On Aging Alone | The Walrus thewalrus.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thewalrus.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Turning an archaeological practice on its head In a new book, Megan Kassabaum challenges the field to take a forward-looking approach, rather than one that looks backward. She does this through the study of a Native American architectural feature called platform mounds.
Archaeologists often spend a career studying a single site, region, or time period, building on the field’s previous research and interpretations. But some, like Penn’s Megan Kassabaum, take a wider view that spans both time and geography by focusing on understanding widespread practices. Since arriving at Penn, Kassabaum has focused on tracking the long history of Native American platform mounds in the eastern United States.
The Center for Creative Photography introduces digital viewing to encourage during the pandemic arizona.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from arizona.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Cincinnati Magazine
Illustration by Lars Leetaru
Self-care always seemed self-evident to me. Take care of yourself, eat right, sleep enough, and stay active in some way. Then came a wave of âas seen on TVâ products offering self-care in a bottle, a shoe, or a scent, followed by experiences like beach vacations and spa treatments branded as self-care.
Just another attempt to take advantage of human insecurities to sell us stuff we donât need, right? Weâve seen it before with businesses promising solutions for our beauty, weight, and sex issues; now theyâve rolled up every potential personal shortcoming under the all-encompassing umbrella of self-care.
The Whosoevers’ Idaho tour is the subject of a new documentary, “The Whosoevers Full Send Tour: Spreading the Gospel During Difficult Times in the Pandemic,” which was released in March 2021. | The Whosoevers
Over the last five years, Ryan Ries, the co-founder of The Whosoevers, a movement that seeks to deliver the message of the Gospel to schools and empower students to realize their true purpose in life, has seen hundreds of thousands of children, teens, and young adults come to Christ.
“We ve seen over 100,000 students give their life to the Lord in public school systems worldwide through our Kill the Noise tour,” Ries, who founded the group with P.O.D. frontman Sonny Sandoval, told The Christian Post.