Adventures offer a lesson in theology
One of the greatest aspects that make up Sevillano culture is its large tie to the Catholic religion.
131 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
One of the greatest aspects that make up Sevillano culture is its large tie to the Catholic religion.
When people talk about their experiences abroad, they tell you how amazing living in a different country is, and how fun it is to taste the life of a jet setter traveling all the time, but they never tell you how hard it can really be living so far away from your loved ones.
Bang! Bang! The beat of the drums sounded from every angle.
I had my first excursion outside of Sevilla this past weekend to a small beach town on the coast of the south of Spain called Cadiz.
I think the dark hair, brown eyes and semi-dark complexion definitely aided me in this accomplishment, but my dream came true: I was mistaken for a Sevillano.
When I lived at home, my family made it a priority to always have dinner together. Of course, schedules tended to conflict with tennis practice or rehearsal or work, but by the end of the week family dinner was always the precedence.
It happened. I couldn’t avoid it. There was no way of escaping it. Culture shock hit me hard.
People shuffled into the theater to escape the 30-degree cold outside while 12 microphone stands were perfectly aligned on the stage, with projected snowflakes on the back curtain and white twinkling lights hanging from the ceiling.
“18 dead in Paris.” “60 dead in Paris.” “100 dead in Paris.”
Tricked. Blackmailed. Forced.
Secretary of State John Kerry visited IU as part of the celebration of the recent opening of the Global and International Studies Building.
Secretary of State John Kerry visited IU as part of the celebration of the recent opening of the Global and International Studies Building.
Yaolin Wang was a proud young woman, very proud, her father, Mr. Wang said.
A celebration of Chinese culture inundated Dunn Meadow with food Sunday afternoon, games, dancing, singing and an overall appreciation for the festival of mid-autumn.
A single spotlight shined down on the stage.
The American Folklore Society has recently moved its office from Ohio State University to IU-Bloomington after 15 years at the academic institution.
On the cold, rainy day of Sept. 11, 2015, 2,977 flags were propped into the ground of Dunn Meadow, each standing uniformly in rows.
A picture of the American flag was displayed on the projector screen.
At the age of five, Juan Fernando Maestre said he knew he was gay.
From IDS reports