by VERONIKA MOROZ
But people in Ukraine can’t move on. They can’t look away. It may feel like the war’s slower progress is inevitable, but it isn’t. It doesn’t have to be like this.
Read Moreby VERONIKA MOROZ
But people in Ukraine can’t move on. They can’t look away. It may feel like the war’s slower progress is inevitable, but it isn’t. It doesn’t have to be like this.
Read Moreby VERONIKA MOROZ
Since its inception in 2011, the goal of the Book Arsenal Festival has been to “integrat[e] the Ukrainian book and literary community with the international one.” This concept takes on a whole new level of international importance now as a direct opposition to the rhetoric of Putin, who claims that Ukrainian culture and literature does not exist.
Read Moreby SOPHIA DU
Endlessly,
you wash the Earth clean in a
circle of life, a tireless guardian of the land.
Read Moreby VICTORIA WOO
Imagine a slim, tall woman with her hair slicked back and her navy blue pencil skirt perfectly hugging her legs. When she walks, her 3-inch heels clack and echo, and her very presence radiates like an ember. This, my friends, is the memory manager.
Read Moreby CHELSEA GUO
She liked to save objects: The marbles in her kindergarten teacher’s shelf of games. The pretty napkins her classmates’ fathers lovingly packed into lunch boxes. The flowers in her foster mom's garden.
Especially the flowers.
Read Moreby OLIVIA BAO
On May 10, 2024, the weather phenomenon known as the Northern Lights appeared in Lexington.
Read Moreby NIHASHI NAG
This entire speech touched on a variety of issues and ideologies that are extremely relevant in our political world today. Not only do these topics have strong significance in the United States, but they also have serious global importance. To speak on these issues in a manner such as this was bound to ignite countless reactions.
Read Moreby VICTORIA WOO
The show may not be mainstream, but–in Anne’s exact words–I solemnly swear “for as long as the sun and moon shall endure” that it is worth a watch.
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