The Eighth Tribe, 1976 (3. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)
1976-04-01 / 4. szám
Francis H. Szecakay 2Ö17 Castleview Dr* Pittsburgh, Pa* 15327 Page 16 (5) Balogh, J. K. An Analysis of Cultural Organizations of Hungarian Americans in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County. Ph.D. Diss. University of Pittsburgh, 1945. 205 p. Baretski, Charles Allan. American Foreign Relations with East Europe, 1823- 1867: Hungary and Poland. Ph.D. Diss. University of Notre Dame, 1959. 501 p. Benyon, Erdman D. Occupational Adjustment of Hungarian Immigrants in American Urban Community. Ph.D. Diss. University of Michigan, 1933. Boros, Alexander. Their New World, a Comparative Study of the Assimilation Patterns of Four Waves of Hungarian . Immigration. Honours Diss. Kent State University, 1959. 294 p. Butosi, John. Church Membership Performance of Three Generations in Hungarian Reformed Churches of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Ph.D. Diss. Uni' versity of Pittsburgh, 1961. 323 p. Csicseri-Rónai, István. A Critical Study of Hungarian in Some Basic Reference Tools with a Historical and Cultural Chronology. Master Thesis. Catholic University, 1957. Gáspár, Steven. Four Nineteenth-Century Hungarian Travelers in America. Ph.D. Diss. University of Southern California, 1967. 540 p. Gergely, Emrő. Adaptation on Hungarian Plays upon the New York Stage. Ph.D. Diss. University of Pennsylvania, 1938. Head, Violet. The 1956 Hungarians; Their Integration into an Urban Community. Ph.D. Diss. University of Chicago, 1963. 185 p. Héya-Kiss, Mária. Hungarian Classical Literature in the National Union Catalog; A Bibliographical Survey. Master Thesis. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America, Dept, of Library Science, 1953. Kalassay, Louis A. The Educational and Religious History of the Hungarian Reformed Church in the United States. Ph.D. Diss. University of Pittsburgh, 1939. 39 p. Kautz, Edwin L. The Hungarian Baptist Movement in the United States. Master Thesis. University of Pittsburgh, 1946. Kerényi, Caterina Eősze. Poets in Exile: A Comparative Study in Latin and Hungarian Literature. Ph.D. Diss. The University of Texas at Austin, 1969. 132 p. THE EIGHTH TRIBE Komjáthy, Aladár. The Hungarian Church in America: An Effort to Preserve a Denominational Heritage. Ph.D. Diss. Princeton Theological Seminary, 1962. 336 p. Kovács, Ilona. The Hungarians in the United States: An Annotated Bibliography. Master’s Research Paper. Kent State University, Ohio, 1975. 65 p. Leffler, Andor. Kossuth Episode in America. Ph.D. Diss. Western Reserve University. 1949. 309 p. Madden, Henry M. Xantus, Hungarian Naturalist in the Pioneer West. Ph.D. Diss. Columbia University, 1950. 312 p. Major, Mark Imre. American Hungarian Relations: 1918-1944. Ph.D. Diss. Texas Christian University, 1972. 373 p. Nelson, Agnes Denman. A Study of English Speech of the Hungarians of Albany, Livingston Parish, Louisiana. Ph.D. Diss. Louisiana State University, 1956. 226 p. Nemser, William Joseph. The Interpretation of English Stops and Interdental Fricatives by Native Speakers of Hungarian. Ph.D. Diss. Columbia University, 1961. 270 p. Primes, Agnes. Hungarians in New York. Master Thesis. New York: Columbia University, Faculty of Political Science, 1940. 118 p. Reisch, Alfred A. The Contribution of Sándor Bölöni Farkas’ Study of American Democracy and Institutions to Political Perspective of the Nineteenth Century Hungarian Age of Reform, 1830-1848. Ph.D. Diss. Columbia University, 1970. 452 p. Schuchat, Molly Geiger. Hungarian Refugees in America and their Counterparts in Hungary, the Interrelations between Cosmopolitanism and Ethnicity. Ph.D. Diss. The Catholic University of America, 1970. 200 p. Stone, Margaret Lewis. Historical Development and Use of the Kodály Music Method and the Orff-Schulwerk Techniques Including Their Present Practice in the U.S.A. Ph.D. Diss. Kent State University, 1971. 225 p. Szarnék, Pierre Ervin. The Eastern American Dialect of Hungarian: An Analytical Study. Ph.D. Diss. Princeton University, 1955. 145 p. Szentmiklósy, Éles, Géza. Hungarians in Cleveland. Master Thesis. John Carroll University, 1972. 145 p. April, 1976 Táborszky, Otto. The Hungarian Press in America. Master Thesis. Catholic University of America, 1955. 117 p. Trautmann, Fredrick William Edward. Louis Kossuth’s Audience Adaptation in His American Speaking Tour, 1851- 1852. Ph.D. Diss. Purdue University, 1966. 265 p. Weinstock, S. Alexander. The Acculturation of Hungarian Immigrants: A Social-Psychological Analysis. Ph.D. Diss. Columbia University, 1962. 130 p. (6) Néhány magyar szempontból fontosabb könyvtár cime: The Library of Congress, Processing Department, Exchange and Gift Division, Washington, D.C. 20540. Gifts and Exchanges Librarian, Indiana University, The University Libraries, Bloomington, Indiana, 47401. Gifts and Exchange Librarian, Columbia University in the City of New York, The Libraries, New York, N.Y. 10027. Head, Order Department, Cleveland Public Library, 325 Superior Ave., Cleveland, Ohio 44114. The Balch Institute, 108-114 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. 19106. American Hungarian Studies Foundation, 177 Somerset St., P.O. Box 1084, New Brunswick, NJ. 08903. Harvard College Library, Department of Resources and Acquisitions, Cambridge, Mass., 02138. Immigration History Research Center, University of Minnesota, 826 Berry St., St. Paul, Minn. 55114. HUSVÉTKOR Az Ég legyen kék, A Föld legyen zöld, A Virág illatos, A Határ harmatos. Szívetek szeretve, Szobátok melegbe. Szeretet a házba, Szabadság az országba. Finom meleg sonka, Szürke barát bontva, Fehér kenyér a tálba, “Istentől” megáldva. B. Barczy, 1976 New York, N.Y.