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Show 32 TENTH ANNUAL REPORT with America; Goldsmith; Vicar or Wakefield; Lowell; Vision of Sir Launfal. English III. Open to those who have completed English II. A careful study will be made of the following: Macaulay; Essays on Milton and on Addison; Milton, Paradise Lost, books I and II; Addison, Sir Roger de Coverly Papers; Dryden, Palamon and Arcite; Pope, Homer's Iliad, books I, VI, XXII, and XXIV. POLITICAL SCIENCE. W. H. LYON. CIVIL GOVERNMENT. Civil Government is prescribed in third year Normal and second year Literary; three recitations per week during the first half year. The object of this course is the study of the origin and development of American institutionsfederal, state and local. The Constitutions of the United States and of Utah are studied. Lectures, recitations and debates. Fiske's Civil Government. POLITICAL ECONOMY. The principles underlying the production, exchange, distribution and consumption of wealth are discussed. Recitations, discussions, and supplementary reading. Walker's Political Economy. EDUCATION AND PHYSICAL CULTURE. MISS RUTH EYELYN MOENCH. ELOCUTION. In this branch instruction will be given upon the general principles of expression, the education and training of the voice and body in order to meet the highest requirements of the art. WEBER STAKE ACADEMY. 33 Criticals will be held once a week to make the work of voice and body culture as practical and as thorough as possible. PHYSICAL CULTURE. In physical culture every effort will be made to produce a symmetrical development of the body without the use of apparatus. The course will embrace German and Swedish gymnastics, fencing, the use of Indian clubs, together with military and aesthetic drills. The design is the complete and harmonious development of the body which has been so much neglected, in our schools in times past. |