Word: dj
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...city's most popular radio DJ's, Eddie "el Piolin" Sotelo, who stirred passions and whipped up enthusiasm for the March 25 boycott, didn't report to his mike this morning, in support of the boycott, and the station aired a previously taped show. Meanwhile, over the weekend, some members of the We Are America coalition were disheartened to hear that Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa would be traveling to Dallas for NFL meetings, rather than participating in their afternoon march. Villaraigosa told TIME.com in March that he preferred to lobby for the McCain-Kennedy Senate bill on immigration reform rather than...
FRIDAY Kuumba and DJ Shiftee host “Get It!” in the Adams Dining Hall for $5. FM will be there as soon as names of dances stop telling them what to do. The FAM Inc. (they’re so much more than just a blocking group—they even have their own t-shirts!) presents Chapter II in a TBA location. If only Michael “You can call me Cash” Anderson ‘08 could announce it in Justice. SATURDAY The Ho-Co guarantees FM that you won?...
...Harvard students put down their problem sets and head out to Boston on a weeknight? FRIDAY Blame the MCATs for Friday night’s lack of festivities. At BGLTSA’s Varsity, the police were stationed outside 45 Mt. Auburn, just in case any of DJ Shiftee’s wild Britney remixes got a little out of hand. The party seemed to be dry, but that didn’t stop the dirty dancing or some pretty serious PDA. FM has got to learn to be less alco-normative. Though some waited up to half an hour...
...Hospital Fest 2006 this weekend, but he swears he would if he had a car, a driver’s license, or money.“I’m a little bit disappointed,” says Evan L. Hanlon ’08, a music director and DJ for WHRB’s underground rock department, Record Hospital (RH), and a major organizing force behind RH’s upcoming two-night concert. “If it happened it would have been almost too good to be true,” continues Hanlon. But the independent festival...
...professors in the field. The relay is also meant to raise awareness. “Fundraising is a big part of Relay, but it’s also about celebrating hope,” Joseph M. Hanzich ’06, wrote in an e-mail. Live bands, a DJ, free massages, “root beer Beirut,” raffles, and card games were some of the other activities taking place as the relay continued from 6 p.m. Friday to 6 a.m. Saturday. Teams were composed primarily of eight to 15 people and many were organized by sororities...