Word: mais
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...game faster, there has been no increase in the number of referees. I agree with retired ref Gilles Veissière, whom you quoted suggesting that football needs another referee so that there would be one ref to cover play on each side of the field. Dennis Gillman Chiang Mai, Thailand Can the Feeling Last? Thank you for the article "Party people" [June 26], which captured the Germans' sudden change in attitude toward the World Cup, their team and their national identity. The past few weeks have not only helped Germans get over the guilt that has been linked...
Malemba-Nkulu is a small town on the upper reaches of the Congo River. Since late last year, the town has swelled with the arrival of some 18,000 refugees who left their villages to escape fighting between government troops and a vicious rebel outfit known as the Mai Mai. Most arrive with little more than the clothes they are wearing. Sitting outside a modest house where they rent a room, Ngoi Banza Leontine, 45, and her husband Monji Banza, 47, say they fled the fighting with their nine children just before Christmas, after the Mai Mai came to their...
...Lowell Lecture Hall, includes a wide array of dance styles, from the culturally rooted Harvard Pan-African Dance and Music Ensemble to the Balanchine-esque Harvard Ballet Company. The Harvard-Radcliffe Dance Company, Harvard’s oldest student dance troupe, will be featured in the show as well. Mai-King C. Chan ’06, one of the directors of HRDC, says that the group will be sticking with its modern-dance roots for its performance during the dance festival, presenting an elegant piece set to string music and drums. “Modern dance in general...
...Harvard-Radcliffe Dance Company, Harvard’s oldest student dance troupe, will be featured in the show as well. Mai-King C. Chan ‘06, one of the directors of HRDC, says that the group will be sticking with its modern-dance roots for its performance during the dance festival, presenting an elegant piece set to string music and drums...
...local council in the Pakistani border state of Punjab ordered the gang rape of Mukhtar Mai in 2002 after her brother was seen walking with a girl from a rival tribe. After Mai spoke out, the government gave her $8,300 in compensation, which she used to found a school to educate young women in Pakistan. She has gained international acclaim largely due to columns penned by New York Times op-ed writer Nicholas D. Kristof ’81, whose readers have sent Mai over $130,000 through this past November.Kristof, a former Crimson editor, has written that Mai...