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Quaker Research in Progress Robert S. Burgess, Church Lane, Allison Park, Pennsylvania. Mary Dyer. (Written for young people of high-school age) . Completed. Leon Ray Camp, Department of Speech and Theatre, Indiana University , BIoomington, Indiana. The Speaking of Roger Williams in the Quaker Debate. Indiana University: Department of Speech and Theatre, thesis for M.A. degree. I960. Charline H. Conyers, Cheyney State College, Cheyney, Pennsylvania. A History of Cheyney State Teachers College, 1937-1951. (Traces the history of the institution from its establishment as the Institute for Colored Youth, founded in Philadelphia in 1837 from funds bequeathed by Friend Richard Humphreys, to the end of the tenure of Leslie Pinckney HiU as President.) New York University: Higher Education, thesis for Ed. D. degree. I960. Lawrence R. Ephron, Survey Research Center, University of California , Berkeley, California. Friends In Deed: A Sociological Study of the American Friends Service Committee. (Evaluation of "Youth for Service" delinquency program and its place in the AFSC.) University of California: Sociology and Social Institutions, thesis for M.A. degree. 1961. Bliss Forbush, Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania. Liberal Quakerism, 1830-1850. (First section of a study of liberal Quakerism, its action and thinking, 1830-1960.) Edmund Goerke, Monmouth Hills, Highlands, New Jersey. Authority and Liberty in the Life. (A study of unity and separation among the Children of the Light, 1650-1690.) S. Garlin Hall, 7030 S. E. Brooklyn, Portland, Oregon. The Contribution of Henry Joel Cadbury to the Study of the Historical Jesus. Boston University: Biblical Literature, thesis for Ph.D. degree. 1961. Norma E. Henderson, Wonewoc, Wisconsin. A Study of Friends' Missions in Jamaica. Asbury Theological Seminary: Christian Education, thesis for B.D. degree. 1955. J. Hampton Hoch, Medical College of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, and Quintus Hoch, 2429 Frankford Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Mrs. [Sybilla] Masters and her "Tuscarora Rice." (Information about her family and the mill used for preparing her hominy, which has been called "the first American patent medicine.") Sydney V. James, Jr., History Department, Brown University, Providence 12, Rhode Island. The Impact of the American Revolution on Quakers' Ideas about Their Sect. (Summarizes some theological points, but dwells more on Quaker ideas about the relationship between the Society of Friends and the rest of the civil community.) Anne C. Johnson, Rivermere Apartments, Alger Court, Bronxville, 52 Quaker Research in Progress53 N. Y. The Pronoun of Direct Address in Seventeenth-Century English. (Study of occurrence of thou and you in a sample selection of plays and fiction in relation to social class and by decades. Grammarians do not recognize you for the singular before 1653 and only rarely for some time thereafter.) Columbia University: English, thesis for Ph.D. degree. 1959- (Available on microfilm.) J. Reaney Kelly, 137 Conduit Street, Annapolis, Maryland. Quakerism and the Founding of Anne Arundel County. (Its premise: that Anne Arundel County was the scene of the first substantial convincements in Quakerism on the mainland of the New World; also that the planting of Quakerism was unopposed by either the Church or the Provincial Government.) Charles Lowell Marlin, Department of Speech and Theater, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana. The Speaking of Jemima Wilkinson, the "Public Universal Friend." Indiana University: Speech and Theatre, thesis for M.A. degree. I960. Allen Willard Mendenhall, Vermilion Grove, Illinois. History of a Quaker Academy in Vermilion Grove, Illinois, 1874-1942. (Points out the freedom of a private subscription school in contrast to the tax-supported, state-controlled, non-sectarian public high school.) Indiana State Teachers College: Education, thesis for M.A. degree. 1958. Harry W. Nerhood, Whittier College, Whittier, California. A History of the Whittier Institute of International Relations, 1935-1959. William T. Parsons, 712 Chestnut Street, Collegeville, Pennsylvania. Biography of Isaac Norris II. (Ph.D. thesis being prepared for publication with new material added.) H. Wickliffe Rose, R. D. No. 1, Great Barrington, Massachusetts. The Colonial Houses of Worship in America. (Churches, meetinghouses, etc., built in the British colonies before 1798 and still standing.) Thomas G. Sanders, Department of Religious Studies, Brown University , Providence 6, Rhode Island. Protestant Theories of the Relation between Church and State. (To include discussion of the distinctive characteristics of the Quaker theory.) William Edwin Sawyer, 111 Delaware Avenue, Ridley...

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