Hungarian Studies Newsletter, 1981 (9. évfolyam, 27-30. szám)
1981 / 29. szám
HUNGARIAN RESEARCH CENTER AMERICAN HUNGARIAN FOUNDATION 177 Somerset Street P.O. Box 1084 NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. 08903 Non-Profit Org U.S. POSTAGE PAID Permit No. 257 RETURN POSTAGE GUARANTEED ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED JOURNALS ON HUNGARY (Continued) John B. Vickery, Myths and Fiction in Contempory American Novel: The Case of John Barth. Zsolt Virágos, Myth: The Dilemma of the American Novelist. John Anderson, Subjecthood. Yoshlhiko Ikegami, ''Goal" over "Source,” A Case in Dissimetry in Linguistic Orientation. Katalin E. Kiss, A Note on the Interpretative Theory of Pronominalization. Béla Korponay, The Ablative and the Instrumental. Leonhard Lipka, Semantic Components of English Nouns and Verbs and Their Justification. Wolfgang Viereck, The Dialectical Survey of British English Lowman’s Evidence. THE CANADIAN-AMERICAN REVIEW OF HUNGARIAN STUDIES Vol. 7, no. 1 (Spring 1980). Special issue on HUNGARIANCANADIAN PERSPECTIVES: SELECTED PAPERS. Martin L. Kovács, Introduction. N.F. Dreisziger, The Hungarian General Staff and Diplomacy, 1939-1941. Robert Blumstock, The Irrelevance of Ideology: The Fall of Marxism and the Rise of the Last Man. Martin L. Kovács, Searching for Land: The First Hungarian Influx to Canada. N.F. Dreisziger, Aspects to Hungarian Settlement in Central Canada, 1921-1931. Martin L. Kovács, Early Hungarian-Canadian Culture. John Miska, Modern Hungarian Poetry in Canada. ACADEMY EXCHANGE AWARDS, 19Ö2 The National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council awarded the following scholars and scientists in the framework of an exchange program with the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (HAS) for calendar year 1982. (For program description see HAS no. 2, p.1.) AMERICANS TO HUNGARY Howard H. Vogel (U. of Tennessee) for study of radiation oncology, 6 months; Nándor Balazs (SUNY/Stony Brook) for study of nuclear physics, 1 month; Carlin Pinkstaff (West Virginia U.) for the study of histochemistry, Vk month; Mitchell Broke (Duquesne U.) for study of radio pharmaceuticals, 1 month. HUNGARIANS TO THE UNITED STATES Gyula Bencze (Res. Inst, for Particle and Nuclear Physics) to study N-Particle scattering theory, 1 month; Klára Berel (Centr. Res. Inst, for Physics) to study radioactive labelling of organic compounds, 7 months. (Postponed until 1982.) György Vaskovics (Computer and Automation Inst.) to study the use of computers in testing, 10 months. (NAS assent pending.) László Simándi (Centr. Res. Inst, for Chemistry) to study inorganic chemistry, 1 month. (NAS assent pending.) György Nemeth (Weil Emil Hospital) to study radiotherapy of malignant tumors, 1 month. (NAS assent pending.) György Jazsofszky (Centr. Res. Inst, for Chemistry) to study inorganic chemistry, 1 month. (NAS assent pending.) György Hunyady (Eötvös L.U.) to study social psychology, 4 months. (NAS assent pending.) For information on support write to Kaara N. Ettesvold, Program Officer, Section on USSR and Eastern Europe, Commission on International Relations, National Academy of Sciences, 2101 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20418. EDITOR'S CORNER I wonder how many of our readers take a peek at the Editor’s Corner. A few issues back, in no. 26 to be exact, I urged that you approach the acquisition librarian of your college or public library and call his or her attention to the usefulness of the HSN when selecting Hungarian-related books. I must assume that most of you rushed to the library and had therefore no time in letting us know about your success. We have not received one single comment. Neither have we received any subscriptions in response to your pleas. We are performing a service with enthusiasm, but we need to be read, and the bills need to be paid. Persons who were helpful in the preparation of this issue were George Blsztray, Kaara N. Ettesvold, Bela Kapotsy, Walter W. Kolar, Tibor Körtvélyessy, Alfonz Lengyel, Irwin T. Sanders, Ivan Sanders, Denis Sinor, William Sólyom-Fekete, and Maria Toth. _. _ ... HUNGARIAN REFERENCE SHELF A series of inexpensive publications facilitating Hungarian related research for the for the English speaking scholar. Please request complete list. 1. HUNGARIAN ETHNOGRAPHY: A Bibliography of English Language Sources, by David R. Howell (University of Virginia), 1976, 319 entries, 24 pages. $1.80 plus 30<E handling, $2.10. 3. HUNGARIAN ECONOMIC REFORMS: A Selective Partially Annotated Bibliography, by Gabriel F. Horchler (Library of Congress), 1977.1,620 entires, 190 pages. $4.95 paper; $9.95 cloth, plus postage and handling. 5 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HUNGARIAN LINGUISTIC RESEARCH IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA. Compiled by Andrew Kerek (Miami University), 1978. $2.75 plus 75<t handling, $3.50. Order: HUNGARIAN RESEARCH CENTER AMERICAN HUNGARIAN FOUNDATION Post Office Box 1084, New Brunswick, N.J. 08903 8 NO. 29, AUTUMN 1981, HUNGARIAN STUDIES NEWSLETTER