Word: tens
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...very beginning, we felt the future of personal computing is mobile computing. We're halfway there. In the not too distant future, people will turn to [portable] devices for their computing needs, to access information and to communicate. I think we're going to lead that continued revolution. Ten years from now, I think we will have every opportunity to be like Intel, Apple, Cisco, Oracle and the great companies in Silicon Valley...
...capped off its season the right way by defeating Ivy foe Columbia (8-9, 1-6 Ivy) by a 2-1 score at the Stevens Institute of Technology. For Harvard, the win was a first in several respects. By defeating the Lions, the Crimson snapped a ten-game losing streak, winning for the first time since a Sept. 21 victory against then-No. 15 UConn. It was also the first collegiate win for sophomore goalie Siobhan Conolly, who stood tough in the net but did not have to make any saves thanks to an inaccurate Columbia offense. Perhaps most importantly...
...cross-section of classes and ethnicities. Made up of short, numbered chapters that count down, like a bomb, rather than up, each focuses on one of the book's six major characters, then repeats the cycle. Each set begins with Ray Beam, a burnt-out pop star of ten years ago whose descent from debauched musical godling to weird, unproductive recluse resembles that of Axl Rose. He suddenly seems to find his muse in Lily, a young Hispanic-American woman whose side of the story bookends each chapter cycle. Initially hired as Ray's personal assistant, Lily cautiously allows herself...
...friendliness worked wonders. Wearing a black mini-skirt, tight crop-topped yellow T, and pink headband, Ninja got the audience chanting along to her silly lyrics, “Do, do it, alright,” and her cheerleaders’ call, “Two, four, six, eight, ten!” At one point in the show, she began imitating the dances of various audience members, and late in the show began wildly kicking into the air. Caught up in the excitement and energy, the audience, the majority of whom sported thick under-21 crosses on both hands...
...during the recitals. Adolphus Busch Hall. 12:15 p.m. Free. (LAM)Neba Solo—The Music & Dance of Mali. Harvard’s African Expressive Culture Group present “the genius of the balafon,” Souleymane Traoré, aka Neba Solo, and group of ten African musicians and dancers. Sanders Theatre. 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Harvard Box Office, (617) 496-2222, with a limit of two free tickets per person. (LAM)Digable Planets, Project Move, and the Eclectic Collective. Digable Planets, Project Move, and Eclectic Collective mix up rap, hip-hop, and jazz...