Opera, orchestra team up to tell story of deadly 1913 flood
An opera revisits the Great Flood of 1913, a Midwestern disaster that killed hundreds and left thousands homeless.
An opera revisits the Great Flood of 1913, a Midwestern disaster that killed hundreds and left thousands homeless.
Here is an interesting response to last week’s column about leaving seriously damaged Bohol churches as ruins rather than totally reconstructing them.
Although the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) initially shelved the Dayaw indigenous people’s national celebration in Tacloban last November due to Supertyphoon “Yolanda,” it reset the event and held a much different celebration altogether.
In this rare instance, you are at a loss for words, or even thoughts. You are overwhelmed by images of destruction and tragedy which aren’t newsreels from some remote place abroad. They are from right here, at home, and somehow, you know of at least one person who is a casualty of this disaster.
It was a sober moment at the Raffles Ballroom of the Raffles Suites Makati as Ayala Land dedicated a minute of silence for the victims and families left behind by Supertyphoon “Yolanda.” In an event that was supposed to highlight the joys and revelry of the Christmas season, Ayala Land reminded everyone about the spirit of sharing and giving.
It has been wet in Atlanta. Flash floods have plagued some areas and trees have fallen because the ground is soft and mushy.
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