Word: rico
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...Pasachoff '68, of Quincy House and New York City, will replace Grey Jones, the squash manager and Jeffrey L. Berenberg '63, of Quincy House and Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, was chosen undergraduate manager in wrestling. He will replace Pete Schwartz. Paul S. Horvitz '64, of Hurlbut Hall and Santurce, Puerto Rico, will become varsity manager. The undergraduate manager for track, D. Roger Ferguson '62, of Dunster House and Syracuse, New York, will remain in his position and managers for the fencing team will be chosen next week...
...primary cause of the dropoff is political and psychological. In January, after his advisers reported increasing resistance from potential U.S. investors, Puerto Rico's Governor Luis Muñoz Marin showed up at a Manhattan hotel to give a pep talk on the Commonwealth's economic possibilities to 500 U.S. businessmen. When he finished, the first question was: "What about Castro?" Fearful that Castroism has high export value, many U.S. businessmen wonder if Cuba's nationalization of U.S. investment (totaling $1.5 billion) may be an augury of things to come across the hemisphere...
Tanned and rested after a vacation at Ramey Air Force Base in Puerto Rico, Olmstead and McKone said that they were ready for "any job the Air Force gives...
Natural progesterone is too costly and must be given in such massive doses as to be unsuited for wide use. Then Pincus and colleagues found that norethynodrel worked better and in far smaller doses. Pincus and Rock teamed with Puerto Rico's Dr. Edris Rice-Wray in a big-scale test of the drug as a contraceptive among San Juan slum dwellers. While "on the pills" only 16 out of 838 women in four study areas became pregnant and all 16 had skipped their pills occasionally. Equally important, among the 174 women who dropped out of the test because...
...teamed with Richard Loeb in 1924 to murder 14-year-old Bobby Franks in a Dostoyevskian crime without passion, was sentenced to life imprisonment plus 99 years, served 33 years before earning parole in 1958, and is now a graduate student of sociology at the University of Puerto Rico; and Trudi Garcia de Quevedo, 56, Baltimore-born widow who runs a flower shop in San Juan; in Castaner, Puerto Rico, in a civil ceremony kept secret for 48 hours but approved by the Illinois Parole and Pardon Board...