Published on January 29th, 2009 | by Sunita Dharani
Interacting with nature, delving into imagery captured by the human mind and even extracting movement to create notes of music – these are just a few of the works audiences will experience at the screening of …... Read More →
Published on January 20th, 2009 | by Sunita Dharani
With the start of a new year, the inauguration of a new president into the White House and the appointment of a new University president, it is only appropriate that even the Blaffer Gallery would select …... Read More →
Published on November 19th, 2008 | by Sunita Dharani
Perhaps one of the perks of living on an island such as Cyprus that has been besieged by everyone – from the Greeks, to the Ottomans, the Venetians and the British – is the great assortment …... Read More →
Published on November 12th, 2008 | by Sunita Dharani
Ask anyone who conducts a study abroad program what is the most important aspect to consider when researching study abroad, and the answer you receive will vary. Some will say the location of the program (before …... Read More →
Published on November 5th, 2008 | by Sunita Dharani
I have found during the past few months of living in Nicosia that to be "American" is to be something special to the locals. While a bit of an exaggeration, the overwhelming feelings of being trapped …... Read More →
Published on October 29th, 2008 | by Sunita Dharani
I had four pieces of shrimp in my hair. There may have been more caught in the strands that loosely danced around my face, but I wasn’t busy counting exactly how many chunks of seafood had …... Read More →
Published on October 22nd, 2008 | by Sunita Dharani
Smoky scents of chicken, lamb, and hookah float through the alleyways around me. In front, a domed structure and two minarets loom, the worn stone reducing its imposing nature by only a small extent. The only …... Read More →
Published on October 15th, 2008 | by Sunita Dharani
The first day of school is terrifying – whether it’s the first day of kindergarten, high school or college. A feeling of nausea takes over as you break out into a nervous sweat, your fingers tightly …... Read More →
Published on October 8th, 2008 | by Sunita Dharani
When I stepped onto the rocky soil of Famagusta, there were no saloons, no factories left unoccupied by their operators, no tumbleweeds, and certainly no horses left unguarded by a population that has fled their homes. …... Read More →
Published on September 24th, 2008 | by Sunita Dharani
At approximately 10 p.m. Sept. 13, I found myself trapped on an Athens street corner surrounded by three large Greek men, and the locked gates of closed businesses. At every turn, signs stared back at me …... Read More →