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Quarterly Journaly

of the
University of North Dakota

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IV. THE GEOLOGY AND STRUCTURE OF THE
EAST SIDE OF THE NESSON ANTICLINE
LEONARD P. Dove..

240

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HE Quarterly Journal is a periodical maintained by the Uni

versity of North Dakota. Its primary function is to represent the varied activities of the several colleges and departments of the University, tho it is not limited to that. Contributions from other sources are welcomed, especially when they are the fruitage of scientific research, literary investigation or other forms of constructive thought. Correspondence is solicited.

cents.

The subscription price is one dollar a year, single numbers, thirty

All communications should be addrest,

WITH

THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL,
University, North Dakota.

Editor's Bulletin Board

ITH this issue the Quarterly Journal enters upon its twelfth year. It extends a kindly greeting to all old subscribers and readers, and is pleased to announce four very interesting numbers for the year. The next issue, that for January, 1922, will carry, among other articles, three extensive studies-all very timely and all touching, in one way or another, the general field of political and social sciences. The three studies are as follows: (1) "The Critical Attitude of the French Mind"; this is by Dr. Henry Haxo, head of the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures in the University of North Dakota. Dr. Haxo is a native Frenchman, educated in this country. (2) "Social Aspects of the Business Cycle" by Dr. George R. Davies, Professor of Sociology in this University. For two years Dr. Davies has been occupying a teaching position in Princeton University, on leave-of-absence from the University of North Dakota. (3) "The Cahokia Mounds", by Dr. Wallace Nelson Stearns, Professor of Religious Education in McKendree College, Lebanon, Illinois. Dr. Stearns was formerly a member of the faculty of the University of North Dakota and a frequent contributor to the columns of the Quarterly Journal. He is much interested in the preservation of this great monument of a past civilization and, near at hand, has a splendid opportunity of interpreting it as well as the movement for its preservation.

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