Pizza is the universal food language. Though not popular in all countries, it is usually one of the
Whenever you travel back to your hometown, you always seem to notice a couple of changes here and
We drink to party. We drink to cry. We drink to rebel. I drink for culture.
After running up and down stairs, I double check and triple check every room in my house to
One of the most important lessons I learned while studying abroad is to break out of your comfort
So far in London, I’ve enjoyed a show in the famous West End, visited the queen (and my future husband, Prince Harry) at Buckingham Palace and ridden on the top of a double decker bus. I’ve updated my wardrobe to be more chic and I’ve started casually incorporating the words flat and posh into my daily vocabulary. I’ve also spent a lot of money on alcohol, and for that I blame Freshers Week.
When I am craving two of my favorite sugary indulgences, ice cream and soda, I like to “experience” them at the The Franklin Fountain, a quaint ice cream shop and soda fountain located in old city Philadelphia.
I drove the approximate 2.3 miles from my downtown apartment to the little twin house that I used to live in as a child.
My favorite book in the series was, without a doubt, Eloise in Paris. After reading the marvelous tales of Eloise in the city of lights, I became enamored with the city, and immediately longed to travel there myself one day.
Nestled to the north of London, Highgate Cemetery is the final resting place of some of the world’s most prominent historical figures. Founder of socialism Karl Marx, author George Eliot (also known as Mary Ann Cross,) and physicist Michael Faraday are all buried within the confines of the enormous 37-acre cemetery.