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The Far East: China and Japan by Douglas Grant; Millar MacLure Review by: E. H. S. Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 81, No. 4 (Sep. - Dec., 1961), p. 463 Published by: American Oriental Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/595749 . Accessed: 12/06/2014 14:48 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . American Oriental Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of the American Oriental Society. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 62.122.79.56 on Thu, 12 Jun 2014 14:48:13 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

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Page 1: The Far East: China and Japanby Douglas Grant; Millar MacLure

The Far East: China and Japan by Douglas Grant; Millar MacLureReview by: E. H. S.Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 81, No. 4 (Sep. - Dec., 1961), p. 463Published by: American Oriental SocietyStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/595749 .

Accessed: 12/06/2014 14:48

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

American Oriental Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal ofthe American Oriental Society.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 62.122.79.56 on Thu, 12 Jun 2014 14:48:13 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: The Far East: China and Japanby Douglas Grant; Millar MacLure

Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books Briwef Yottces of Books 463 463 463 463 463 463 463 463 463 463 463

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

Contemporary China; PEconornia and Social Studies; Documents, Chronolopy, Bibliopraphy, III, 1958-59. Pp. xi + 439. Hong Eong: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $6.00. Statistics and other data for social scientists on Communist China, with some short essays (such as K. A. \Vittfogel, " Class Structure and Total Power in Oriental Despotism "). Large bibliography and indexes. (E. H. S.)

The Lolo of Liang Shan. By LIN YUEH-EUA. Trans- lated by JU-SHU PAN. Pp. 159. New Haven: HP&F PRESS, 1961. $3.00. Translation of a report (Liang-shan I-chia) of a field trip among the Lolo made by Professor Lin in 1943. It is primarily a study in social anthropology, and has tables of kinship terms and terms of address. (E. H. S.)

The Trapedy of the Chinese Reuolution. By HAROLD R. ISAACS. Second Revised Edition. Pp. if 392. Stanford: STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. $7.50. First published in 1938, this is a study of the early years of Chinese Communism, especially during 1925-27, with an appendix covering the Kiangsi Soviet period of 1928-34. (E.H. S.)

Studies in Chinese Institutional Zistory. By LIEN- BEENG YANG. Harvard-Yenching Institute Studies XX. Pp. 229. Cambridge: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1961. Republication of nine of Professor Yang's articles which appeared in the HARVARD Journal of Asiatic Studies between 1946 and 1957.

(E. E. S. )

The Far Plast: China and Japan. Edited by DousLss GRANT and MILLAR MAcLE. University of Toronto Quarterly Supplement 5. Pp. numbered 259 to 344. Toronto: UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS, 1961. Short essays: J. R. LEVENSON, The Intellectual Reuolution in China; A. FEUERWERRER, Rewriting Chinese Ilistory: Interpreting the Past in the People's Republic of China; M. H. VAN DER VALR, Assimilation and Chinese Law; W. A. C. DOBSON, Micius; D. HAWRES, The Supernatural in Chinese Poetry; P. D. HANAN, A Landmark of the Chinese Nouel; D. KEENE, Modern Japanese Literature. ( E. E. S. )

Journal of the Ilong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. I (1960-61). HK$20 per year. The Hong Kong Branch existed from 1847 to 1859, and was revived in 1959. This first issue of its journal contains the following as Transactions: F. S. DRARE, " The Study of Asia: A Heritage and a Task "; A. M. MACFARLANE, " Birds of Hong Kong"; B. T. CHIU, " Flowers of Hong Kong"; JAMES J. Y. LIU, "The Knight Errant in Chinese Literature "; HUGH RICHARDSON, " Tibet as it Was." As Articles Contributed: DOROTRY SCOTT, "The Morrison Library "; LIU TSUN-YAN, "Bud- dhist Sources of the Novel Feng-shen Yen-I "; HOLMES WELCH, " Buddhist Organizations in Hong Kong "; B. D. WILSON, " Chinese Burial Customs in HOng Kong.' ( E. E. S. )

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

II Buddhwmo. By OSCAR BoTTo. Pp. 125. 12 plaes and map. Milano: ISTITUTO EDITORL&LE GALILEO, 1959. Informative, very well and clearly written, concise book describing the life of Buddha, the essence of his teaching, Tantric Buddhism and the spreading of Buddhism to Greater India. Contains also a bibli- ography and a useful index. Appeared as Volume 6 in the series Le relipions dell'Uma??it. (L. S.)

Eoncise Chinese-PAnplish Dictionary, Romanized. By JAMES C. Quo. Pp. vi +225. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: CHARLES E. TUTTLE Co., 1960. The dictionary under review is a pocket size companion volume to Mr. Quo's Concise PJnplish-Chinese Dic- tionary, Romanized. It is very clearly and hand- somely printed in Japan on good paper. For a book as small in size as the present dictionary (8 X 14 X 1 cms. ) it contains surprisingly much material, in- cluding a good many modern words and compounds not treated in any existing Chinese-English dic^ tionary irrespective of size. Characters and romani^ zation (Wade) are supplied for all compounds, and for the most recent vocabulary those terms used on Formosa are marked with one asterisk, those used on the Mainland with two asterisks. The number of words and compounds included approaches 10,000, more than half the number found in W. Simon's A Bepinners Chinese^Enplish Dictionary. I would estimate that about one third of the compounds in Quo's dictionary are not found in Simon's, but, of course, not all of them are equally important. The book is easily worth the $2.00 it sells for in the U. S. ( S. E. )

The Chinese alassics. With a translation, critical and exegetical notes, prolegomena, and copious indexes. BY JAMES LEGGE. Reprinted from the last editions of the Oxford University Press. 5 volumes. Hong Kong: EONG KONG UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $80.00. "A number of errata listed by James Legge have been corrected in the text. Added at the front of each volume are Concordance Tables to later trans- lations in English, French and German and to the Shih-san-ching chu-shu fu chiao-k'an-chi, Shanghai 1935. Volume I contains a portrait of Dr. James Legge with a Biopraphscal Note by Dr. L. T. Ride, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. Volume II contains Notes on Bencius by Dr. Arthur Waley, originally published in Asia 7Uajor, N. S. I, i,1949." (E.}I.S.)

The Chinese Classics. By JAMES LEGGE. BiopraphicaZ Note, by LINDBAY RIDE; Concordance Tables; Notes on Mexcius, by DR. ARTHUR WALEar. Pp. 29 + xlviii. Hong Kong: Hoss Koss UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1960. $2.00. This is a separate printing of the new mate- rials which appear with the 1960 five-volume edition of Legge's Chinese Classics. (E. II. S.)

:Kyoto haipaku fuzoku toshoka?? rokushi-nen shi. Pp. 342. Kyoto: KYOTO UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, 1961. A study of the development of the libraries of Kyoto University over the past sixty years. Information on resources of the several special libraries.

(E.}I S.)

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