Word: mexicans
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Raggio 3G., will read "El Tren Exproso" from Campoamor's "Pequenos Poemas" this evening at 8 o'clock in the Assembly Room of the Union. The reading is under the auspices of the Sociedad Espanola and is open to the University. Mr. Wallace Gillpatrick, of the Mexican Herald, whose stage version of Guimera's "Tierra Baja" was given by Mrs. Fiske in New York last winter under the title "Marta of the Lowlands," will render several Spanish and Mexican songs with guitar accompaniment...
Professor L. Wiener and S. G. Morley '99 have been elected faculty members of the Sociedad, and Colonel Charles K. Darling and Mr. A. P. Cushing '78, Mexican Consul, have been elected honorary members. The following thirteen men have been elected active members: E. L. Porter '04, R. P. Utter 1G., K. N. Washburn '04, W. M. Dey 1G., J. Hinckley '06, N. O. Simard '06, H. D. Chandler '06, R. Dupouey 1G., F. V. Sotolongo 2G., A. G. Waite '05, F. M. Smith, Jr., '04, F. H. Sawyer '06, C. B. Loughead...
...close was breveted lieutenant colonel, for meritorious services. He resumed his practice of law in Boston immediately after the war, and was appointed first assistant solicitor for Boston in 1870, holding that office until his resignation in 1876. He long served as counsel for the Mexican Central Railway Company and as trustee for a number of large estates. He was a director of the New England Trust Company, the Stark Mills, Cabot Manufacturing Company, Northern Pacific Railway, and Marquette, Houghton and Ontonagon Railroad...
...important acquisition has been made recently by the Peabody Museum of a collection of Mexican antiques, which have been taken from excavations at Zumpango and Tecomaxochill. The collection consists of Crania, pottery, stone implements, soap stone vessels and small human effigies, one of which is a remarkably fine specimen. There are also beads of gadeite and shell, stone pendants and car ornaments, and rude figures of stone, fashioned from discarded axes...
Professor Marshall H. Saville, who occupies the chair of Mexican Archaeology recently founded by the Duc de Loubat at Columbia University, will deliver the first of a series of four public lectures, to be given under the auspices of the Harvard Anthropological Society, at 8 o'clock this evening in the Fogg Lecture Room. The subject of the lecture will be "Ruins at Oaxaca, Mexico...