
Articles
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1 month ago |
wuwm.com | Diane Cole
A 19-year-old mechanic in Nigeria who maintains the water supply, a ground-breaking jazz guitarist from Sudan, deep-sea diving women in their 60s from South Korea, a watermelon vendor in Indonesia who at 82 is her family's main bread winner. They are among the subjects in the photography exhibition, "Iconic Women: From Everyday Life to Global Heroes," that opens on March 8, in honor of International Women's Day, at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Kentucky, and will run through January 19.
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2 months ago |
wsj.com | Diane Cole
“Is this the home of Tony Horwitz?” Thus began the phone call from the hospital informing Geraldine Brooks that her husband had suddenly collapsed and died. Memorial Days: A Memoir Viking 224 pages We may earn a commission when you buy products through the links on our site. Amazon Barnes & Noble Books a Million Bookshop It was Memorial Day 2019, a day that would no longer be a holiday to Ms. Brooks and the two sons she and Horwitz raised together in their home on Martha’s Vineyard.
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2 months ago |
flipboard.com | Diane Cole
Nick Ut Breaks His Silence on Accusation He Didn't Take 'Napalm Girl' PhotoNick Ut, the subject of a new documentary that claims he didn’t take the iconic “Napalm Girl” photo which is arguably the most famous image of the …
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Nov 27, 2024 |
kpbs.org | Diane Cole
We usually encounter our food roughly at eye level: stacked on shelves in the supermarket, displayed on stands at outdoor markets, beckoning at the Thanksgiving table. Acclaimed photographer George Steinmetz wanted to bring a different perspective to our daily bread, protein and produce. As he looks at the way food makes its way to feed a constantly growing human population, he works mainly with drones for a bird's eye view. In his "foodscapes," human, boats and machines all play a role.
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Nov 27, 2024 |
boisestatepublicradio.org | Diane Cole
We usually encounter our food roughly at eye level: stacked on shelves in the supermarket, displayed on stands at outdoor markets, beckoning at the Thanksgiving table. Acclaimed photographer George Steinmetz wanted to bring a different perspective to our daily bread, protein and produce. As he looks at the way food makes its way to feed a constantly growing human population, he works mainly with drones for a bird's eye view. In his "foodscapes," human, boats and machines all play a role.
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