About the Music Department Music Department Newsletter 104 Morrison Hall # 1200, Berkeley, CA 94720-1200 Phone: 510.642.2678 - Fax: 510.642.8480 - music@uclink.berkeley.edu people | classes | friends | calendar | performing | degree programs | collections | UC Berkeley Music Library L & S HomePage | UC Berkeley HomePage | Campus Map ...
ls.berkeley.edu/dept/music/dept.html
Department of South and Southeast Asian Studies University of California, Berkeley 7233 Dwinelle Hall 510-642-4564 General Questions 510-642-4564 casmaoff@socrates.berkeley.edu Departmental Staff Lee Amazonas Graduate & Undergraduate Student Affairs Officer 510-642-4219 casmauga@socrates.berkeley.edu Susan Pulliam Manager/Business Officer 510-642-4565 spulliam@uclink.berkeley.edu Bronwen ...
ls.berkeley.edu/dept/sseas
The Department of Rhetoric is a leading center for interdisciplinary research and teaching in the humanities and social sciences. Linked by a common interest in the functions of discourse in all its forms, faculty and students engage the theoretical, historical, and cultural dimensions of intepretation and criticism, in fields as diverse as political theory, gender, law, media studies, ...
rhetoric.berkeley.edu/index.html
Who we are: We study and teach the languages, literature, and cultures of Russian, other Slavic peoples, and their neighbors in Europe and Western Asia. The Slavs and their neighbors have been at the forefront of cultural developments in the past and they are now at the center of ongoing, profound cultural and political change. Courses on literature and culture: Most courses on literature and ...
ls.berkeley.edu/dept/slavic/index.html
Chair: Susanna Elm Graduate Advisor: Ronald S. Stroud Student Affairs Officer: Janet Yonan 7303 Dwinelle Hall Univ. of California Berkeley, CA 94720 (510) 643-8741 (office) (510) 643-2959 (fax) last revised: 10/03/01 ...
ls.berkeley.edu/dept/ahma
The Department and Programs Language Program Undergraduate Program Graduate Program Scandinavian at Berkeley Although, taken singly, the Scandinavian countries are relatively small in population (Sweden at 8.5 million; Denmark at 5 million; Norway at 4 million; Iceland at 250, 000), they form as a whole a common linguistic and cultural community of some size. With the exception of Icelandic (a ...
socrates.berkeley.edu/~scanweb/deptinfo.html