the editorial staff, working with free-lance
writers, photographers and illustra-
tors, management of editorial and produc-
tion systems, budgeting, coordination
of editorial with business, circulation
and advertising functions. Students serve
as editors of magazines produced
by the class. Prerequisite: Journalism 332,
485, or consent of the department.487. Writing for Magazines. 3 hours. An
advanced non-fiction writing course
in which students learn to create article
ideas, research and write magazine-
length articles and submit them for
publication as free-lance authors.
Includes theory of readability, adaptation of
fiction techniques to nonfiction,
organization of material, survey of the
magazine market, querying, dealing
with editors. Attention to in-depth newspa-
per articles. Prerequisite: Journalism
331, or consent of the department.
490-491. Special Problems. 1-3
hours each.
Graduate Courses
500. The Business Press. 3 hours.
505. Readings in Mass Communication.
3 hours.
510. Case Problems in Public Relations.
3 hours.
515. International Mass Communication.
3 hours.
520. Public Opinion and Propaganda.
3 hours.
525. Research Methods in Mass Com-
munication. 3 hours.
530. Theories of Mass Communica-
tion. 3 hours.
540. Studies in the Mass Media. 3 hours.
547. Political Broadcasting. 3 hours.
550. Advertising Studies. 3 hours.
580. Professional Internship. 3 hours.
590-591. Advanced Problems in
Journalism. 1-3 hours each.
592-593. Research Problems in
Lieu of Thesis. 1-3 hours each.
595. Thesis. 6 hours.
Library and
Information
Sciences
Main Office ISB 205
The Bachelor of Arts with a major in
library and information science is
offered through the College of Arts and
Sciences. This is a double major
program of at least 124 semester hours.
Students must complete a first major
of at least 24 hours in the School of Library
and Information Sciences and a
second major of at least 24 hours in a field
of their choice in the College of Arts
and Sciences through which the degree is
awarded. Students must additionally
complete a minor of at least 12 hours in a
subject field other than the first
major and the second major. The overall
program must include at least 100
hours outside the first major field, with at
least 75 hours being in the arts and
sciences.Required courses for the first
major in library and information science
include LIBR 301, 310, 400 and 441,
plus 12 additional elective hours in the
field. For program requirements and
course descriptions in the field, see the
School of Library and Information
Sciences section, pp. 153-155.
Department of
Mathematics
Main Departmental Office GAB 418
Associate Professor
and Chairman Allen
Professors Appling, Bilyeu, Connor,
Dawson, Kallman, Lewis, Mauldin,
Mohat, Neuberger, Parrish, Vaughn;
Associate Professors Garner, Hagan,
Nunley, Vest; Assistant Professors
Kung, Maher, Schuchman, Simmons
The department stresses the training of
professional mathematicians and
mathematics teachers and the preparation
of students for further study in
science, engineering, industry, and
business.
Students who plan to major in mathemat-
ics, physics, chemistry, biology, or
computer sciences should have had four
years of mathematics in high school,
including trigonometry. Students who will
be required to take mathematics as
part of their degree program in college
should have had at least two years.
of algebra and one year of geometry in
high school.
All students planning to take a mathemat-
ics course at NTSU for the first time must
obtain departmental counsel and a
course recommendation on the day prior to
registration in order to avoid delays
in registration. Mathematics majors should
confer with the chairman of the
department to be assigned a permanent
faculty advisor.
Students planning to minor in mathemat-
ics should consult the chairman of
the mathematics department. A first minor
usually includes 171, 172, 270, 273,
plus six advanced hours. Mathematics 311,
312, 314, 315, 319 and 320 should
not be included in the minor, except for
elementary education majors.
Bachelor's degree candidates in mathe-
matics must present a 2.0 grade
point average on all mathematics courses
numbered above 320.
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North Texas State University. Catalog of North Texas State University: 1982-1983, Undergraduate, book, May 1982; Denton, Texas. (https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc799596/m1/82/?q=%22Department+of+English%22: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, UNT Digital Library, https://digital.library.unt.edu; .