EditorialWorld Cup fans struggle to stuff Uruguay's mascot for the World Cup, a thermos named "Botija", through a metro turnstile in Doha, Qatar, Dec. 1, 2022. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times)
EditorialThe last of the nomadic Charrua people, Uruguay, 1833. Medicine man Senacua Senaque (perhaps drinking yerba mate tea), warrior with bow and arrow Vaimaca-Piru Sira, and young couple Laureano Tacuave Martinez and Maria Micaela Guyunusa. The Charrua were...
EditorialThe last of the nomadic Charrua people, Uruguay, 1833. Medicine man Senacua Senaque (perhaps drinking yerba mate tea), warrior with bow and arrow Vaimaca-Piru Sira, and young couple Laureano Tacuave Martinez and Maria Micaela Guyunusa. The Charrua were...
EditorialThe last of the nomadic Charrua people, Uruguay, 1833. Medicine man Senacua Senaque (perhaps drinking yerba mate tea), warrior with bow and arrow Vaimaca-Piru Sira, and young couple Laureano Tacuave Martinez and Maria Micaela Guyunusa. The Charrua were...