News

It’s Paris! Enough said,” sums up Dennis Lennox, travel columnist for The Christian Post. In case you’re looking around at intersections during your visit and feeling a bit perplexed, here’s the ...
This often overlooked South American destination is packed with out-of-this-world nature, fascinating historical sites, and markets with peculiar souvenirs.
With “P’unchaw,” the photographer Victor Zea captures the light falling on Cuzco, Peru, where people have mixed Catholic and ...
The world’s largest statue of Our Lady of Guadelupe will celebrate its 30th anniversary this year. The statue is located at the Servants of Mary Center for Peace, a shrine located at 6601 Ireland Road ...
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Brazilian Catholic worshippers laid down an eco-friendly carpet in front of the world-famous Christ the ...
Utility workers excavating trenches to expand the network of natural gas pipelines in Peru’s capital have uncovered a pre-Inca mummy approximately 1,000 years old, barely half a meter from the surface ...
Officials will unveil the statue at 56 Main St. at 2 p.m. Saturday. LEWISTON — In 1965, Lewiston became the unlikely stage for one of the most iconic moments in sports history, the heavyweight ...
But will the market heat up for solar cars such as INTI — named after the Inca Sun God? Entrepreneur Julian Field thinks so. On Wednesday, he unveiled his solar car prototype that he hopes will ...
According to a PNG order obtained by The Sun, the protestors were cited for trespassing and for failure to present a permit to display posters on the statue. According to University policy ...
“He’ll be a shiny bronze color.” A statue of George Washington stands on the grounds of the North Carolina State Capitol in Raleigh. Kaitlin McKeown The News & Observer Washington’s ...
Nearly everyone wears a Stetson or sun hat or ball cap—L.A. Lakers ... be able to use them to crack open the lost history of the Inca empire, which was, at its peak, the largest civilization ...
The Atlantic has a fascinating deep dive into khipus — long cords that the Inca tied knots into to preserve information. Few know how to read the knots, which are hundreds of years old and fragile.