Word: hollands
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Commenting on his paper, Professor L. J. van Holk of the University of Leyden, Holland, pointed out that the growth of empiricism coincided with the eighteenth century enlightenment and the rise of liberalism...
Slow Stranglehold. The union bosses hoped to defeat Holland by dislocating New Zealand trade. Thousands of tons of perishable goods piled up in warehouses. Farmers lost money, local factories closed down for lack of raw materials. Sugar supplies ran out, homes were without heat, gas and power were rationed. Trade loss: an estimated...
Tough, able Sidney Holland invoked a set of emergency regulations. He used his powers sparingly, but in some instances suspended the right of assembly, public speech or public print. Newspapers and radio stations were forbidden to interview strikers. Other unions were not allowed to hold public discussions of the strike issues or on the emergency regulations. Anyone giving aid & comfort to strikers or their families was threatened with jail. But police did not lay a finger on the Red bosses...
...Holland stubbornly refused to deal with the Red unionists, set his hopes on a new Communist-free dockers' union, sponsored by the government. By last week, the Red strike was broken. Miners, meat-freezing and hydroelectric workers voted to go back to work. The Waterside Workers' Union had virtually ceased to exist; its Communist leaders were thoroughly discredited...
...Reds stalemated, Prime Minister Holland was expected to revoke the emergency regulations. New Zealanders felt that democracy, stern though its measures were, had won an important victory...