Word: portos
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Maine 109, Maryland 52, Massachusetts 2193, Michigan 41, Minnesota 67, Mississippi 11, Missouri 77, Montana 9, Nebraska 42, Nevada 2, New Hampshire 66, New Jersey 146. New York 576, New Mexico 2, North Carolina 24, North Dakota 9, Ohio 193, Oklahoma 24, Oregon 30, Pennsylvania 215, Philippine Islands S. Porto Rico 3, Rhode Island 97, South Carolina 22, South Dakota 4. Tennessee 18, Texas 28, Utah 19, Vermont 37, Virginia 28, Washington 30, West Virginia 19, Wisconsin 46, Wyoming...
...list of last year's officers shows the range of nationalities that is covered in the club. The President, P. G. Quinones LL. B. '19, a Porto Rican; J. V. Manach '21, Vice-President, comes from Cuba. The Secretary, E. Noguera Unc., is a Mexican, and R. Arratia, Treasurer, is an Exchange Professor from Chile...
...from Massachusetts, which furnishes, therefore, over half the undergraduates of the University. The next state is New York with a total of 236. The states unrepresented are: Idaho, Mississippi, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. The District of Columbia has a total of 14, while the territories of Porto Rice and Hawall have 2 each...
...United States. "Kanana," Miss Ida Horblit 6. Denmark. Danish Songs, Miss Mathilde Ward, Radcliffe. 7. Cuba and United States. Dramatic play entitled, "A Game of Comedy." Fromont, a French actor, Jorge V. Manach '21 Marie, a laundress, Miss Dorothy Googins Pierre, Fromont's servant, Herman E. Wiener '20 8. Porto Rico. Pianoforte Selections, J. M. Sanroma, New England Conservatory of Music. 9. Spain. Spanish Dance, F. C. Monteagudo 3Dv. 10. France. A Greeting from Overseas, Pierre A. Martin 1L "My Country "Tis of Thee...
...consoling it is worth reflecting that sugar is from 15 to 20 cents a pound in Europe today, and much more scarcely obtainable than it is here. We have sugar from California, Colorado, Idaho, Michigan and Ohio; from the Louisiana and Texas cane fields and mills, from Porto Rico and from Hawaii, as well as Cuba; with the result that there is no month in the entire year in which American-grown sugar is not being harvested and moved to market...