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Nicole M. Gandia ’09 and her fiancé Lino A. Gonzalez first forged their relationship over a love of salsa dancing. “We met my freshman year. We both dance salsa and I went to take his salsa class,” Gandia said. “Months later, I went out to dance salsa in Central Square at a place called the Havana Club, and he was there. We started dancing.” The pair grew to be quick friends and salsa partners, but did not become romantic for several years...

Author: By Claire J. Saffitz, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Nicole M. Gandia ’09 and Lino A. Gonzalez | 6/1/2009 | See Source »

...Indian dance. Representatives from the Bulgarian Club, donning vibrant traditional outfits, opened the event with a lively lesson about their dance, the Danube Horo. Although volunteers who joined the dancers exhibited varying levels of grace and coordination, the circular dance quickly took shape. Next, Candela Salsa presenter Nicole M. Gandia ’09 urged attendees to “loosen up and let go” as she dazzled them with Los Angeles-style salsa, which several students seemed to pick up quickly. According to Jean S. Arias ’09, who led the lesson along with Gandia...

Author: By Ryshelle M. Mccadney, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Uncommon Dances Bring Veterans and Amateurs to Their Feet | 10/19/2006 | See Source »

...Franco proclaimed over the Burgos radio at 2:20 p. m. on March 29 that the Spanish Civil War had officially ended. His troops had occupied Madrid, Valencia, Ciudad Real, Cuenca, Jaén, Albacete-almost without resistance. Italian planes from Majorca had made a last bombing trip over Gandia, British-controlled Mediterranean port. A few anarchist soldiers were still putting up a feeble resistance in isolated districts and clean-up campaigns were bound to continue for some time. But, broadly speaking, Generalissimo Franco was right: the war was over and for the first time in 984 days Spain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Aftermath | 4/10/1939 | See Source »

Attacks on British ships in the 23-month-old war were brought to 60 and the 78th British seaman was killed. The British-owned port at Gandia, with Union Jacks painted on the rooftops, was bombed and machine-gunned in what British Manager Edwin Apfel called a "deliberate brazen attack on British property." At Denia, a raisin exporting centre, the French merchantman Brisbane was bombed, five seamen were killed, a British observer for the Non-intervention Committee killed and the captain injured. Farther down the coast at Alicante the British freighter St. Winifred and the 5,387-ton ship English...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Brazen Attack | 6/20/1938 | See Source »

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