Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

FM Joseph Dunn, Ph.D., Professor of Celtic Languages and Lecturer in Romance Languages, Catholic University of America; 206 Park St., New Haven, Conn.

1936 Frederick George Dyas Jr., B.A., Cheshire Academy, Cheshire, Conn.; Old Spanish.

1934 Isidore Dyen, A.M., 3025 West Berks St., Philadelphia, Pa.; Indo-European linguistics.

1927 Helen S. Eaton, Linguistic Research Assistant of the International Auxiliary Language Association; 44 West Tenth St., New York City; minimum vocabularies and frequency lists in major European languages.

1934 John M. Echols, M.A., 511 Seventeenth St., University, Va.; comparative linguistics.

SC Franklin Edgerton, Ph.D., Salisbury Professor of Sanskrit and Comparative Philology, Yale University; 174 Blake Road, Hamden, Conn.

1938 William F. Edgerton, Ph.D., Professor of Egyptology, Oriental Institute, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.

1930 Stefán Einarsson, Ph.D., Associate in English, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.

1936 Norman E. Eliason, Ph.D., Acting Professor of English, University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla.

1934 Serge Elisséeff, Director of the Harvard-Yenching Institute and Professor of Far Eastern Languages in Harvard University; 17 Boylston Hall, Cambridge, Mass.

1928 Murray B. Emeneau, Ph.D., 1910 Yale Sta., New Haven, Conn.; Sanskrit, Dravidian.

1935 Bert Emsley, Ph.D., Asst. Professor of English, Ohio State University; 205 Derby Hall, Ohio State Univ., Columbus, Ohio. FM Boyd Ross Ewing Jr., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, Washington and Lee University; Box 62, Washington and Lee Univ., Lexington, Va.; Spanish.

1934 Paul-Louis Faye, Ph.D., Associate Professor of French, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo.; Old French syntax, psychology of language.

1937 Chauncey Edgar Finch, Ph.D., Instructor in Classical Languages, St. Louis University, St. Louis, Mo.; Sanskrit, Slavic. 1927 Edward Fitch, Ph.D., Emeritus Professor of Greek, Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y.

1938

SC

FM

1934

FM

FM

1931

1938

1935

Girdler B. Fitch, Ph.D., Instructor in Romance Languages,
Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.

George T. Flom, Ph.D., Professor of the Scandinavian Languages
and English Philology, University of Illinois; 611 W. Green
St., Urbana, Ill.

The Hon. Maynard D. Follin, formerly in the United States
Consular Service, Box 118, Detroit, Mich.; winter address,
Dunedin, Fla.; biblical exegesis.

J. D. M. Ford, Ph.D., Professor of the French and Spanish
Languages, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Frank H. Fowler, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Classical Liter-
ature, University of Arizona; Route 1, Box 482, Tucson, Ariz.;
Latin and Greek syntax.

Charles C. Fries, Ph.D., Professor of English, University of
Michigan; 7 Harvard Place, Ann Arbor, Mich.

Naoshiro Fukushima, Professor of Sanskrit, Imperial University
of Tokyo; 33 Hikawachō, Akasaka, Tokyo, Japan; Indo-
European comparative linguistics.

Anna Frieda Gamper, Ph.D., Professor of German, MacMurray
College, Jacksonville, Ill.

Miss Elizabeth F. Gardner, A.B., 5 Weehawken St., New York
City; general linguistics.

1938 Meredith Knox Gardner, M.A., Graduate Assistant in German, University of Wisconsin; University Club, Madison, Wis.;

semasiology.

FM Henry S. Gehman, Ph.D., Professor of Old Testament Litera

FM

1930

ture in Princeton Theological Seminary and Lecturer in Se-
mitic Languages at Princeton University; 60 Stockton St.,
Princeton, N. J.

Eugene A. Gellot, Artist, 149-46 117th St., Aqueduct, Long
Island, N. Y.

George H. Genzmer, M.A., Lecturer and Fellow in English, and Librarian, at Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, N. Y. 1930 John L. Gerig, Ph.D., Professor of Celtic, Columbia University; Philosophy Hall, Columbia Univ., New York City; Celtic and Romance linguistics.

1938 Albert W. Gerberich, Ph.D., Assoc. Professor of Modern Languages, Dickinson College; 36 W. Pomfret St., Carlisle, Pa.; Germanic linguistics.

1933 Martha Jane Gibson, Ph.D., Professor of English, Talladega College, Talladega, Ala.; American English.

FM Donald M. Gilbert, Ph.D., Professor of Modern Languages, Albion College; 506 N. Superior St., Albion, Mich.; Romance linguistics.

1938 Curt Rudolf Goedsche, Ph.D., Instructor in German, Northwestern University; 207 Fisk Hall, Evanston, Ill.

1926 Charles Goetsch, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Germanic Philology, University of Chicago; 404 Wieboldt Hall, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.

FM Solomon Goldman, A.B., D.H.L., Rabbi, 633 Waveland Ave., Lakeview Sta., Chicago, Ill.

1930 Leo Gosser, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Ala.; Teutonic etymology.

1934 Albrecht Götze, Ph.D., Laffan Professor of Assyriology and Babylonian Literature, Graduate School of Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

1928 Willem L. Graff, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Germanic Languages, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.

SC Louis Herbert Gray, Ph.D., Professor of Comparative Linguistics, Columbia University, New York City.

1926 Charles Grimm, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Romanic Languages, Williams College, Williamstown, Mass.

1927 John Flagg Gummere, Ph.D., Latin Master, William Penn Charter School, School Lane and Fox St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.; Romance linguistics.

1930 Walter W. Gustafson, Ph.D., Head of English Dept., Upsala College, East Orange, N. J.; English, German, Swedish.

1934 Mary R. Haas, Ph.D., Institute of Human Relations, Yale University, New Haven, Conn.; general linguistics, American Indian Languages. Life Member 1937.

1937 Ernest Faber Haden, Ph.D., Professor of French and Head of Dept., McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., Canada; phonetics.

FM Luise Haessler, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of German, Brooklyn College; 400 W. 119th St., New York City; Germanic and English linguistics.

1936 Sivert N. Hagen, Ph.D., Professor of English, Franklin and Marshall College; 558 W. Lemon St., Lancaster, Pa.; Germanic philology.

FM E. Adelaide Hahn, Ph.D., Professor of Latin and Greek and Head of Department, Hunter College; 640 Riverside Drive, New York City; Hittite, Latin, comparative syntax. Life Member 1935.

1932 Joseph Boyd Haley, Ph.D., Professor of Greek, Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va.; classical philology.

1935 Robert A. Hall Jr., Litt. D., Assistant Professor in Foreign Languages, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras, P. R.; Indo

Iranian, Romance, Finno-Ugrian.

1930 Nelius O. Halvorson, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English, Iowa State Teachers College, Cedar Falls, Iowa; Old English. 1930 Alfred Porter Hamilton, Ph.D., Head of Dept. of Ancient Languages, Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss.; semantics.

1929 Hollister Adelbert Hamilton, Ph.D., Professor of Classical Philology, Elmira College, Elmira, N. Y.

1929 Miles L. Hanley, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English, University of Wisconsin; Bascom Hall, Madison, Wis.

1929 Zellig S. Harris, Ph.D., Instructor in Oriental Studies, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.; general lingustics. 1937 Einar Ingvald Haugen, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Scandinavian Languages, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 1938 S. I. Hayakawa, Ph.D., Instructor in English, University of Wisconsin; Extension Building, Madison, Wis.; semantics. 1926 Roe-Merrill Secrist Heffner, Ph D., Bascom Hall, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis.; German.

1935 Otto William Heick, Ph.D., Clergyman, Ellis, Kansas; Hellenistic Greek.

1938 Laura E. Heminger, M.A., Instructor in English, Michigan State College, East Lansing, Mich.

1935 Alice Hermes, M.A., teacher of English, Jamaica High School, Jamaica, L. I.; 244 E. 15th St., New York City.

1935 Margaret W. Herr, Ph.D., 416 S. Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne, Pa.; Latin.

1938 J. Homer Herriott, Ph.D., Asst. Professor of Spanish, University of Wisconsin; Bascom Hall, Madison, Wis.

1931 George Herzog, Ph.D., Asst. Professor of Anthropology, Columbia University, New York City; American Indian and African languages.

1937 Richard Patrick Hickey, Ph.D., Head of Department of English, Rockhurst College; 5715 Brooklyn Ave., Kansas City, Mo.; Indo-European.

1928 Archibald A. Hill, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English, University of Virginia; Box 1, University, Va.

1938 Frank J. Hill, M.D., 863 Bank St., Waterbury, Conn.; Lithuanian. 1926 Raymond Thompson Hill, Ph.D., Associate Professor of French, Yale University; 1091 Yale Station, New Haven, Conn.; Mediaeval Latin and Romance linguistics.

1929 Lawrence S. Hitchcock, B.A., Headmaster of Los Alamos Ranch School, Otowi, New Mexico; classical languages.

1936 Louis Hjelmslev, Ph.D., Docent of Comparative Linguistics, University of Aarhus; Strandvej 227, Charlottenlund, Denmark.

1929 Rev. Michael Martin Hlavčák, M.A., St. Vincent Archabbey, Latrobe, Pa.; classical and Slavic languages, and Hebrew. 1938 Carleton Taylor Hodge, 915 S. First St., Springfield, Ill.; epigraphy.

1933 Harry Hoijer, Ph.D., Instructor in Anthropology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.; American Indian languages. 1936 Mrs. Leicester B. Holland (Louise Adams), Ph.D., 4203 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa.; Italic archaeology.

1931 Lee M. Hollander, Ph.D., Professor of Germanic Languages, University of Texas; 3204 West Ave., Austin, Tex.

FM Urban T. Holmes, Ph.D., Professor of French, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.

1936 Hirsch Hootkins, Ph.D., Instructor in Romanic Languages, University of Michigan; 715 Forest Ave., Apt. 409, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Indo-European and Semitic linguistics.

FM Mrs. Francis W. Hopkins (Grace Sturtevant), Ph.D., 221 Harrison Ave., Highland Park, N. J.; classical languages.

1937 Haruo Hosaka, Tokyo-Furitsu-Dai-7-Kotojogakko, Sakasai Itchome, Edogawa-ku, Tokyo, Japan.

1934 Hartley Howard, Ph.D., Box 105, Hyattsville, Md.; Latin. 1931 Félix Howland, Head of History Department, Tome School, Port Deposit, Md.; Persian dialects.

1930 Rev. Clement Louis Hrdlicka, Ph.D., Professor of Latin, St. Procopius College, Lisle, Ill.; patristic Latin.

FM Harry M. Hubbell, Ph.D., Talcott Professor of Greek, Yale University; 484 Yale Ave., New Haven, Conn.

1938 Vernam Edward Hull, Ph.D., Assoc. Editor of the Early Modern English Dictionary, University of Michigan; 1705 Hill St., Ann Arbor, Mich.; Celtic.

« ZurückWeiter »