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FM Americo Ulysses N. Camera, Ph.D., Professor of Romance Languages and Head of Department, Brooklyn College; 57 Willoughby St., Brooklyn, N. Y.

1927 Harry Caplan, Ph.D., Professor of Classics, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.

1925 Frederick Mason Carey, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Greek and Latin, University of California at Los Angeles; 405 Hilgard Ave., West Los Angeles, Calif.

1931 Alice Carlson, Ph.D., Docent in English Philology, University of Latvia; Reimersa Ielā 1, Dz. 9, Riga, Latvia.

1935 Joseph Médard Carrière, Ph.D., Instructor in Romance Languages, Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill.; French dialects in Canada and Louisiana.

1936 John B. Carroll, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn.; Greek. 1929 Clive H. Carruthers, Ph.D., Professor of Classical Philology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.

1931 K. Chattopadhyāya, Professor of Sanskrit, University of Allahabad, Allahabad, India; Vedic, Old Iranian.

FM Edith Frances Claflin, Ph.D., Lecturer in Greek and Latin in Columbia University; 418 W. 118th St., New York City; IndoEuropean linguistics.

1932 Charles Upson Clark, Ph.D., Professor of Languages and Director of the Summer School, City College, New York City. 1925 Walter Eugene Clark, Ph.D., Wales Professor of Sanskrit, Harvard University; 85 Dunster St., Cambridge, Mass.

1933 David L. Clendenin, B.A., Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. 1931 William Edward Collinson, Ph.D., Professor of German and Honorary Lecturer in Comparative Philology, University of Liverpool; 9 Bertram Road, Liverpool, England.

1927 Klara Hechtenberg Collitz (Mrs. Hermann Collitz), Ph.D., 1027 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md.; Germanic and Romance languages.

1936 Procope Sarantos Costas, Ph.D., 6200 University Ave., Chicago, Ill.; Greek and Latin.

FM Roberta Douglas Cornelius, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English, Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Lynchburg, Va.; Old and Middle English, Old French.

1927 Cornelia Catlin Coulter, Ph.D., Professor of Latin, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass.

FM

Hardin Craig, Ph.D., Professor of English, Stanford University,

1926 William Alexander Craigie, M.A. (Oxon.), Professor of English, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill; English and Scandinavian languages.

FM J. P. Wickersham Crawford, Ph.D., Professor of Romanic Languages, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. 1926 Edmund D. Cressman, Ph.D., Professor of Classics, University

of Denver; 2287 S. Columbine St., Denver, Colo.; semantics. 1927 Ephraim Cross, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, City College; 1840 Andrews Ave., Bronx, New York City; Romance languages, Dutch.

1926 George Oliver Curme, Ph.D., Emeritus Professor of Germanic. Philology, Northwestern University, and Lecturer on the same, University of Southern California; 515 Fifteenth St., Santa Monica, Calif.

1935 Leonora Frances Curtin, Acequia Madre, Santa Fe, N. M.; Spanish, Arabic phonetics.

1936 Jane E. Daddow, M.A., 1721 Mohantongo St., Pottsville, Pa.; student at the University of Giessen.

1933 A. Henry Dahlstrom, Ph.D., Professor of German, Heidelberg College; 81 Ohio Ave., Tiffin, Ohio.

1933 Henry A. Davidson, M.D., Physician and Psychiatrist; Box 53, Union, N. J.; linguistic psychology and sociology.

1929 Edward P. Davis, Ph.D., Professor of German and Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, Howard University, Washington, D. C.

1936 Rufus S. Day Jr., A.B., LL.B., Attorney-at-Law, 1503 Midland Building, Cleveland, Ohio; Indo-European.

FM Victor de Beaumont, Professor of the French Language and Literature, University of Toronto; 73 Queen's Park, Toronto, Canada.

1934 Harry A. Deferrari, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Romance Languages, Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C. FM Roy Joseph Deferrari, Ph.D., Professor of Latin and Greek and Dean of the Graduate School, Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C.

1936 Leah H. Dennis, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English, Alabama College, Montevallo, Ala.

FM Norman W. DeWitt, Ph.D., Professor of Latin Literature and Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Victoria College; Victoria University, Toronto 5, Canada.

1930 William F. Diller, A.M., 317 E. King St., Lancaster, Pa.; Latin.

1933 Charles J. Donahue, Ph.D., Instructor in English, Fordham University; 233 Broadway, New York City; English and Celtic. 1936 Witold Doroszewski, Ph.D., Professor of Polish, University of Wisconsin; 207 Pinckney St., Madison, Wis.

FM Henry Grattan Doyle, A.M., Professor of Romance Languages, The George Washington University, Washington, D. C.; Old French, Old Spanish.

1935 Joseph William Ducibella, Ph.D., Instructor in Italian and Spanish, Mt. St. Joseph College, West Hartford, Conn.

1931 Paul Emile Dumont, Ph.D., Professor of Sanskrit and Indology, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.

1932 Gertrude H. Dunham, Acting Professor of German, RandolphMacon Woman's College, Lynchburg, Va.

1936 Arthur Ray Dunlap, Ph.D., Instructor in English, University of Delaware; 6 Purnell Hall, Newark, Del.; Middle English, Indian place-names in Delaware.

FM Joseph Dunn, Ph.D., Professor of Celtic Languages and Lecturer in Romance Languages, Catholic University of America; 47 Vista Terrace, New Haven, Conn.

1936 Frederick George Dyas Jr., B.A., Instructor in Spanish and German, Roxbury School; 1750 Yale Sta., New Haven, 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, 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.

1930 Edward C. Ehrensperger, Ph.D., Professor of English and Head of Dept., University of South Dakota; 304 Canby St., Vermillion, S. D.

1928 Arthur G. Eichelberger, A.M., Instructor in Latin, Northeast High School; West Shawmont Ave., Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pa.

1930 Stefán Einarsson, Ph.D., Associate in English, The Johns Hop

kins University, Baltimore, Md.

1936 Norman E. Eliason, Ph.D., Instructor in English, Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind.; English, Scandinavian.

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., Fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies for Research in Dravidian Languages; care of Thos. Cook and Son, Bombay, India.

1935 Bert Emsley, Ph.D., Instructor in English, Ohio State University; 306 Derby Hall, Ohio State Univ., Columbus, Ohio.

FM Erwin A. Esper, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.

SC Aurelio M. Espinosa, Ph.D., Professor of Romance Languages, Stanford University, Calif.; Spanish.

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.

1934 Mrs. Eva Fiesel, Ph.D., Visiting Professor of Linguistics, Bryn Mawr College; Low Buildings, Bryn Mawr, Pa.; Etruscan. 1927 Edward Fitch, Ph.D., Professor of Greek, Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y.

1931 Eleanor Fleet (Mrs. Irvin Fleet), B.S., Teacher of Shorthand and Typewriting in Simon Gratz High School; Carl Mackley Houses, Apt. 252, M and Bristol Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.; Latin. 1931 Otto S. Fleissner, Ph.D., Professor of German, Wells College, Aurora, N. Y.

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

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

1934 J. D. M. Ford, Ph.D., Professor of the French and Spanish Languages, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.

FM Frank H. Fowler, Ph.D., Professor of Classical Literature, University of Arizona; 1036 E. Helen St., Tucson, Ariz.; Latin and Greek syntax.

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

1931 Naoshirō Fukushima, Professor of Sanskrit, Imperial University of Tokyo; 33 Hikawachō, Akasaka, Tokyo, Japan; IndoEuropean comparative linguistics.

1935 Miss Elizabeth F. Gardner, A.B., 18 Garden Place, Derby, Conn.; general linguistics.

FM Henry S. Gehman, Ph.D., Professor of Old Testament Literature in Princeton Theological Seminary and Lecturer in Semitic Languages at Princeton University; 60 Stockton St., Princeton, N. J.

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

1930 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.

1933 Martha Jane Gibson, Ph.D., Honorary Fellow of Yale University; 85 Sachem St., New Haven, Conn.; American English. FM Donald M. Gilbert, Ph.D., Professor of Modern Languages, Albion College; 506 N. Superior St., Albion, Mich.; Romance linguistics.

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., 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.

1928 Charles H. Grandgent, L.H.D., Emeritus Professor of Romance Languages, Harvard University; 107 Walker St., Cambridge, Mass.

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

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