Word: dickinsons
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...there is reason for her flowers and landscapes to be considered as symbols of the unconscious, her gigantic Black Cross, New Mexico] might suggest extreme asceticism. All of O'Keeffe's work, utterly original, has graphic cleanliness, economy, purity, a lyric quality suggesting that of Poetess Emily Dickinson...
Northwest was started in 1926 by the late Charles D. Dickinson, a red-faced, white-whiskered eccentric who made a fortune in the seed business, was affectionately called "Pop" and "Santa Claus" by airmen because he spent the last years of his life and much of his fortune angeling flying ventures. Aviation Bug Dickinson toyed with Northwest for a spell, lost so much money he turned it over to a group of Minneapolis-St. Paul-Chicago financiers. They did better: in 1927 Northwest had a prosperous Twin Cities-Chicago run, in 1928 spread to Winnipeg. Then Northwest picked up tough...
Rounding out the Saturday morning program was a discussion of "The Controlled Materials Plan as an Aid to War Production," by E. T. Dickinson, executive director of the planning committee...
...TOOK TO THE WOODS - Louise Dickinson Rich-Lippincott...
...considerable attention to the parallel development of Canada and Latin America. Ignoring unimportant U.S. Presidents, it gives most study to those Americans who have played a world role (e.g., Ben Franklin, Woodrow Wilson). Its texts include such original documents as the Resolves of the First Continental Congress and John Dickinson's Letters of a Farmer in Pennsylvania. Unusually sophisticated for undergraduates, it requires students to read such authors as French Catholic Philosopher Jacques Maritain, British Socialist Harold Laski, Congressional Librarian Archibald MacLeish, Machiavelli...