Word: holland
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Saturday at Andover. Gulick and Schneider, playing an excellent passing game, scored two goals each for the Blue, while F. P. Lowrey '34 and R. D. Merry '34 did the tallying for the Freshmen. ANDOVER HARVARD '34 Paine, g. g., Johnson Howard, c.p. c.p., Holsapple Lowe, p. p., Eagleton Holland, 3d. 3d., Rogers Lewis, 2d. 2d., Althouse, Lowd Shea, 1.d. 1.d., Rabinovitz Moyer, c. c., Levan, Sise Rowland, 3a. 3a., Lowe, Reed Ward, 2a. 2a., Housen Schneider, 1a. 1a., Lowney Tompkins, i.h. i.h., Lessig Gullick, o.h. o.h., Merry, Downes...
...King of Siam, now en route to the U. S., will have a similar operation performed after examination by Dr. William Holland Wilmer of Johns Hopkins...
...Holland. An agent of Capitalist August Heckscher of Manhattan announced that New Holland Corp. might be dissolved. Six years ago the capitalist's and the corporation's names were news enough to set residents of Hyde County, N. C. agog. The capitalist poured millions into the company; the company set up huge pumping stations which drained the marshy old bed of Lake Matamuskeet for a mammoth "factory-farming" project. Wheat and soybeans were planted in great batches. First year it rained, flooding New Holland. Second year New Holland was a success. Third year brought a new failure...
Joyce Cornvelt, South African Dutch girl, came back to Holland when her father's death left her an orphan. But the Leyden Cornvelts did not take to her very kindly. She was glad to pay a visit to the English branch of the family. The London Cornvelts were completely Anglicized and quite prosperous; they treated her like the country cousin she was, but Joyce preferred them to the Leydeners. That was in 1908, when the question of woman's suffrage in England had already begun to burn. The Cornvelts were for it, but in a nice way; nobody...
...Author. Jo Van Ammers-Kuller, 46, called Holland's foremost novelist, likes long books with lots of relationships. To aid the unwary reader who does not realize that No Surrender is a sequel to The Rebel Generation, she has prefaced this book with a revealing but formidable genealogical table. Good and caustic when it comes to describing a family anniversary, Novelist Van Ammers-Kuller in her feminist vein gets almost committee-womanish. She started to write before she was 20, quit when she married, began again when her two boys were safe in school, her husband director...