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...sold to academic laboratories for $100 a litre if pure, $15 a litre if mixed. Argon or nitrogen at low pressure are the usual fillers for electric tamp bulbs manufactured in the U. S. In Europe, however, krypton-filled lamps have been manufactured by Philips Glowlamp Works of Holland and other companies for about three years. Krypton lamps cost 75?, compared to 25? for argon lamps, but their sponsors claim that a 40-watt krypton lamp sheds as much light as an ordinary 50-watt bulb and that the cooling effect of krypton remarkably prolongs the bulb's life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Krypton Lamps | 7/12/1937 | See Source »

Happily back in Holland after all the fun she and her Prince Consort had in England at the time of George VI's Coronation was Crown Princess Juliana of The Netherlands. She was in such high good humor last week that, stepping to the microphone in Amsterdam, Her Royal Highness became the first Crown Princess, and possibly the first woman, to broadcast the news that she is expecting a child. This Juliana did with becoming Dutch delicacy in these words: "Nooit had iets mij kunnen weerhouden alle deelen van het programma mee te maken, waren het niet-op zichzelf...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NETHERLANDS: Expectant Broadcast | 6/28/1937 | See Source »

...prodigy, whose scientific name is Amorphophallus titanum and which is called krubi by the islanders of its native Sumatra, was the New York Botanical Garden in The Bronx. Only five times before had Amorphophallus titanum bloomed outside the Sumatra jungle-twice in London's Kew Gardens, once in Holland, once in Germany, once in a botanical garden in Java. During last week's excitement Assistant Curator Wendell Holmes Camp observed that The Bronx's plant was probably the ''most photographed plant in the history of botany...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Prodigious Plant | 6/21/1937 | See Source »

When James Hampton Kirkland of Spartanburg, S. C., eight years out of the University of Leipzig, took over Vanderbilt in 1893, it was chiefly because the bickering Methodist Episcopal bishops who ran it could agree on none but a dark horse candidate. Twenty years earlier Bishop Holland McTeyeire had extracted from his wife's cousin-in-law, "Commodore'' Cornelius Vanderbilt, a $500,000 endowment. An unexpectedly dark horse, Chancellor Kirkland insisted on appointing his own Board of Trust to manage it. When the Church refused to relinquish control, Chancellor Kirkland broke its grip in Tennessee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Chance Out | 6/21/1937 | See Source »

Only those nations will be visited which have achieved the highest development of the new forms--Germany, Scandinavia, Russia, Holland, England, Poland, Belgium and France. Listed among the special stops are Westminster Cathedral and London Tower, the Kremlin, and the Paris 1937 Exposition...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ARCHITECTURE COURSE ON HIGH SEA, ABROAD | 6/7/1937 | See Source »

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