Word: mayas
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...essence of Michael Jackson morphed into a rhythmic display.” Or so says student choreographer Lisa B. Flannery ’08 of TAPS, the campus tap-dancing troupe. Along with the company’s “Smooth Criminal” piece, Susan E. Maya ’08 has also choreographed “a fun, whimsical dance set,” which combines “a showy Broadway feel and traditional rhythm-tap.” Maya says that her dance, set to the song “King of New York...
...rapid-fire series of a dozen bands (one every half-hour) from 12-5:30 p.m. in front of Holyoke Center, should delight. Promising to have something for everyone, the performers’ self-descriptions range all the way from alt-pop to pop/rock. Battle of the Bands victors Maya, along with ever-popular groups like Major Major and the Dharma Seals, will participate, and the event should be worth watching if just to see each band cram set-up, performance, and disassemble in the amount of time it takes a crew of five roadies to position the amps...
Shorty after Stephen McCarthy moved to Las Vegas in 2004, he offered a female friend an interesting proposition: if she kept the place tidy, cleaned up after his dog Maya and brought in the paper each morning, she could live in his house rent free. It worked well until, McCarthy says, his friend began to get possessive, jealously questioning him when he went out on dates. Her argument that she had a right to ask after his whereabouts since she did "everything, just like a wife," prompted him to ask her to move out after a year. "That...
...course, it's what's on the inside that really counts. And that falls very much under the mystical influence of time. A bottle of wine, as Maya, the oenophilic waitress in Sideways points out, reflects the soil, the sun and the rain of the year its grapes were grown. Its ultimate flavor, though, will also reflect the burnishing influence of the years it lay in wait of a corkscrew. As more women discover that age-old truth about wine and waiting, it's a good bet that fewer will settle for the little White Lie of a cutesy label...
...Maya E. Frommer ’07 might have been an anomaly at Chinese Student Association meetings two years ago, when she was an officer of the group.For one thing, she’s not Chinese.“I’m completely Caucasian,” said Frommer, a government concentrator from Chicago.Frommer might have stood out at the group’s meetings, but on Harvard’s campus, she epitomizes a trend—undergraduates who are crossing traditional ethnic lines in their extracurricular choices.Joseph A. Pace ’06, a social studies concentrator...