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National Geographic : 1960 Jan
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Like Gulls in Flight, Sailboats Skim Across Lake Hopatcong A priest walked slowly around the temple exterior, revolving a prayer wheel. The elders strive mightily to preserve their Buddhist teachings, and many young people, such as Alexey, seek to help them. Materially, the Kalmuks are doing well. Americanization is everywhere: in late-model cars, in TV aerials atop ranch houses, in gum chewing, teen-aged Kalmuk girls reading movie magazines, in little boys playing mar bles. and in a lay leader wearing a faded college sweatshirt like any other college boy home for the weekend. The Kalmuks and all these other varied New Jersey's largest lake, the Indians' "honey water of many coves" lies among tree-clad hills. peoples have found room in tiny New Jersey - and it is tiny, a fact impressed on me by a visitor from California. "Why," she said. 'I think San Bernardino County could hold all of New Jersey!" I went to an encyclopedia. She was right. San Bernardino could hold all of New Jersey and have room left over for Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Delaware! Waterfall Built a City I usually take visitors through the north Jersey forest and lake country. To make the contrast between well-known industry and
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