English citations of Cola

Columbia, South Carolina edit

  • 1994 October 12, Janet A. Brindle, “First Family Weekend enjoyed by most”, in The Johnsonian, 7th issue, fall edition, 71st year, Rock Hill, →OCLC, page 5, column 1:
    Brenda Jackson, from Cola, S.C., said she enjoyed the weekend very much.
  • 1995 September 5, “Lovaas in Columbia,SC”, in bit.listserv.autism[1] (Usenet):
    I am
    writing because I currently provide training in the Lovaas method to a
    4 year old boy in Cola, SC.
  • 1996 September 16, “Cancelled in Cola. SC?”, in alt.tv.star-trek.voyager[2] (Usenet):
    Voyager has disappreared from its normal place on Fridays at 7:00pm in
    Columbia SC. Where has it gone?
  • 2001 January 25, “Columbia South Carolina League?”, in rec.sport.baseball.fantasy[3] (Usenet):
    I am either looking for an existing league in the Cola SC area or
    failing that I am wiling to form a league in Cola.
  • 2006 February 1, Caroline Foster, Glenn Gardner, South Carolina Department of Natural Resources internal communications assessment (South Carolina State Documents Depository)‎[4], South Carolina State Library, page 70:
    (Columbia keeps) the burden off of us and lets us go about our jobs by not being flooded with all these things that are being handled in Cola.
  • 2012 [1863 February 14], chapter 1863, in Margaret Belser Hollis, Allen H. Stokes, editors, Twilight on the South Carolina Rice Fields: Letters of the Heyward Family, 1862-1871[5], →DOI, →ISBN, →OCLC:
    Dearest Tattie, I reached home from Columbia, late last Eveng, and must write my last letter, before the mail Boy leaves at twelve o’clock.

    My business detained me, till dinner time, yesterday in Cola, and Izard and I, had to travel down pretty much all the way after dark, with Izard all the while, whenever in a rather dark place on the road, crying out “mind your other Eye Papa—if that gets hit you will look magnificent.”
  • 2015 January 16, Belvin Olasav, “What Columbia needs in 2015: Arts and Culture”, in The Daily Gamecock[6], Columbia, →ISSN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 6, column 2:
    It was like a gift to Cola's music scene — Music Farm announced it was opening a branch in Columbia, finally giving the city the mid-sized music venue that it so desperately needed.