A

Abbe, Cleveland (1838-1916) NAS biographical memoir

Abbot, Charles G. (1872-1973) NAS biographical memoir

Abbot, Henry L. (1831-1927) NAS biographical memoir

Abe, Shinzō (安倍 晋三) 1954- maternal grandfather: Nobusuke Kishi (岸 信介) whose biological younger brother is Eisaku Satō (佐藤 榮作)

Abe, Stanley 阿部贤次

Abecassis, Andree '60 (photographer) Barnard College

Elephant Seals. Dodd Mead, 1979 (with Louise C. Brown).

Abeel, Daphne '59 Barnard College

A City's Life and Times: Cambridge in the Twentieth Century. Cambridge Historical Society, 2007 (editor).

Abel, John J. (1857-1938) NAS biographical memoir

Abeles, Francine Forte '57 Barnard College

The Pamphlets of Lewis Carroll, Volume Two: The Mathematical Pamphlets of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson and Related Pieces. University Press of Virginia, 1994 (editor).

The Political Pamphlets and Letters of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson and Related Pieces: A Mathematical Approach. Lewis Carroll Society of North America, 2001.

Abelove, Joan '66 Barnard College

Go and Come Back. DK Publishing, 1998; Puffin, 2000 (children's book).

Saying It Out Loud. DK Ink, 1999; Puffin, 2001 (children's book).

Abelson, Robert P. , 1928-2005.

Robert P. Abelson (1928-2005): Obituary. Roseman, Ira J.; Read, Stephen J. American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (3), Apr 2007, 247-248.

Aberlin, Jane (Stein) '34 Barnard College

Seniority Rules: A Light Look at Longevity. Vantage Press, 1998.

Abrahamsen, Martha Gaber '69 (translator) Barnard College

Aarhus City Hall. Danish Architectural Press, 1991.

Arne Jacobsen. Danish Architectural Press, 2001.

The Award-Winning City. Danish Architectural Press, 2003.

Danish Jewelry/Danske Smykker by Jacob Thage, Komma, & Clausen, 1990.

The Enamel Door in Chandigarh. Danish Architectural Press, 1990.

Finn Juhl: A Biography. Danish Architectural Press, 1990.

Guide to Danish Landscape Architecture. Danish Architectural Press, 2003.

The Miracle in Denmark: The Rescue of the Jews, 1943-1945. Christian Ejlers, 2007.

P. V. Jensen-Klint: The Headstrong Master Builder by Thomas Bo Jensen. Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts School of Architecture Publishers, 2009.

Transparency: Jane Reumert, Studio Ceramist. Danish Architectural Press, 2003.

250 Years of Danish Architecture. Danish Architectural Press, 2004.

Abrahamson, Eric John.

ACAC

Academia Sinica (Taiwan)

http://academicians.sinica.edu.tw/index.php?func=1

http://academicians.sinica.edu.tw/index.php?func=1-D

Acem meditation see Eifring, Halvor, 1960- 艾皓德

Achebe, Chinua, 1930-2013. Nigerian writer

Ackerman, Diane Leighton '66 Barnard College

Getting Rich: A Smart Woman's Guide to Successful Money Management. A&W Publishers, 1981.

Money, Power, Ego: A Manual for Would-Be Wheeler-Dealers. Playboy Press, 1976 (with Martin Ackerman).

The Only Guide You'll Ever Need to Marry Money. Fireside/Simon & Schuster, 1982.

*Ackermann, Jean '41 Barnard College

Anniversary (one-act play), 1986.

Auld Lang Syne (one-act play), 1984; revised version, 1988.

Becoming Heroes (monologues with musical background), 1988.

The Clean Fun Laundromat (play), 1990.

Communicating Industrial Ideas: An International Handbook. Stanford Research Institute, 1962.

Compound Interest (mini-musical), 1988; revised version, 1989.

Films of a Changing World: A Critical International Guide, Society for International Development, 1972, 1976 (editor).

General Jessie (play), 1993.

Jessie (play), 1966; revised version, 1987.

Pocahontas in London (musical play), 1995.

A Pride of Heroes (play), 1983.

Princess (musical play), 1991.

Sing O Sing of Lydia Pinkham! (musical play), 1988.

Standoff at Bear Valley (one-act play), 1986.

Tom Benton's Daughter (one-act play), 1994.

Train of Events (play), 1990.

Trifles: The Musical (musical play), 1991.

Welcome Strangers (play), 1992.

Whither Thou Goest (play), 1992.

Acosta, Pedro 柯彼得

Acton, Harold 艾克顿

Adachi, Kiroku 足立喜六

Adamek, Wendi 韦闻笛

Adams, Comfort A. (1868-1958) NAS biographical memoir

Adams, Henry E. (Henry Earl), 1931-2000.

Henry Earl Adams (1931-2000): Obituary. Roitzsch, John C.; Zeichner, Amos.

American Psychologist. Vol. 58 (1), Jan 2003, 77.

Adams, Jack A., 1922-2010.

Jack A. Adams (1922-2010): Obituary. Wickens, Christopher D.; Williges, Robert C.

American Psychologist. Vol. 66 (7), Oct 2011, 638.

Adams, Leason H. (1887-1969) NAS biographical memoir

Adams, Lucy Wilcox, 1898-1996.

Adams, Roger (1889-1971) NAS biographical memoir

Adams, Walter S. (1876-1956) NAS biographical memoir

Addis, Thomas (1881-1949) NAS biographical memoir

*Adelson, Dorothy '30 Barnard College

Operation Susannah. Pemberly Press, 1982.

Adkins, Homer (1892-1949) NAS biographical memoir

Adler, Helmut E., 1920-2001.

Helmut E. Adler (1920-2001): Obituary. Hogan, John D.; Denmark, Florence L. American Psychologist. Vol. 56 (12), Dec 2001, 1172.

Adler, Joseph 艾周思

Adler, Nanci '85 Barnard College

The Gulag Survivor: Beyond the Soviet System. Transaction Publishers, 2001.

*Adler, Ruth Relis '35 Barnard College

Atoms and Molecules/Magnets. John Day, 1966 (with Irving Adler).

Sets/Taste, Touch, and Smell/Tree Products. John Day, 1967 (with Irving Adler).

Adler-Klein, Debra '77 Barnard College

A Pocket Manual of Differential Diagnosis, 5th Edition. Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins, 2008 (coauthor).

Africano, Lillian (Tabeek) '57 Barnard College

The Businessman's Guide to the Middle East. Harper & Row, 1977.

Consenting Adults. Charter Books, 1988.

Gone from Breezy Hill. Berkley Books, 1985 (coauthor) (under the pseudonym Nora Ashby).

Illusions. Warner Books, 1988 (under the pseudonym Jessica March).

Insiders' Guide to the Jersey Shore. Globe Pequot Press, 2002 (with Nina Africano).

Obsessions. Warner Books, 1990 (as Jessica March).

Passions. Berkley Books, 1985.

Something Old, Something New. Jove, 1982.

Temptations. Warner Books, 1989 (as Jessica March).

Agassiz, Alexander (1835-1910) NAS biographical memoir

Agassiz, Louis (1807-1873) NAS biographical memoir

Agee, James, 1909-1955. American novelist

*Aguilar, Jeannette Handrickson '55 Barnard College

The Classic Cooking of Spain. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1966.

Ahlfors, Lars V. (1907-1996) NAS biographical memoir

Ahn, Byung-joon 安秉俊 (韓裔)

Ahrens, Kathleen 安可思 http://www.kathleenahrens.com/

Ainsworth, Mary D. Salter (Mary Dinsmore Salter), 1913-1999.

Mary Dinsmore Salter Ainsworth: Obituary. Bretherton, Inge; Main, Mary. American Psychologist. Vol. 55 (10), October 2000, 1148-1149.

Aitken, Robert G. (1864-1951) NAS biographical memoir

Aks, Judith '91 Barnard College

Women's Rights in Native North America. LFB Scholarly Publishing, 2004.

Alama, Pauline '86 Barnard College

The Eye of the Night. Bantam Spectra, 2002.

Alaska

Alaya, Flavia M. '56 Barnard College

Bridge Street to Freedom: Landmarking a Station on the Underground Railroad. Ramapo College of New Jersey, 1999 (coauthor).

Gaetano Federici: The Artist as Historian. Passaic County Historical Society, 1980 (editor).

William Sharp, "Fiona Macleod" 1885-1905. Harvard University Press, 1970.

Under the Rose: A Confession. The Feminist Press, 1999.

Albee, George W., 1921-2006.

George W. Albee (1921-2006): Obituary. Kessler, Marc. American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (4), May 2008, 317-318.

Albert, Abraham A. (1905-1972) NAS biographical memoir

Albizu, Carlos, 1920-1984.

Obituary: Carlos Albizu-Miranda (1920-1984). Albee, George W.; Santiago-Negron, Salvador. American Psychologist. Vol. 42 (8), August 1987, 818.

Albright, Fuller (1900-1969) NAS biographical memoir

Albright, William F. (1891-1971) NAS biographical memoir

Aldaba-Lim, Estefania, 1917-2006.

Estefania Aldaba-Lim (1917-2006) : Obituary. David, Henry P.; Villar, Imelda V. G.; Denmark, Florence L. American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (1), Jan 2007, 53.

Aldridge, Alfred Owen, 1915-2005.

A. Owen Aldridge (Alfred Owen Aldridge) 1915-2005

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._Owen_Aldridge

Aleni, Julio, 1582-1649 艾儒略

Alexander, Dorothy Hase '71 Barnard College

The German Single-Leaf Woodcut 1600-1700. Abaris Books, 1977 (with Walter L. Strauss).

Alexander, Irving E. (Irving Emmanuel), 1922-2007.

Irving Emmanuel Alexander: Obituary. Demorest, Amy. American Psychologist. Vol. 63 (1), Jan 2008, 59.

Alexander, John H. (1812-1867) NAS biographical memoir

Alexander, Lloyd, 1924-2007. children's author (lived in Philadelphia and Drexel Hill) High King; Prydain

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lloyd_Alexander

James S. Jacobs. Lloyd Alexander: a critical biography.

Jared Crossley. Lloyd Alexander: a documentary. http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1625183244/lloyd-alexander-a-documentary

1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jln9VPoP3Tw

2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GilIovrb4uE

3 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtECLFD4n0Q

Alexander, Stephen (1806-1883) NAS biographical memoir

Alexopoulos, Constantine John, 1907-1986.

Alford, William P. 安守廉

Alger, Grant 葛治平

Alitto, Guy Salvatore 艾愷

Allan, Sarah 艾兰

Allard, R. W. (1919-2003) NAS biographical memoir

Allee, Warder C. (1885-1955) NAS biographical memoir

Allen, Bennet Mills, 1877-1963.

Allen, Charles E. (1872-1954) NAS biographical memoir

Allen, Eugene T. (1864-1964) NAS biographical memoir

Allen, Irene Shum '93 Barnard College

The Glass House. Assouline, 2008 (editor).

Allen, Jane Elizabeth '67 Barnard College

Beyond Time Management: Organizing the Organization. Addison-Wesley, 1986.

Allen, Joel A. (1838-1921) NAS biographical memoir

Allen, Joseph R. 周文龍

Allen, Ruth Alice, 1889-1979. economist

Alleton, Viviane ( 艾樂桐) http://www.gddrcc.org/staticLs/look003/look003_exdetail.do?expert_id=RW00001022

Aller, Lawrence H. (1913-2003) NAS biographical memoir

Allinson, Robert E. 爱莲心

Allison, Samuel K. (1900-1965) NAS biographical memoir

Allport, Floyd Henry, 1890-1978.

Obituary: Floyd H. Allport. Katz, Daniel. American Psychologist. 34 (4) April 1979, 351-353.

Alluisi, Earl A., 1927-1993.

Earl A. Alluisi: Obituary. Morgan, Ben B. American Psychologist. Vol. 50(2), Feb 1995, 105.

Almond, Gabriel A. (1911-2002) NAS biographical memoir

Alpern, Mathew, 1920-1996.

Matthew Alpern: Obituary. Pugh, Jr., Edward N.; Krantz, David H. American Psychologist. 54 (5), May 1999, 364.

Alperson, Myra '73 Barnard College

Better World Investment Guide. Council on Economic Priorities, 1991 (editor).

Dim Sum, Bagels, and Grits: A Sourcebook for Multicultural Families. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2001.

The Food Lover's Guide to the Real New York: Five Boroughs of Restaurants, Markets, and Shops (coauthor).

Foundations for a New Democracy: Corporate Social Investment in South Africa. Ravan Press (Johannesburg), 1995.

The International Adoption Handbook: How to Make an Overseas Adoption Work for You. Henry Holt/Owl, 1997.

Alpert, Rebecca (Trachtenberg) '71 Barnard College

Exploring Judaism: A Reconstructionist Approach. The Reconstructionist Press, 1985 (coauthor).

Lesbian Rabbis: The First Generation. Rutgers University Press, 2001 (co-editor).

Like Bread on the Seder Plate: Jewish Lesbians and the Transformation of Tradition. Columbia University Press, 1997, 1998.

Voices of the Religious Left: A Contemporary Sourcebook. Temple University Press, 2000 (editor)

Whose Torah? A Concise Guide to Progressive Judaism. New Press, 2008

ALS (Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) 俗稱「漸凍人」疾病 運動神經元疾病

Victims: Lou Gehrig, 徐福棟 Fu-Tong Hsu, Ting-Tsang Cheng, Stephen Hawking , David Niven、俄國作曲家蕭斯塔高維奇(Dmitri Shostakovich)和毛澤東。

Alsop, Gulielma Fell 1903 Barnard College

April in the Branches. Dutton, 1947.

Arms and the Girl: A Guide to Personal Adjustment in War Work and War Marriage. Vanguard, 1943 (with Mary F. McBride).

Deer Creek: The Story of a Golden Childhood. Vanguard, 1947.

A Gift for Santa Claus. Samuel French, 1970.

History of the Woman's Medical College: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1850-1950. Lippincott, 1950.

She's Off to College. Vanguard, 1940 (with Mary F. McBride).

She's Off to Marriage: A Guide to Success and Happiness in Married Life. Vanguard, 1942 (with Mary F. McBride).

She's Off to Work. Vanguard, 1941 (with Mary F. McBride).

Altman, Myriam Jarblum '59 Barnard College

New York Civil Practice Before Trial. James Publishing, 2001 (coauthor).

Altomara, Rita Ecke '72 Barnard College

Hollywood on the Palisades: A Filmography of Silent Features Made in Fort Lee, New Jersey, 1903-1927. Garland, 1983.

Alvarez, Luis W. (1911-1988) NAS biographical memoir

Alzheimer's Disease

Amelung, Iwo 阿梅龍

Ames, Joseph S. (1864-1943) NAS biographical memoir

Ames, Louise Bates, 1908-1996.

Ames, Louise Bates: Obituary. Walker, Richard N. American Psychologist. 54 (7), July 1999, 516

Ames, Roger T. 安樂哲

Amiot, Joseph Marie 钱德明

Amishai-Maisels, Ziva '61 Barnard College

Depiction & Interpretation: The Influence of the Holocaust on the Visual Arts. Pergamon Press, 1993.

Tapestries and Mosaics of Marc Chagall at the Knesset. Tudor, 1973.

Ammons, Robert B. (Robert Bruce), 1920-1999.

Robert Bruce Ammons (1920-1999): Obituary. Whiting, Betty; Ammons, Douglas. American Psychologist. Vol. 56 (5), May 2001, 453.

Amnawah, Linda (Prado) '76 Barnard College

Daydreams. Writer's Showcase, 2001.

Paco's Memories. Authors Choice Press, 2001.

Amoia, Alba della Fazia '49 Barnard College

An Anthology of Modern Belgian Theatre. Whitston, 1982 (with Bettina Liebowitz Knapp '47 and Nadine Dormoy Savage).

Feodor Dostoevsky. Continuum/Frederick Ungar, 1993.

Multicultural Writers from Antiquity to 1945: A Bio-Bibliographical Sourcebook. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001 (editor, with Bettina Liebowitz Knapp '47).

No Mothers We! Italian Women Writers and Their Revolt Against Maternity. University Press of America, 2000.

Stendhal's Rome: Then and Now. Edizioni Di Storia e Letteratura, 1997 (coauthor).

Thomas Mann's Fiorenza. Peter Lang, 1990.

Twentieth-Century Italian Women Writers: The Feminine Experience. Southern Illinois University Press, 1996.

Women on the Italian Literary Scene: A Panorama. Whitston, 1992.

Amos, D. Bernard (1923-2003) NAS biographical memoir

Amundson, Neal (1916-2011) NAS biographical memoir

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis see ALS (Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis)

Anagnost, Ann S. 安德训

Anan, Dev, 1923-2011. x Ananda, Deva Indian cinema

Ananda, Deva, see Anan, Dev, 1923-2011.

Anastasi, Anne, 1908-2001. x Anastasi (Foley), Anne '28 Barnard College

Anne Anastasi (1908-2001): Obituary. Reznikoff, Marvin; Procidano, Mary.

American Psychologist. Vol. 56(10), Oct 2001, 816-817.

Fields of Applied Psychology. McGraw-Hill, 1964.

Individual Differences. John Wiley, 1965.

Anawalt, Sasha (Cunningham) '79 Barnard College

The Joffrey Ballet: Robert Joffrey and the Making of an American Dance Company. Scribner, 1996; University of Chicago Press, 1997.

Ancelot, Claudia Marck '46 Barnard College

L'ombre brisee. Editions Balland, 1980.

Andersen, Poul 安保羅

Anderson, Carl D. (1905 -1991) NAS biographical memoir

Anderson, Edgar (1897-1969) NAS biographical memoir

Anderson, Harold H. (Harold Homer), 1897-1990.

Harold Homer Anderson: Obituary. Rabin, A. I. American Psychologist. Vol. 46(9), Sep 1991, 982.

Anderson, Herbert L. (1914-1988) NAS biographical memoir

Anderson, James Anthony, 1934-1983.

Anderson, John A. (1876-1959) NAS biographical memoir

Anderson, Laurie '69 Barnard College

Empty Places: A Performance. HarperPerennial, 1991.

The Guests Go in to Supper. Burning Books, 1987 (coauthor).

Home of the Brave. Talk Normal Productions, 1986.

The Package. Bobbs-Merrill, 1971.

Puppet Motel, Voyager, 1995 (CD-ROM) (with Hsin-Chien Huang).

She's a Rebel by Gillian Gaar. Seal Press, 2002 (subject of biography).

Stories from the Nerve Bible: A Retrospective, 1972-1992. HarperPerennial, 1994.

United States. Harper & Row, 1984.

Works from 1969 to 1983. Institute of Contemporary Art, 1983.

What Do You Mean We?. School of the Art Institute of Chicago, 1986 (videotape).

Subject of Biography: Laurie Anderson by John Howell. Thunder's Mouth Press, 1992 (American Originals series).

Subject of Biography: Laurie Anderson by Roselee Goldberg. Harry N. Abrams, 2000.

Anderson, Marston, d. 1992 (age 40) 安敏成 Yale prof.; PhD, Berkeley

安敏成 (Marston Anderson),美国耶鲁大学东亚系教授,是美国中国现代文学研究界一位大有潜力的学者,不幸于1992年因病英年早逝,时年40岁。主要著作有《现实主义的限制》、《现代中国短篇小说阅读》(与与胡志德Theodore Huters合编)

Anderson, Nancy Sigrid, 1930-2007.

Nancy Sigrid Anderson (1930-2007): Obituary. Scholnick, Ellin K. American Psychologist. Vol. 63 (6), Sep 2008, 555.

Anderson, Rudolph J. (1879-1961) NAS biographical memoir

Anderson, T. W. (Theodore Wilbur), 1918-

Anderson, Thomas F. (1911-1991) NAS biographical memoir

Andersson, Johan G. 安特生

Andrane, Tonio 欧阳泰

André, Guilhem 安炜

André, Naomi '89 Barnard College

Voicing Gender: Castrati, Travesti, And the Second Woman in Early Nineteenth-Century Italian Opera. Indiana University Press, 2006.

Andrew, Anita M. 安竹

Andrews, Alice Brover '89 Barnard College

Trine Erotic. Vivisphere Publishing, 2002.

Andrews, Henry N., Jr. (1910-2002) NAS biographical memoir

Andrews, Julia 安雅兰

Ang, Andrew. PhD (Stanford); Columbia; BlackRock vita

factor-based investing

Angell, James R. (1869-1949) NAS biographical memoir

Angier, Natalie '78 Barnard College

The Beauty of the Beastly: New Views of the Nature of Life. Houghton Mifflin, 1995, 1996.

The Best American Science & Nature Writing 2002. Houghton Mifflin, 2002 (co-editor).

Mujer Una Geografia Intima. Editorial Debate, 2000.

Natural Obsessions: The Search for the Oncogene. Houghton Mifflin, 1988, 1999.

Woman: An Intimate Geography. Houghton Mifflin/Davison, 1999, 2000 (National Book Award finalist).

Angoff, William Herbert, 1919-1993.

William Herbert Angoff (1919-1993): Obituary. Messick, Samuel. American Psychologist. Vol. 49(11), Nov 1994, 964.

Ansbacher, Heinz Ludwig, 1904-2006.

Heinz L. Ansbacher: Obituary. Richard (Rik) E. Musty. American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (6), Sept 2007, 602.

Ansorge, Betty (Schneider) '63 Barnard College

Leopards Near a Beehive. Coleman, 1986.

*Anspacher, Rowena Ripin '27 Barnard College

The Individual Psychology of Alfred Adler: A Systematic Presentation in Selections from His Writings. 1956 (with Heinz Ansbacher).

*Antin, Mary 1905 Barnard College

From Plotzk to Boston, 1899. Markus Wiener Books, 1986.

The Promised Land (autobiography), 1912.

Aoki, Michiko 青木美智子

*Appel, Anita Smith '23 Barnard College

East Quogue Remembered. East Quogue Civic Association, 1990.

Mastering Latin: Two Years. Oxford Book Co., 1967.

Appel, Kenneth I., 1932-2013. mathematician; four-color theorem

Appelbaum, Barbara Goldberg '62 Barnard College

Perilous Journeys: Personal Stories of German and Austrian Jews Who Escaped the Nazis. The Center for Holocaust Awareness and Information, 2002 (co-editor).

Appelbaum, Diana (Karter) '75 (see also Muir) Barnard College

Cocoa Ice. Orchard Books, 1997.

Giants in the Land. Houghton Mifflin, 1993; Sandpiper, 2000.

The Glorious Fourth: An American Holiday, An American History. Facts on File, 1989.

Thanksgiving: An American Holiday, An American History. Facts on File, 1984.

Araki, Tōru, 1931-2009. 荒木亨

Arce, Rose Marie '86 Barnard College

Latino in America. Celebra Books, 2009 (coauthor).

Architects

Famous people: Architects

Arenal, Electa '59 Barnard College

The Answer/La Respuesta: The Restored Text and Selected Poems of Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz. The Feminist Press/CUNY, 1994 (co-editor and translator) (Pen Center West Translation Award Finalist).

Untold Sisters: Hispanic Nuns in Their Own Works. University of New Mexico Press, 1989 (coauthor).

Argyle, Michael, 1925-2002.

Michael Argyle: Obituary. Endler, Norman S. American Psychologist. 58 (4), Apr 2003, 316.

Arkush, David 欧达伟

Arlen, Shelley '73 Barnard College

The Cambridge Ritualists: An Annotated Bibliography of the Works by and about Jane Ellen Harrison, Gilbert Murray, Francis M. Conford and Arthur Ber. Scarecrow Press, 1990.

Armijo, Jackie 艾敏慧

Armsby, Henry P. (1853-1921) NAS biographical memoir

*Armstrong (Lewi), Charlotte '25 Barnard College

The Balloon Man. Coward McCann, 1968.

Dream of Fair Woman. Coward McCann, 1966.

The Gift Shop. Coward McCann, 1967.

I See You. Coward McCann, 1967.

Lemon in the Basket. Coward McCann, 1967.

A Little Less Than Kind. Coward McCann, 1963.

The Protegé. Coward McCann, 1970.

Seven Seats to the Moon. Coward McCann, 1969.

The Turret Room. Coward McCann, 1965.

The Witches' House. Coward McCann, 1963.

Arnheim, Rudolf, 1904-2007.

Rudolf Julius Arnheim: Obituary. Pariser, David A. American Psychologist. 63 (1), Jan 2008, 55.

Arnold, Lois Barber '59 Barnard College

Four Lives in Science: Women's Education in the Nineteenth Century. Schocken Books, 1984.

Preparing Young Children for Science: A Book of Activities.

Arnold, Magda B. , 1903-2002.

Magda B. Arnold (1903-2002): Obituary. Shields, Stephanie A.; Fields, Rona M.

American Psychologist. Vol. 58 (5), May 2003, 403-404.

Arnon, Daniel I. (1910-1994) NAS biographical memoir

Aron, Joan Borgenicht '43 Barnard College

Licensed to Kill? The Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Shoreham Power Plant. University of Pittsburgh Press, 1998.

Aronson, Lester R. (Lester Ralph), 1911-1996.

Lester Ralph Aronson: Obituary. Tobach, Ethel. American Psychologist. Vol. 52(9), Sep 1997, 986.

Arrow, Kenneth, 1921-2017. NAS; Nobel Prize (economics); Stanford

Arroyo, Madeline '77 Barnard College

Calie's Gift. Stairway Publications, 2003.

Arthos, John, 1908-2000. Professor of English

Arvanitis, Agnes Vlavianos '57 Barnard College

Biopolitics: The Bio-Environment, Vols. I, II, III. Biopolitics International Organisation, 1988/89/91 (editor).

(Volume II Bios in the Next Millennium)

Oscillations and Roots (poetry).

Reflections. Privately published in Greek.

Asch, Solomon E. (Solomon Elliott), 1907-1996.

Solomon E. Asch (1907-1996): Obituary. Gleitman, Henry; Rozin, Paul; Sabini, John.

American Psychologist. Vol. 52(9), Sep 1997, 984-985.

Ascher, Carol (Bergman) '63 Barnard College

Between Women: Biographers, Novelists, Critics, Teachers and Artists Write about Their Work on Women. Beacon Press, 1984 (co-editor).

Education and Culture in Brooklyn: A History of Ten Institutions (published under Lopate).

The Flood. The Crossing Press, 1987; Curbstone Press, 1997.

Hard Lessons: Public Schools and Privatization. The Twentieth Century Fund Press, 1996 (coauthor).

Simone de Beauvoir: A Life of Freedom. Beacon Press, 1981.

Women in Medicine. Johns Hopkins Press, 1968 (published under Lopate).

Ayscough, Florence Wheelock, 1878-1942. born in Shanghai, died in Chicago

Simon Fraser Univ. x MacNair, Florence Wheelock Ayscough

xx Harley Farnsworth MacNair (1891-1947)

Florence Wheelock Ayscough and Her Interpretations Of Chinese Classical Poetry.

by Dr. Lan Jiang (1968- ), 江岚 William Patterson University, NJ.

Asher, R.E. 阿舍

Ashworth (Yahraes), Marjorie '38 Barnard College

Glory Road: Pennsylvania Avenue Past & Present. Link Press, 1986.

To Create a Nation: The Constitutional Convention of 1787. Link Press, 1987.

Asim, Ina 康怡諾 康依娜

Asker, Stephanie (Mattersdorf) '55 Barnard College

Plan B: How to Get Unstuck from Work, Family, Relationship Problems. Perigee, 1999.

Assael, Brenda '89 Barnard College

The Circus and Victorian Society. University Press of Virginia, 2005.

Astor, Lisa (Menke) '80 Barnard College

The Second Opinion Handbook: A Guide to Medical Self-Defense. Nick Lyons Books, 1987 (coauthor).

Astwood, Edwin B. (1909-1976) NAS biographical memoir

Asus 华硕集团 (xx Pegatron 和硕联合科技股份有限公司) xx Pegasus

华硕集团取名有一套,许多人不知道, 华硕的英文品牌名称「ASUS」其实源自希腊神话中的独角飞马(Pegasus),取意珍贵独特、纯洁的意思。和硕联合科技股份有限公司

只不过,18年前,华硕选用Pegasus後半段,化为ASUS,而此次分家时,和硕联合科技英文名字Pegatron,则理所当然融入独角马英文前半段Pega拼音。 著名的日本动画片《圣斗士星矢》中,星矢代表的天马座的发音就是Pegasus。

Pegasus 拆成 ASUS

华硕董事长施崇棠最喜欢挂在口头上的就是「师法自然」,取其顺势而为之意。 另外,华硕在许多产品品牌策略上,也都跟大自然学习,因此创造许多独树一格的动物理论,让外界津津乐道。

早在18年前华硕刚成立取英文名时,几位创办人为了让公司名字能排在前面,计划以A为英文字开头,最後大家想到了希腊神话中,一只会飞的独角马帕格萨斯Pegasus,因此才有了ASUS。

和硕定名Pegatron

此次,华硕大分家,以代工为主体的和硕联合科技在取英文名字时,施崇棠表示,索性把独角马英文名字的前半段Pega拿来运用,演化为Pegatron。 即使18年後,华硕取名仍未忘记把独角马的精神保留下来。

Atkin, S (Susan) Beth '83 Barnard College

Gunstories: Life-Changing Experiences with Guns. HarperCollins, 2006.

Voices from the Fields: Children of Migrant Farmworkers Tell Their Stories. Little, Brown, 1993, 2000.

Voices from the Streets: Young Former Gang Members Tell Their Stories. Little, Brown, 1996.

Atkinson, George F. (1854-1918) NAS biographical memoir

Atkinson, John W. , 1923-2003.

John W. Atkinson: Obituary. Smith, Charles P. American Psychologist. 60(2), Feb-Mar 2005, 195.

Atkinson, John William, 1923-2003.

Atkinson, Rick, 1952- Pulitzer Prize; Pritzker Military Library Literature Award

Attie, Alice '74 Barnard College

Harlem on the Verge. W. W. Norton, 2003.

Attneave, Carolyn L. (Carolyn Lewis), 1920-1992.

Obituary: Carolyn Lewis Attneave (1920-1992). LaFromboise, Teresa D; Trimble, Joseph E.

American Psychologist. Vol. 51(5), May 1996, 549.

Attneave, Fred, 1919-1991.

Fred Attneave (1919-1991): Obituary. Hyman, Ray. American Psychologist. Vol. 49(1), Jan 1994, 62.

Atwell, William S. 艾维四

Atwill, David G. 龙戴维

Atwood, Elmer Bagby, 1906-1963.

Atwood, Margaret, 1939- Canadian novelist

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Atwood

Aurbach, Gerald D. (1927-1991) NAS biographical memoir

*Auerbach, Aline Buchman '19 Barnard College

Creating a Preschool Center. John Wiley, 1971 (with Sandra Roche).

Parents Learn Through Discussion: Principles and Practices of Parent Group Education. John Wiley, 1968.

Preparation for Parenthood through Group Discussion. McGraw-Hill, 1976.

Aurousseau, Léonard Eugène 鄂卢梭

Auslin, Michael R., 1967- Japanologist

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Auslin

Austin, John Joseph, 1930-2006.

John Joseph Austin (1930-2006): Obituary. Fagan, Tom. American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (3), Apr 2007, 251.

Averill, Stephen C. 韦思谛

Avery, Oswald T. (1877-1955) NAS biographical memoir

Aviad, Janet (Koffler) '63 Barnard College

Return to Judaism: Religious Renewal in Israel. University of Chicago Press, 1983.

*Avnet, Helen Hirshfield '35 Barnard College

Insured Dental Care: A Research Project Report. Group Health Dental Insurance, 1967 (coauthor).

Physician Service Patterns and Illness Rates. Group Health Dental Insurance, 1967.

Awards, Prizes, etc.

Ax, Albert F. (Albert Francis), 1913-1994. psychophysiology

Albert Francis Ax (1913–1994): Obituary. Fetzner, Joanne. American Psychologist, Vol 51(11), Nov 1996, 1182.

doi: 10.1037/0003-066X.51.11.1182

Memorializes Albert Francis Ax, founder of the Society for Psychophysiological Research and founding editor of Psychophysiology. In 1953 Ax published his landmark paper entitled "The physiological differentiation between fear and anger in humans," which was the first successful demonstration of differential patterns of physiological response accompanying different emotions. Ax demonstrated repeatedly that pathology could be linked to a deficit in physiological learning. In the successful replication of his classic fear and anger study in 1969, Ax raised the question that dominated much of his later research, that is, whether patterns of physiological response could play an etiologic role in the learning of social skills such as achievement motivation, empathy, and others. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)

Ax, Emanuel, 1949- pianist; wife: Yoko Nozaki (野崎 洋子), pianist (Caring for mother died 2005)

Axelrod, Julius (1912-2004) NAS biographical memoir

Axtell, John D. (1934-2000) NAS biographical memoir

Aydelotte, William O. (1910-1996) NAS biographical memoir

Azrin, Nathan H., 1930-2013. behavioral psychologist; wrote "Potty training manual"

xx token economy

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Abelson, Robert P. , 1928-2005.

Abrahamson, Eric John.

Adams, Henry E. (Henry Earl), 1931-2000.

Adams, Lucy Wilcox, 1898-1996.

Adler, Helmut E., 1920-2001.

Ahn, Byung-joon 安秉俊

Ainsworth, Mary D. Salter (Mary Dinsmore Salter), 1913-1999.

Albee, George W., 1921-2006.

Albizu, Carlos, 1920-1984.

Aldaba-Lim, Estefania, 1917-2006.

Aldridge, Alfred Owen, 1915-2005.

A. Owen Aldridge (Alfred Owen Aldridge), 1915-2005

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._Owen_Aldridge

Aleni, Julio, 1582-1649 艾儒略

Alexander, Irving E. (Irving Emmanuel), 1922-2007.

Alexopoulos, Constantine John, 1907-1986.

Alger, Grant 葛治平

Alitto, Guy Salvatore 艾愷

Allen, Bennet Mills, 1877-1963

Allen, Joseph 周文龍

Allen, Ruth Alice, 1889-1979. economist

Allport, Floyd Henry, 1890-1978.

Alluisi, Earl A., 1927-1993.

Alpern, Mathew, 1920-1996.

Amelung, Iwo 阿梅龍

Ames, Louise Bates, 1908-1996.

Ames, Roger T. 安樂哲

Ammons, Robert B. (Robert Bruce), 1920-1999.

Anastasi, Anne, 1908-2001.

Andersen, Poul 安保羅

Anderson, Harold H. (Harold Homer), 1897-1990.

Anderson, James Anthony, 1934-1983.

Anderson, Marston 安敏成

Anderson, Nancy Sigrid, 1930-2007.

Anderson, T. W. (Theodore Wilbur), 1918-

Ansbacher, Heinz Ludwig, 1904-2006.

Araki, Tōru, 1931-2009. 荒木亨

Argyle, Michael, 1925-2002.

Arnheim, Rudolf, 1904-2007.

Arnold, Magda B. , 1903-2002.

Aronson, Lester R. (Lester Ralph), 1911-1996.

Asch, Solomon E. (Solomon Elliott), 1907-1996.

Asim, Ina 康怡諾

Atkinson, John William, 1923-2003.

Attneave, Carolyn L. (Carolyn Lewis), 1920-1992.

Attneave, Fred, 1919-1991.

Atwood, Elmer Bagby, 1906-1963.

Austin, John Joseph, 1930-2006.

Ax, Albert F. (Albert Francis), 1913-1994.

________________________________________________________________________

Abelson, Robert P. , 1928-2005.

Robert P. Abelson (1928-2005): Obituary.

Roseman, Ira J.; Read, Stephen J.

American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (3), Apr 2007, 247-248.

Abrahamson, Eric John.

Eric John Abrahamson, Ph.D. is Principal Historian and founder of Vantage Point. Over the last two decades he has written numerous histories of major corporations and cultural institutions in telecommunications, banking, food processing, construction, philanthropy and the arts. He is coauthor with Louis Galambos of Anytime, Anywhere: Entrepreneurship and the Creation of a Wireless World (Cambridge University Press, 2002). Eric earned his Ph.D. in American Economic History from Johns Hopkins University in 2003. He and his wife, Lois Facer, Academic Dean at National American University, have lived in Rapid City, South Dakota, since 1998.

eric@vantagepointhistory.com

Persistence and perspective : Franklin Templeton Investments : the first sixty years / by Eric John Abrahamson & Grant Alger ; foreword by Charles B. Johnson. San Mateo, CA : Franklin Resources, Inc., c2007. xviii, 230 p. : ill. ; 30 cm.

Anytime, anywhere : entrepreneurship and the creation of a wireless world / Louis Galambos, Eric John Abrahamson. Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2002.

Spirited commitment : the Samuel and Saidye Bronfman Family Foundation, 1952-2007 / Roderick MacLeod and Eric John Abrahamson. Montréal : Published for the Samuel and Saidye Bronfman Foundation by McGill-Queen’s University Press, c2010.

Adams, Henry E. (Henry Earl), 1931-2000.

Henry Earl Adams (1931-2000): Obituary.

Roitzsch, John C.; Zeichner, Amos.

American Psychologist. Vol. 58 (1), Jan 2003, 77.

Adams, Lucy Wilcox, 1898-1996.

LUCY WILCOX ADAMS, 98, died in Santa Cruz, CA, on December 6, 1996. Although not a trained anthropologist, Adams was one of the early pioneers in the employment of anthropologists, and of anthropological expertise, in government programs. Her special forte was working in cross-cultural settings, and she came to appreciate the crucial contribution that anthropology could make in those circumstances.

Born Lucy Marian Wilcox in San Francisco in 1898, Adams was the daughter of recent immigrants from Australia. She left Stanford before graduation to take a position in England as secretary and researcher. There she became engaged to William F Adams. The couple were married in 1925. His untimely death a few years later left his widow with two young sons, and very few resources. Adams secured a position with the Soil Conversation Service in Albuquerque, beginning her long career in government service. The agency, Technical Cooperation-Bureau of Indian Affairs, was charged with researching problems involved in developing soil conservation projects on Indian reservations. It was from its members--anthropologists John Provinse, W W Hill, Ruth Underhill and Frederica de Laguna--that Adams acquired her initial interest in anthropology.

In 1936 Adams was appointed director of the newly consolidated school systems on the Navajo, Hopi and Southern Ute reservations, where she oversaw development of the first comprehensive program of day-school education. It was she who commissioned Gladys Reichard to develop a system of orthography for writing the Navajo language and ethnologist Richard Van Valkenburgh to study Navajo place-names.

When World War II brought all Indian Bureau projects to a standstill, Adams took a position with the War Relocation Authority, the agency responsible for relocating 110,000 Japanese Americans from the West Coast. As assistant director of the Manzanar Relocation Camp in eastern California, she was responsible for education and social programs within the camps. A member of her staff there was "camp anthropologist" Morris Opler.

At the conclusion of the war, Adams spent three years resettling refugees and displaced persons in Germany and Hungary for the UN Relief and Rehabilitation Agency. 1948 saw her back in the Indian Bureau at Window Rock, where she developed the program of off-reservation employment for Navajos and Hopis.

America's involvement in overseas development programs offered a new outlet for Adams' talents. She served the remainder of her government career with the USAID, spending 5 years in Iran as director of projects for Isfahan Province and later assistant AID director for the whole country. After another stint in Korea as an assistant director, she served in a planning role in the agency's Washington headquarters.

Forced to retire at 65, Adams became an adjunct professor at the U of California, Berkeley, in a special program for training foreign-aid personnel. Here, she was associated with George Foster. Final retirement was forced on her at 70.

For all her adventurous life and manifold accomplishments, Adams was the antithesis of a flamboyant person, driven not by a desire for attention or success but simply by a love of action and adventure.

Adams is survived by sons Ernest W and retired anthropologist William Y, and 4 grandsons. (William Y Adams)

http://www.obitcentral.com/obitsearch/obits/misc/anthro9.htm

Adler, Helmut E., 1920-2001.

Helmut E. Adler (1920-2001): Obituary.

Hogan, John D.; Denmark, Florence L.

American Psychologist. Vol. 56 (12), Dec 2001, 1172.

Ainsworth, Mary D. Salter (Mary Dinsmore Salter), 1913-1999.

Mary Dinsmore Salter Ainsworth (1913-1999): Obituary.

Bretherton, Inge; Main, Mary.

American Psychologist. Vol. 55 (10), October 2000, 1148-1149.

Albee, George W., 1921-2006.

George W. Albee (1921-2006): Obituary.

Kessler, Marc.

American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (4), May 2008, 317-318.

Albizu, Carlos, 1920-1984.

Carlos Albizu-Miranda (1920-1984).

http://www.mia.albizu.edu/web/about_cau/carlos_albizu_founder_of_cau.asp

Obituary: Carlos Albizu-Miranda (1920-1984).

Albee, George W.; Santiago-Negron, Salvador.

American Psychologist. Vol. 42 (8), August 1987, 818.

Carlos Albizu-Miranda is the first Hispanic Educator to have a North American University renamed in his honor. On January 1, 2000 the Board of Trustees of the Caribbean Center for Advanced Studies, which includes the Miami Institute of Psychology, conferred this honor on Dr. Albizu by renaming the two-campus institution, Carlos Albizu University.

This posthumous honor recognized Dr. Albizu’s long and distinguished career as a professor of psychology, his role in founding the institution that now bears his name, and his service as the first president of the National Hispanic Psychological Association.

Born on September 16, 1920 in Ponce, Puerto Rico he earned a B.A. in Education at the University of Puerto Rico with a major in psychology and a minor in history. Following service in the U.S. Army during World War II, he worked for the Veteran’s Administration, first as a psychometrician and later as Chief of the Vocational Rehabilitation and Education Center in Puerto Rico.

In 1950 Albizu and his wife, Ermida Garcia Muñoz, left Puerto Rico for Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, where he earned an M.S. degree in Experimental Psychology in 1951 and a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology in 1953. He completed his Clinical Psychology Internship at the Veteran’s Administration Hospital in Marion, Indiana. When Dr. Albizu graduated from Purdue, he became one of the first Hispanics to earn a Ph.D. in Psychology in the United States.

Albizu and his family returned to Puerto Rico and began teaching at the University of Puerto Rico. He also started his private practice in psychology. He became a full professor at the University, and was recognized by his peers as an outstanding educator, diagnostician, psychotherapist and consultant.

During these years of professional growth, Dr. Albizu became deeply concerned about the need for qualified psychologists in Puerto Rico. No graduate programs in psychology were available in Puerto Rico and only a few students were able to pursue graduate studies in the United States. Those who did were trained in models and techniques not always sensitive to the needs and sociocultural characteristics of Hispanic clients.

In 1966, Dr. Albizu took what proved to be a bold pioneering step. He founded the first independent professional school of psychology in North America, initially known as the Instituto Psicológico de Puerto Rico. In 1971 the name was changed to Caribbean Center for Advanced Studies. Since its founding, the school’s philosophy has always been to adapt models of psychological assessment and intervention to the sociocultural characteristics and needs of the population it serves. In 1980, Carlos Albizu expanded his field of vision by moving to the U.S. mainland and opening a sister campus as the Miami Institute of Psychology. As a result of these two campus locations in Miami and San Juan, a significant number of Hispanic psychologists are either former students of Carlos Albizu-Miranda or of his pupils. Clearly, his impact in training minority and mainstream mental health professionals in sociocultural sensitivity has been enormous. In addition to founding the two-campus school, he published extensively, with special emphasis on cross-cultural issues in mental health training and service delivery, including “A Training Model for Minority Psychologists” and “Psychological Concomitants of Poverty.” From 1980 to 1982 he was the first president of the National Hispanic Psychological Association.

He was a Fellow of the American Psychological Association and served on the Committee of Professional and Scientific Conduct and Ethics. In 1980 the American Psychological Foundation honored Dr. Albizu with a special award for the development of psychological education in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean Region. He was a member of several honorary scientific organizations including Sigma Xi, Psi Chi, and the New York Academy of Sciences.

Carlos Albizu died on October 6, 1984. In a memorial article in the Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 1985, Vol. 7. No. 3, Marion A. Wennerholm writes:

“Dr. Albizu had an exceptional ability to dream great dreams and then convert them into realities. His enthusiasm was contagious and he was able to stimulate and motivate his colleagues by sharing his dreams with them and involving them in carrying them out. Through his tireless efforts and despite times of great adversity, his dream of a professional school of psychology became a reality.”

Aldaba-Lim, Estefania, 1917-2006.

Estefania Aldaba-Lim (1917-2006) : Obituary.

David, Henry P.; Villar, Imelda V. G.; Denmark, Florence L.

American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (1), Jan 2007, 53.

Aldridge, Alfred Owen, 1915-2005

  1. Owen Aldridge (Alfred Owen Aldridge)

1915-2005

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._Owen_Aldridge

Aleni, Julio, 1582-1649 艾儒略

Alexander, Irving E. (Irving Emmanuel), 1922-2007.

Irving Emmanuel Alexander (1922-2007): Obituary.

Demorest, Amy.

American Psychologist. Vol. 63 (1), Jan 2008, 59.

Alexopoulos, Constantine John, 1907-1986.

http://www.utexas.edu/faculty/council/2000-2001/memorials/SCANNED/alexopoulos.pdf

Alger, Grant. 葛治平

Grant Alger received his Ph.D. in history from Johns Hopkins University and is a specialist in the economic, social and political history of China. He has published and presented studies on the social history of work, the history of technological change, and the regulation of the local economy by the state in China. Based in Philadelphia, he has taught at the University of Maryland and the University of Pennsylvania. He is also interested in U.S. business history and has enjoyed contributing to various Vantage Point projects, including Persistence and Perspective: Franklin Templeton Investments The First Sixty Years. He is a recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities grant among other fellowships.

grant@vantagepointhistory.com

清代社会史:下层社会与边缘人群——1990年以来以英语发表的清史著作综述之二 葛治平

清代云南的农村市场|陆蔚|云南日报(昆明)|2001.4.25.C③中国“内陆水世界”一瞥:清初福建清流篙师|(美)葛治平|东南学术(福州)2002.1.50~56

Persistence and perspective : Franklin Templeton Investments : the first sixty years / by Eric John Abrahamson & Grant Alger ; foreword by Charles B. Johnson. San Mateo, CA : Franklin Resources, Inc., c2007. xviii, 230 p. : ill. ; 30 cm.

Alitto, Guy Salvatore 艾愷

PhD, Harvard

U. of Chicago

艾恺(Guy Salvatore Alitto),1975年获美国哈佛大学哲学博士学

艾恺 Guy Salvatore Alitto

位,师从费正清、史华慈,是当代最活跃、最有影响力的汉学家之一,在梁漱溟研究上堪称第一人,现任芝加哥大学历史教授。著有《最后的儒家》、《这个世界会好吗?》、《Has Man A Future?》(2006年中文版上市,2010年4月外语教学与研究出版社人文社科分社推出英文版)、《吾曹不出如苍生何》、《南京十年的乡村建设》、《世界范围内的反现代思潮》等。

http://baike.baidu.com/view/648753.htm

Allen, Bennet Mills, 1877-1963

Bennet Mills Allen

1877-1963

Professor of Zoology, Emeritus

Bennet Mills Allen was born in Greencastle, Indiana, on July 4, 1877; he died in Los Angeles on December 12, 1963, at the age of eighty-six, having completed sixty years of professional scientific activity. He is survived by his wife and daughter. He received his bachelor's degree from DePauw University and taught in high schools in Colorado before continuing into graduate work at the University of Chicago. He obtained his doctorate in zoology at Chicago in 1903; his major professor was the well-known embryologist, C. O. Whitman.

Following receipt of his doctoral degree, Dr. Allen taught at the University of Wisconsin, first as a member of the Department of Anatomy, later transferring to the Department of Zoology. In 1913, he became Professor of Zoology and head of the department at the University of Kansas. In 1922, he joined the staff of the then Southern Branch of the University of California as a member of the Department of Biology, and in 1924 he became Professor of Zoology. Shortly after reaching retirement in 1947 at the age of seventy, he became a full-time member of The Atomic Energy Project at UCLA. Following his second retirement eleven years later, he became associated with the Department of Radiology of the School of Medicine, where he continued his career of active research and publication. In a copy of his list of publications there appears the following note in his own handwriting: “All publications after this were done after 'retirement' at age seventy.”

Twenty-six scientific papers were published after Dr. Allen's first “retirement.” At the time of his death, he had one manuscript nearly completed, and had accumulated abundant research material for further investigations.

During his career in the Zoology Department at UCLA, Dr. Allen served as Chairman of the Department and as Dean of the University of California Medical Department on North Broadway. For four years during World War II he was Acting Dean of the Graduate Division. He was a member of the original Planning Committee for the Faculty of the School of Medicine at UCLA. In 1930, he was Faculty Research Lecturer speaking on the subject of Glands and Growth. In 1953, he was given the title of University Fellow. He was the recipient of an honorary Doctor of Science degree from his alma mater, DePauw University, and of an honorary Doctor of Laws from the University of California. Dr. Allen was a member of numerous scientific societies, serving as Vice-President of the American Society of Zoologists, as President of the Kansas Academy of Sciences and of the Western Society of Naturalists, and as Chairman of the Southern California Section of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.

Bennet Allen was a research investigator of the first rank. His fundamental contributions towards understanding the role of the endocrine glands in growth and development were carried out in a series of brilliant and technically difficult experiments begun at the University of Kansas and continued at the University of California. He chose to work upon the larval stages of amphibians, in which microsurgery could be performed with fewer complications than in higher vertebrates. In his early work, he demonstrated that the thyroid gland is essential for the metamorphosis of a tadpole into a frog or a toad. He was able to do this by removing from very young tadpoles the first groups of cells destined to become thyroid tissues. Such animals never changed into adults but remained tadpoles throughout their lives unless provided either with active thyroid tissue or with the effective hormone produced by the thyroid.

When Dr. Allen allowed the thyroid to persist intact but removed from young tadpoles the groups of cells that were destined to form another endocrine gland, called the hypophysis or the pituitary, the tadpoles not only did not metamorphose but in addition remained small, while the pigment in their integumentary cells contracted, so that the animals became very light in color. Since the hypophysis of the adult frog consists of several portions, Allen conceived the idea of dissecting out the constituent parts of the gland and of implanting each part separately into a tadpole from which he had removed previously the cells capable of forming the hypophesis. In this way, he demonstrated which particular part of the gland produced a hormone essential for growth, which part was associated with the elaboration and release by the thyroid of the substance needed to bring about metamorphosis, and which part was responsible for the change in function of the pigment cells of the skin.

These pioneering experiments of Allen, so carefully done and so clearcut in their results, were monumental contributions, and together with those of P. E. Smith of Columbia, who worked simultaneously and independently on the consequences of hypophysectomy, constitute a landmark in the formative period of modern endocrinology.

After he became Emeritus Professor of Zoology at the age of seventy and had transferred to the Atomic Energy Project, Dr. Allen initiated an entirely new line of research. In order to do this, he had to become familiar with the field of radiation biology so that he could use the facilities of the Atomic Energy laboratories. Beginning in 1950, he published a series of papers dealing with the effects of x-irradiation on various tissues of amphibians and reptiles. He worked not only with the structures with which he was most familiar, namely, the endocrine glands, but also with blood-forming tissues, the growing limb-buds, the kidney and the retina, investigating the damage done by irradiation at different stages of development. Here his earlier training as an anatomist and as an embryologist, together with the skill he had acquired as an experimental endocrinologist, proved invaluable in pinpointing the effects of irradiation upon certain specific cells and developing tissues.

It would be difficult to overemphasize the influence Bennet Allen had on the growth and development of research activities on the Los Angeles campus. He came to this part of the University only three years after it ceased to be the Los Angeles State Normal School and before it had awarded its first undergraduate degree, when, as he said in his faculty research lecture, research work was “literally carried on in cellar and attic in rooms assigned to it because unfit for other purposes.” Together with a few other dedicated staff members, he fought vigorously to establish research as an essential and an integral activity of the faculty, and for the provision of space, time, and funds to permit this activity to be carried on. When the University moved to the Westwood campus in 1929 and could provide him with neither cellar nor attic for research quarters, he was able to persuade a sympathetic Los Angeles physician to give him space in an unused building in the garden of his home on Third Avenue about ten miles from UCLA. This was the beginning of a long association between Dr. Gregorio del Amo and Dr. Allen. Here he set up a working laboratory where he was joined by enthusiastic (mainly premedical) undergraduates. (Graduate work had not yet been authorized on this campus.) He made a most profound impression on this group of young men and women by introducing them into the field of scientific research. His influence on students remained with them throughout their lives; nearly fifty of them, many of them practicing physicans, joined in honoring Dr. Allen at a luncheon on the occasion of his eightieth birthday. This influence was strikingly illustrated last year in the gift to the Biomedical Library of a remarkable collection of books on medical history by Dr. John Benjamin, one of the group who had worked with Dr. Allen over thirty years previously in the laboratory on Dr. del Amo's property. These volumes, described by an eminent medical historian as making up “one of the most significant of private collections of medical works,” were given by Dr. Benjamin in honor of Dr. Allen and of the late Dr. Boris Krichesky, another former member of the Department of Zoology.

On the occasion of Dr. Allen's eightieth birthday Dr. Benjamin wrote of him: “He instilled securely into his students a desire to try to understand the workings of biological systems. We lived with him in his classroom, in his research laboratory, and most of all I cherish the many hours devoted to philosophical discussions and research planning. A truly great investigative fundamentalist, a classical teacher, a very humble individual, and a friend beyond compare.”

It was Bennet Allen's privilege to witness the growth of UCLA from the small “Southern Branch” offering only two years of undergraduate work to the institution it has become today. In this development, he played a very great part by his own scientific contributions, by his insistence on research of the highest quality as an essential function of this part of the University, by the enthusiaism for investigation which he aroused in his students, and by his wise counsel during the formative period of UCLA.

Gordon H. Ball Leslie R. Bennett Clara M. Szego

Allen, Ruth Alice, 1889-1979. Economist

http://www.utexas.edu/faculty/council/2000-2001/memorials/SCANNED/allen.pdf

Allport, Floyd Henry, 1890-1978.

Obituary: Floyd H. Allport (1890-1978).

Katz, Daniel.

American Psychologist. Vol. 34 (4) April 1979, 351-353.

Alluisi, Earl A., 1927-1993.

Earl A. Alluisi (1927-1993): Obituary.

Morgan, Ben B.

American Psychologist. Vol. 50(2), Feb 1995, 105.

Alpern, Mathew, 1920-1996.

Matthew Alpern (1920-1996): Obituary.

Pugh, Jr., Edward N.; Krantz, David H.

American Psychologist. Vol. 54 (5), May 1999, 364.

Ames, Louise Bates, 1908-1996.

Ames, Louise Bates (1908-1996): Obituary

Walker, Richard N.

American Psychologist. Vol. 54 (7), July 1999, 516

Ames, Roger T. 安樂哲 U. of Hawaii

http://baike.baidu.com/view/1686544.htm

http://www.ccs-uhm.org/ames-roger-t/

BA 1970, University of British Columbia

MA 1973, University of British Columbia

PhD 1978, University of London

Professor Ames was the Director of the Center for Chinese Studies from 1991 until Spring 2000 and has been the Editor of Philosophy East and West since 1987. In 1993 he was instrumental in creating China Review International, Hawaii’s innovative new journal of reviews of scholarly literature in Chinese studies, and served as its Executive Editor from 1991 to 2000. He is co-director of the East-West Center’s Asian Studies Development Program, for which he has been successful in obtaining multiple National Endowment for the Humanities and Fulbright grants. His teaching and research interests focus on comparative philosophy, the philosophy of culture, environmental philosophy, classical Confucianism, and Daoism.

China-Related Courses

· Phil 100 Introduction to Philosophy: Survey of Problems

· Phil 103 Introduction to Philosophy: Environmental Philosophy

· Phil 302 Political Philosophy

· Phil 370 Chinese Philosophy

· Phil 670 Confucianism

· Phil 672 Daoism

· Phil 740 (alpha) Seminar in Philosophical Texts (Zhuangzi, the Analects, Huainanzi, Sunzi and Legalist Texts)

· Phil 745 Philosophy of Culture

· Phil 790 Topics in Comparative Philosophy

Publications

· Confucian Role Ethics: A Vocabulary. Hong Kong: Chinese University of Hong Kong Press/Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press joint publication. Forthcoming

· The Classic of Family Reverence: A Philosophical Translation of the Xiaojing 孝經. With Henry Rosemont, Jr. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 2009. Chinese translation by He Jinli何金俐, Peking University Press, forthcoming.

· Meaning, Image, and Word: Reading Xu Bing. Edited with Tsao Hsingyuan (Albany NY: State University of New York Press, forthcoming).

· Educations and Their Purposes: A Conversation Among Cultures. Edited with Peter Hershock. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 2008.

· Confucian Cultures of Authority edited with Peter Hershock (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2006).

· Ziwo de yuancheng: Zhongxi hujingxia de gudian ruxue yu daojia 自我的圓成: 中西互鏡下的古典儒學與道家 (Self-consummation: Classical Confucianism and Daoism within the Mirror of East and West). Edited by Peng Guoxiang 彭國翔. Hebei University Press, 2006.

· Dongyang cholhok, Sam kwa Changjoseong—Ha I bu dong: Sungkyunkwan Daehak e so bigyeo cholhak Gan(Eastern Philosophy, Life, and Creativity—Harmony rather than Sameness: Lectures on Comparative Philosophy at Sungkyunkwan University) translated and edited by Chang Wonsuk (Seoul: Sungkyunkwan University Press, 2005).

· Mengzi de renxing guandian 孟子的人性觀 (Mencius’s Notion of Human Nature) ed. with Jim Behuniak (Beijing: Social Science Documentation Publishing House, 2005).

· Daodejing: Making this Life Significant: A Philosophical Translation. (w/ David Hall). New York: Ballantine Books, 2003.

· Focusing the Familiar: A Translation and Philosophical Interpretation of the Zhongyong. (w/ David Hall). Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2001.

· The Democracy of the Dead. (w/David Hall). New York: Open Court, 1998.

· Yuan Dao: Tracing Dao to Its Source (w/ D. C. Lau). New York: Ballantine Books, 1998.

· The Analects of Confucius: A Philosophical Translation (w/Henry Rosemont, Jr.). New York: Ballantine Books, 1998.

· Thinking From the Han: Self, Truth, and Transcendence in Chinese and Western Culture (w/David Hall). Albany: SUNY Press, 1997.

· Self and Deception: A Cross Cultural Philosophical Inquiry (Ed. w/W. Dissanayake). Albany: SUNY Press, 1996.

· Sun Pin: The Art of Warfare. (w/D. C. Lau). New York: Ballantine Books, 1996.

· Anticipating China: Thinking Through the Narratives of Chinese and Western Culture. (w/David Hall). Albany: SUNY Press, 1995.

· Self as Person in Asian Theory and Practice. Ed. with W. Dissanayake and T. Kasulis. Albany: SUNY Press, 1994.

· Sun-tzu: The Art of Warfare. New York: Ballantine Books, 1993.

· Nature in Asian Traditions of Thought: Essays in Environmental Philosophy (Ed. w/J. Baird Callicott). Albany: SUNY Press, 1989.

· Thinking Through Confucius (w/David L. Hall). Albany: SUNY Press, 1987.

Ammons, Robert B. (Robert Bruce), 1920-1999.

Robert Bruce Ammons (1920-1999): Obituary.

Whiting, Betty; Ammons, Douglas.

American Psychologist. Vol. 56 (5), May 2001, 453.

Anastasi, Anne, 1908-2001.

Anne Anastasi (1908-2001): Obituary.

Reznikoff, Marvin; Procidano, Mary.

American Psychologist. Vol. 56(10), Oct 2001, 816-817.

Andersen, Poul 安保羅 U. of Hawaii

http://chinesestudies.hawaii.edu/community/faculty/Andersen_Poul

Professor Andersen’s research focuses on Daoist ritual traditions, both from a historical perspective and based on fieldwork among Daoist priests in southern Taiwan. He is the Director of the Daoist Iconography Project (DIP), an international collaborative research project which he has initiated at the Department of Religion in partnership with the Honolulu Academy of Arts. The purpose of this project is to create an electronic resource for research into Daoist images, shared with scholars and students around the world over the Internet. Professor Andersen is currently working on a book with the preliminary title Icon and Deity: The Status and Function of Images in Daoism.

China-Related Courses

· Rel 203: Understanding Chinese Religions

· Rel 476: Daoism in China

· Rel 495: Seminar on Daoist Iconography

· Rel 661B: Seminar on Chinese Religions

Publications

· The Method of Holding the Three Ones: A Taoist Manual of Meditation of the Fourth Century A.D. (Studies on Asian Topics, no. 1). Copenhagen: Curzon Press, 1980 (reprinted 1989).

· "The Practice of Bugang," Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie 5 (1989-1990), pp. 15-53.

· "Talking to the Gods: Visionary Divination in Early Taoism (the Sanhuang Tradition)," Taoist Resources 5, 1 (1994), pp. 1-24.

· "The Transformation of the Body in Taoist Ritual," in Religious Reflections on the Human Body, ed. by Jane Marie Law, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1995, pp. 181-202.

· Daode Jing: The Book of the Way and Its Power: Mysticism and Practical Wisdom in Ancient China (a translation of the Daode Jing into Danish). Copenhagen: Spektrum Forlag, 1999.

· The Demon Chained under Turtle Mountain: The History and Mythology of the Chinese River Spirit Wuzhiqi. Berlin: G H Verlag, 2001.

· "Concepts of Meaning in Chinese Ritual," Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie 12 (2001), pp. 155-183.

· “Taoist Ritual in the Shanghai Area,” in Ethnography in China Today. A Critical Assessment of Methods and Results, ed. by Daniel L. Overmyer, Taibei: Yuan-liou Publishing Co., 2002, pp. 263-283.

· Scriptures, Schools, and Forms of Practice in Daoism. A Berlin Symposium, ed. with Florian C. Reiter. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2005.

· The Taoist Canon: A Historical Companion to the Daozang (with other authors), ed. by K. M. Schipper and Franciscus Verellen. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005.

Anderson, Harold H. (Harold Homer), 1897-1990.

Harold Homer Anderson (1897-1990): Obituary.

Rabin, A. I.

American Psychologist. Vol. 46(9), Sep 1991, 982.

Anderson, James Anthony, 1934-1983.

James Anthony Anderson, associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese, died on April 17, 1983. He was 48.

Dr. Anderson was born on December 5, 1934, in LaSalle, Illinois. He received his AB degree from Miami University in 1956 and his master's degree from the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 1957. He earned a PhD from the University of California at Berkeley in 1967.

Dr. Anderson, who specialized in Renaissance and Baroque literature of Spain, joined the faculty of The University of Texas at Austin in 1967. He previously taught at Marquette University, the State University of New York in New Paltz, and Princeton University.

He served as associate editor of Literature East and Westfrom 1965-67 and published articles in numerous professional journals, including Romance Notes and La Torre. In 1974 he published Encina and Virgil, a monograph. In addition, Dr. Anderson organized two exhibits of rare books of the Spanish Renaissance and published "Three Poems" for the Texas Quarterly in 1974.

Anderson, Nancy Sigrid, 1930-2007.

Nancy Sigrid Anderson (1930-2007): Obituary.

Scholnick, Ellin K.

American Psychologist. Vol. 63 (6), Sep 2008, 555.

Anderson, T. W. (Theodore Wilbur), 1918-

Mathematician

NAS, AAAS

http://stat.stanford.edu/~ckirby/ted/CV.pdf

Angoff, William H. (William Herbert), 1919-1993.

William Herbert Angoff (1919-1993): Obituary.

Messick, Samuel.

American Psychologist. Vol. 49(11), Nov 1994, 964.

Ansbacher, Heinz Ludwig, 1904-2006.

Heinz L. Ansbacher (1904-2006): Obituary.

Richard (Rik) E. Musty.

American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (6), Sept 2007, 602.

Araki, Tōru, 1931-2009. 荒木亨

Argyle, Michael, 1925-2002.

Michael Argyle (1925-2002): Obituary.

Endler, Norman S.

American Psychologist. Vol. 58 (4), Apr 2003, 316.

Arnheim, Rudolf, 1904-2007.

Rudolf Julius Arnheim (1904-2007): Obituary.

Pariser, David A.

American Psychologist. Vol. 63 (1), Jan 2008, 55.

Arnold, Magda B. , 1903-2002.

Magda B. Arnold (1903-2002): Obituary.

Shields, Stephanie A.; Fields, Rona M.

American Psychologist. Vol. 58 (5), May 2003, 403-404.

Aronson, Lester R. (Lester Ralph), 1911-1996.

Lester Ralph Aronson (1911-1996): Obituary.

Tobach, Ethel.

American Psychologist. Vol. 52(9), Sep 1997, 986.

Asch, Solomon E. (Solomon Elliott), 1907-1996.

Solomon E. Asch (1907-1996): Obituary.

Gleitman, Henry; Rozin, Paul; Sabini, John.

American Psychologist. Vol. 52(9), Sep 1997, 984-985.

Asim, Ina 康怡諾 University of Oregon

http://history.uoregon.edu/faculty/profiles/index.php?name=inaasim

http://homepage.mac.com/moogoonghwa/earth/current/hklna/ff/fund/promotion/us/batch4.pdf

http://j-tea.blogspot.com/2008/04/tea-demo-at-university-of-oregon.html

Preface by Ina Asim

New Life for an Old Painting

Several years ago I contacted Mr. Jeff Hsu in Taibei about a piece of art in his collection that has fascinated me ever since. It was the seventeenth century handscroll of the Lantern Festival in Nanjing by an anonymous painter. The scroll is titled ‘Shangyuan dengcai(tu) ’ ‘Colorful Lanterns at Shangyuan’, title that it was given by the eminent art historian Xu Bangda.

Mr. Hsu instantly wrote back to me and without hesitation provided me with photographs of the painting without asking for anything but for a copy of the book to be published. Such generosity is extremely rare to find and therefore I owe Mr. Hsu my deepest gratitude.

As I started working with his photographs I learned a lot about the details of the painting but sometimes wished I could enlarge them to see with greater clarity. In the meantime I had made a professional transition from Würzburg University in Germany to the University of Oregon. Here the work on the scroll developed in a new direction and took on a different dimension. With the technical equipment available at the University of Oregon the painting could be electronically cleaned, a process which enhanced the ‘readability’ of the scroll to a degree I could not have dreamed off.

Coincidence and luck helped me to find a dream team of collaborators in a very short time. Su-chen Chang provided much more than a translation of the texts for the bilingual comments on the CD and the manual, she also adapted the texts for a Chinese audience with great care and precision. When Mr. Hsu generously offered to loan the painting to the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon she was in charge of the correspondence, a task that brought her more than one sleepless night in which she effortlessly bridged not only the difference between Pacific Time and Taibei gallery hours and but also the differences in juridical regulations for art loans.

Garron Hale cleaned the painting electronically from the darkening process the painting had suffered over the centuries. With utmost attention to detail he electronically ‘washed’ the painting in a painstaking process that left the original untouched and produced the brilliant and precise reproduction you find on the CD. He is the designer of the elegant layout, the viewer-friendly navigation of the various functions hidden in the menus, and the manual. To Su-chen and Garron: my heartfelt thanks for your idealism and unconditional support! Without you the CD project would not have been possible.

I am much obliged to Cathleen Leué and Maram Epstein who revised the manuscript with scrutinizing eyes and polished my phrases into decent English. Lori O’Hollaren was a wizard in securing our financial survival. Brian Floyd programmed countless ideas into practical applications and Jacob Bartruff spent nights on the adaptation of maps from the Ming for us modern viewers. Yu Mueller-Chiu came from Germany and joined Brian Hebb to give their fine voices to the invitation that the painter extends to us:

Join the celebration of an old tradition and preserve its riches for posterity – they are the roots of the future!

For quick reference the texts in the manual are identical with the texts on the CD. Some of the explanations of details repeat information that appears in the longer texts. Thus the CD viewer does not have to read the longer background texts before viewing details of the painting.

Any errors are my responsibility. For comments and critique please contact me at:

Ina Asim

Department of History

University of Oregon

317 McKenzie Hall

Eugene, OR 97403

USA

Email: inaasim@uoregon.edu

Ina Asim Eugene, September 2004

++++++

Ina Asim: The Affluent Secondary Capital: Visual and Written Sources of Nanjing in the Ming

The paper will present research-in-progress of two closely related projects: A study of Nanjing in the Ming as observed by Gu Qiyuan 顧 起 元 (1565-1628) and other contemporary witnesses as transmitted in their brush jottings, as well as the reading two pictorial cityscapes of Ming Nanjing as historical and art historical sources. Both scrolls are from the brush of anonymous Ming painters.

Just as the biji records mirror Nanjing’s function as an administrative center and a metropolis dominated by trade each of the two scrolls aims at rendering the impression of urban prosperity. Yet each scroll follows its own grammar of depiction. While the Nandu fanhui tujuan 南 都 繁 會 圖 卷 [Scroll of the Prospering Southern Capital] largely follows the traditional compositional pattern created with the Song scroll Qingming shang he tu 清 明 上 河 圖 [Spring Festival on the River], the second scroll titled Shangyuan dengcai 上 元 燈彩 [Colorful Lanterns at Shangyuan] is a highly original deviation from the norm which concentrates on depicting the festive atmosphere and related activities in a single street in Nanjing at the time of the Lantern Festival.

The paper will introduce both scrolls by comparing artistic composition and pictorial contents, and juxtapose depictions with descriptions of Nanjing from written sources. Descriptions of cities in local historiography and contemporary painting were at the same time expression of the desires to record local peculiarities and, in the case of the paintings, to participate in consumption: in a concrete sense by commissioning paintings as status symbols, and in an abstract way by preserving [nostalgic] reminiscences of successful government and industrious city dwellers mirrored in urban wealth.

Books by Ina Asim

Chinas goldenes Zeitalter : die Tang-Dynastie (618-907 n. Chr.) und das kulturelle Erbe der Seidenstrasse / herausgegeben von Dieter Kuhn ; mit Beiträgen von Ina Asim ... [et al.]. Published/Created: Heidelberg : Edition Braus, 1993. Description: 312 p. : ill. (some col.), maps ; 28 cm. ISBN: 3894660694

Kluge Gattin, gute Mutter - oder Revolutionärin? : Frauen und Frauenbildung in Vorstellungen und Biographien chinesischer Reformer des frühen 20. Jahrhunderts / Ina Asim. Published/Created: Heidelberg : Edition Forum, 2002. Description: 111 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. ISBN: 392794324X (pbk.)

Religiöse Landverträge aus der Song-Zeit / Ina Asim. Published/Created: Heidelberg : Edition Forum, 1993. Description: 244 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. ISBN: 3927943088

Atkinson, John William, 1923-2003.

John W. Atkinson (1923-2003): Obituary.

Smith, Charles P.

American Psychologist. Vol. 60(2), Feb-Mar 2005, 195.

Attneave, Carolyn L. (Carolyn Lewis), 1920-1992.

Obituary: Carolyn Lewis Attneave (1920-1992).

LaFromboise, Teresa D; Trimble, Joseph E.

American Psychologist. Vol. 51(5), May 1996, 549.

Attneave, Fred, 1919-1991.

Fred Attneave (1919-1991): Obituary.

Hyman, Ray.

American Psychologist. Vol. 49(1), Jan 1994, 62.

Atwood, Elmer Bagby, 1906-1963.

http://www.utexas.edu/faculty/council/2000-2001/memorials/SCANNED/atwood.pdf

Austin, John Joseph, 1930-2006.

John Joseph Austin (1930-2006): Obituary.

Fagan, Tom.

American Psychologist. Vol. 62 (3), Apr 2007, 251.

Ax, Albert F. (Albert Francis), 1913-1994.

Albert Francis Ax (1913–1994): Obituary.

Fetzner, Joanne

American Psychologist, Vol 51(11), Nov 1996, 1182. doi: 10.1037/0003-066X.51.11.1182

http://www.utexas.edu/faculty/council/pages/alpha/a.html

http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/uchistory/archives_exhibits/in_memoriam/index1.html

http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/senate/memoriam/

http://www.apa.org/about/archives/obits/index.aspx