Word: mongolls
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Later on the expedition may continue southward into Eastern Turkestan and Tibet. In the same region, southwest of Urga, is the site of Karakhoto, buried capital of the Mongol emperors, discovered by the Russian scientist Kozlov (TIME, March 17), who is now on another expedition to central Asia...
...Lecture by Professor Anesaki. "Representative Figures in the Religious History of Japan." III. "The Mongol Invasion and a Prophet of Japanese Buddhism," in Emerson...
...Lecture by Professor Anesaki. "Representative Figures in the Religious History of Japan." III. "The Mongol Invasion and a Prophet of Japanese Buddhism," in Emerson...
...will be open to the public. The three other lectures which will complete the series will be held on the next three successive Wednesdays at the same time and place. The subject will be: March 17--"A Social Catastrophe and the work of a Pietist Saint"; March 24--"The Mongol Invasion and a prophet of Japanese Buddhism"; March 31--"Religious Movements in Modern Japan...
...attempts at fables cover the first few pages of this issue. Only two deserve notice. "The Wise Man," by R. P. Utter, is good, but one wishes its tone were otherwise. The dialogue is well done and the topic decidedly modern. The best of the other attempts is "The Mongol and the Chinaman," by Albert Dwight Sheffield. After reading all these essays, however, one sees a reason for the quotation which heads the collection: "For the term fable is not very easy to define rigorously." Two efforts at versifying, the first "To a Guinevere" having no excuse for being...