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Since the early 18th century, one symbol has spelled terror for sailors the world over like no other. Although it most ...
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Sovereignty or Supremacy?
My recent writings on South Africa have focused on one persistent theme: sovereignty. National sovereignty. Economic ...
Miss Katie’s Diner in Milwaukee isn’t just serving food – it’s preserving a slice of Americana that keeps locals coming back and visitors making special trips across county lines. The gleaming white ...
Across time and geography, the eagle has remained a constant in the world of national symbols. From ancient empires to ...
Black Americans’, our’ relationship to this annual holiday has always been fraught. In 1852, nearly a century after the ...
In the southernmost city of mainland Florida sits an unassuming eatery that’s mastered the art of comfort food so thoroughly that one bite of their signature biscuits and gravy might just ruin you for ...
EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsAnother summer packed full of international tournament action continues with the UEFA ...
Before the Euros kicks off on July 2, we look at all 16 teams competing in Switzerland to determine which of them has the ...
This is the last part of the trip after the museum visit and the S Class experience drives. We are already running a little ...
(The Conversation) — In choosing his motto and coat of arms, Leo references the Order of St. Augustine, to which he belongs. He uses the identifying symbol of Augustine, a heart pierced by an arrow.
Pope Leo XIV has announced his motto and coat of arms – a long-held tradition for those in the ranks of bishops, cardinals and popes. The choice of symbols and words reflects the person’s ...
The official coat of arms of Pope Leo XIV. Credit: Vatican Media Beneath the shield runs a scroll displaying the pope’s episcopal motto: “In illo uno unum” (“In the one Christ we are one ...