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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.

1925 August Günther, Ph.D., Studienrat, Reformgymnasium; Südendstr. 3, St. Ingbert (Saarland), Germany; Baltic, Coptic. 1930 Walter W. Gustafson, Ph.D., Head of English Dept., Upsala College, East Orange, N. J.; English, German, Swedish. 1934 Mary R. Haas (Mrs. Morris Swadesh), Ph.D., Institute of Human Relations, Yale University; Room 250, 333 Cedar St., New Haven, Conn.; general linguistics, American Indian languages.

FM Luise Haessler, Ph.D., Professor of German and Head of Dept., 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., Associate Professor of Latin and Greek, 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.; IndoIranian, 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 Hebrew, University of Pennsylvania; 5601 Diamond St., Philadelphia, Pa.; comparative lingustics.

1935 Clarence Edgar Heffelfinger, M.S., Instructor in English, Washington and Jefferson College, Washington, Pa.

1926 Roe-Merrill Secrist Heffner, Ph.D., Instructor in German, Harvard University; 27 Pinehurst Road, Belmont, Mass.

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

1935 Alice Hermes, M.A., teacher of English, Jamaica High School, Jamaica, L. I.; 259 W. 71st St., New York City.

1935 Margaret C. Herr, A.M., 416 S. Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne, Pa.; Latin.

1931 George Herzog, Ph.D., Institute of Human Relations, Yale University, New Haven, Conn.; American Indian and African languages.

1926 Joseph William Hewitt, Ph.D., Professor of Classics and Dean of Freshmen, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. 1928 Archibald A. Hill, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English, University of Virginia; Box 1, University, Va.

1926 Raymond Thompson Hill, Ph.D., Associate Professor of French, Yale University; 1091 Yale Station, New Haven, Conn.; Mediaeval Latin and Romance linguistics.

1931 Henry B. Hinckley, care of B. B. Hinckley, 32 Barret Place, Northampton, Mass.

1934 L. E. Hinkle, Professor of Modern Languages, State College of Agriculture and Engineering; State College Station, Raleigh, N. C.; general 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; 8 Knud Rasmussenvej, Aarhus, Denmark.

1929 Rev. Michael Martin Hlavčák, M.A., St. Vincent Archabbey, Latrobe, Pa.; classical and Slavic languages, and Hebrew. 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.

1931 Abraham Holtz, 1980 86th St., New York City.

1936 Hirsch Hookins, Ph.D., Instructor in Romanic Languages, Uni

versity 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 Harri-
son Ave., Highland Park, N. J.; classical languages.
Hartley Howard, Ph.D., Fellow in Linguistics, University of
Chicago; 5725 Woodland Ave., Chicago, Ill.; Latin.

1934

1931 Félix Howland, care of John H. Austin Esq., 1815 Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa.; modern Iranian 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.

FM Archer M. Huntington, Author; 1 E. 89th St., New York City. Benefactor, 1927.

1926 Stephen A. Hurlbut, St. Alban's School, Washington, D. C.; Latin and Greek.

FM William A. Hurwitz, Ph.D., Teacher of Languages, West Philadelphia High School; 4701 Wayne Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 1926 Henry Hyvernat, S.T.D., Professor of Semitic Languages and Literatures, Catholic University of America; 3405 12th St. N. E., Washington, D. C.

FM

Sanki Ichikawa, Professor of English, Tokyo Imperial University; 25 Kitayamabushicho, Ushigome, Tokyo, Japan. 1935 Samuel Anthon Ives, A.B., 547 Riverside Drive, New York City; mediaeval and modern Greek.

1929 Jess Hamilton Jackson, Ph.D., Professor of English and Head of Dept., The College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Va.; English and Scandinavian languages.

FM Cary F. Jacob, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Spoken English, Smith College; 69 Prospect St., Northampton, Mass. 1936 Hadley Powell Jacobs, B.A., Instructor in History, Hartford College, Oxford; Strathnor, Strathairn Ave., Half-way Tree P.O., Jamaica; Germanic and creole languages.

1928

1929

1929

Melville Jacobs, Ph.D., Instructor in Anthropology, University
of Washington, Seattle, Wash.; American Indian languages.
Russell P. Jameson, Professor of French and Italian and Head
of Dept., Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio.

Edwin Lee Johnson, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Latin and
Greek, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.; Latin and
Greek etymology.

1936 Oscar E. Johnson, Ph.D., Associate in English, University of Iowa; 1209 E. Davenport St., Iowa City, Iowa; philosophy of

grammar.

1934 Maro Beath Jones, address unknown.

1936 Martin Joos, M.A., Assistant in German, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis.; systematic synchronic linguistics.

1935 Lloyd A. W. Kasten, Ph.D., Instructor in Spanish, University of Wisconsin; Bascom Hall, Madison, Wis.

1935 Alfred Paul Kehlenbeck, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Modern Languages, Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa; German linguistics, Low German dialects.

FM May Lansfield Keller, Ph.D., Professer of the English Language, Westhampton College, University of Richmond, Va.

1925 George Dwight Kellogg, Ph.D., Professor of Latin, Union College, Schenectady, New York.

FM Robert James Kellogg, Ph.D., 415 S. Cedar St., Ottawa, Kas.; Hittite.

1928 Hayward Keniston, Ph.D., Professor of the Spanish Language, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.

FM Arthur G. Kennedy, Ph.D., Professor of English Philology,

Stanford University; 435 Coleridge Ave., Palo Alto, Calif. SC Roland G. Kent, Ph.D., Professor of Comparative Philology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.; general linguistics, Latin, Old Persian. Life Member 1927.

1935 Mrs. Roland G. Kent (Gertrude Hall), A.B., 204 St. Mark's Sq., Philadelphia, Pa.; Latin.

1929 John Samuel Kenyon, Ph.D., Professor of the English Language, Hiram College, Hiram, Ohio.

1930 John Kepke, M.A., 224 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y.: Germanic languages. Life Member 1935.

FM J. Alexander Kerns, Ph.D., Instructor in Classics, Room 644, Washington Square College, New York University, Washington Square East, New York City; Indo-European and Semitic verb-morphology.

1935 Carl W. Kinkeldey, Assistant Professor of German, City College, 139th St. and Convent Ave., New York City.

1936 Bodo Jonny Kirchhoff, M.A., graduate student in the German Dept., University of Southern California, Los Angeles, Calif.; English and Germanic linguistics.

FM Eugene Klein, 200 South 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa.; Hungarian.

1931 Dorothy E. Kleinfelter, B.A., Teacher of Latin, Palmyra High School; 417 East Main St., Palmyra, Pa.

1927 James A. Kleist, Ph.D., Professor of Classical Languages, St. Louis University, Grand and Pine Blvds., St. Louis, Mo. FM Charles Knapp, Ph.D., Professor of Greek and Latin, Columbia University; 1737 Sedgwick Ave., New York City. Died Sept. 17, 1936.

1926 Thomas A. Knott, Ph.D., Professor of English and Editor of the Middle English Dictionary, University of Michigan; 1103 Ferdon Rd., Ann Arbor, Mich.

1933 Charles A. Knudson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of French, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.

1935 Atsuo Kobayashi, M.A., Assistant Professor of Linguistics and

English Philology, Faculty of Letters, Tohoku Imperial Uni

versity, Sendai, Japan; philosophy of language, history of linguistic thought.

1933 Alice E. Kober, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Classics, Brooklyn College; 901 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.

FM Selma S. König, Ph.D., Professor of Modern Languages, Peru State Teachers' College; Campus, Peru, Neb.; comparative linguistics.

1935 Heinrich Ludwig Koppelmann, Ph.D., Teacher of German in the Dutch High School; Lawoestr. 11a, Malang, Netherland Indies; general linguistics.

1932 William Charles Korfmacher, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Classical Languages, St. Louis University; 4548A Alice Ave., St. Louis, Mo.

FM Franklin Brunell Krauss, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Latin, The Pennsylvania State College; State College, Pa.

SC Alfred L. Kroeber, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, Calif.; American Indian languages. 1926 Samuel Kroesch, Ph.D., Professor of German and Head of Department, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 1936 Sherman McAllister Kuhn, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English, Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College; 214 West St., Stillwater, Okla.; English linguistics.

1932 Katharine E. Kümmerle, Ph.D., First Assistant in Modern Languages, Walton High School, New York City; 91 Vernon Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y.; metrics.

FM

Hans Kurath, Ph.D., Professor of German and General Linguis

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