Trying to keep warm!
Times Square, NYC. It was 20 F/ -7C on our first day in New York! Handheld at ISO 3200.
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Now that's a Sunrise
Newcastle Sundance outing at Catherine Hill Bay
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Bent and Bongs Beer Bash 28th January 2012
Bent and Bongs Beer Bash 28th January 2012. Formby Hall Atherton.
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Gemldegalerie Kulturforum Berlin
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Still bored!!
How to add snow Still Bored, Bored, Bored and even more so!
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Giants Causeway
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Kodachrome Basin State Park
One of the sedimentary pipes towering over the rocks at Kodachrome Basin State Park in Utah.
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Cranes and M Shed
The M Shed is a museum in Bristol, England, located on Prince's Wharf beside the Floating Harbour in a dockside transit shed that was previously occupied by the Bristol Industrial Museum. The M Shed is home to displays of 3,000 Bristol artefacts and stories, showing Bristol's role in the slave trade and items on transport, people, and the arts.
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Beleza's Brass Section
Beleza Samba School.
Fremantle Festival 2011.
Fremantle, Western Australia.
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Joe Paterno on the football field in Evanston, Ill., on Oct. 22 shortly before his next-to-last game as Penn State's head coach. (Jim Prisching / Associated Press)
The death of former Penn State football coach Joe Paterno at age 85 conjures myriad memories and emotions but none more immediately indelible than a snowy day in State College, Pa.
The jubilant scene seems like years ago … it's actually been less than three months.
Chris Dufresne
E-mail | Recent columns
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Photos: Joseph Paterno 1926 - 2012
Joe Paterno dies at 85; transformed Penn State into football power
Photos: Joe Paterno fired as Penn State football coach
Full coverage: Penn State scandal
Photos: Notable sports deaths of 2011
Photos: Notable deaths of 2011
Paterno, in his 46th season as head coach, had just earned career win No. 409 with his team's 10-7 victory over Illinois. It was Oct. 29. The win pushed him ahead of Grambling legend Eddie Robinson as major college football's all-time victories leader.
PHOTOS: Joseph Paterno 1926 - 2012
Nursing leg, shoulder and pelvis injuries, Paterno coached from the press box but was toasted in a postgame ceremony. Then-university president Graham Spanier and athletic director Tim Curley presented Paterno with a plaque that read: "Joe Paterno. Educator of Men. Winningest Coach. Division One Football."
If only time could have stopped, on his legacy, on that last Saturday in October.
But it didn't, and the rest is a different history.
Less than two weeks after his crowning moment, Paterno was fired in the torrid, horrid middle of one of the worst unfolding scandals in sports history.
Never has 61 years of largely unimpeachable work, in one workplace, with one wife, unraveled so quickly and alarmingly.
The "winningest coach" never got a shot for victory No. 410. The next Saturday, an off weekend, the grand jury investigating the case unveiled a jaw-dropping indictment of longtime Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky. The child sex abuse charges were salacious, scathing and damning.
Spanier and Curley, the men who handed Paterno his plaque, faced charges for failing to report allegations of criminal conduct as well as perjury and saw their Penn State careers abruptly end.
Paterno, the most powerful man in town for six decades, was left to unsuccessfully bargain for the last few weeks of his brilliant career.
It didn't work.
This was worse than a horror movie: It was "Plan 9 from Outer Space."
So this, really, is how it ends?
Paterno's death leaves open wounds and unanswered questions. He was never implicated directly in the scandal, but had to stand in judgment against himself — the high man of character he had proven to be since arriving on campus in 1950.
The bottom line in this scandal is now the forever, nagging gray area: Mike McQueary, a former Penn State quarterback and graduate assistant, had reported to Paterno in 2002 seeing Sandusky molest a young boy in the locker room showers.
Paterno did what was legally required: He reported the incident to his superior. And this is where the story disconnected from anything we would have imagined.
Paterno had built an empire on integrity, accountability and doing things the right way. He called it his Grand Experiment, the idea you could win big without sacrificing ethics or dignity.
Joe Paterno, Penn State, Penn State, Joseph Paterno, Penn State football coach Joe Paterno ebook download, Penn State football coach, football field
January snow in Bucharest
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SEOUL—South Korea said it will continue bilateral discussions with the U.S. to find an acceptable compromise on sanctions against Iran's crude-oil exports, as the resource-poor country attempts to safeguard its energy security without alienating its key ally and trade partner.
A delegation of U.S. officials led by Robert Einhorn, special adviser on non-proliferation and arms control, met with South Korean officials throughout Tuesday to solicit Seoul's cooperation on U.S.-led efforts to curtail Iran's oil revenues to pressure Tehran into giving up its nuclear program.
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The U.S.'s special adviser for nonproliferation and arms control, Robert Einhorn, answers reporters' questions after meeting South Korean Deputy Foreign Minister Kim Jae-Shin in Seoul.
The U.S. delegation stressed the importance of resolving the standoff over Iran's nuclear program through global cooperation, the Korean government said in a statement. The U.S. seeks a gradual reduction of Iranian oil imports, to avoid disrupting the global crude-oil market or hurting its allies.
In response, Korean officials expressed their desire to go along with the multilateral effort but stressed the importance of minimizing the impact of the sanctions on the Korean economy, which is almost wholly dependent on overseas producers for its energy needs.
"The two sides agreed to continue efforts to reach an amicable solution that takes into account the interests of our country and companies while achieving the target sought by the U.S.," a Korean foreign ministry spokesman said. The two countries will hold additional talks over the matter but didn't specify any dates.
South Korea sources nearly 10% of its crude oil from Iran, and it would be difficult for the country to find alternative supplies quickly. The government has said it will look to secure alternative supplies to Iranian crude from Iraq and Kuwait.
Washington can choose to grant Seoul either an "exception" or a "waiver" to its sanctions. To be an exception, South Korea would have 180 days from the date the U.S. law took effect to reduce Iranian crude imports, while for a waiver it would have to act within a 120-day period in a way that would reinforce U.S. security.
Seoul is more likely to opt to be considered as an exception, people familiar with the matter say, a path that would require it to reduce Iranian crude imports significantly by end-June.
Write to Se Young Lee at vincent.lee@dowjones.com
sanctions against Iran, Robert Einhorn, South Korea, South Korean officials, energy security, SEOUL—South Korea online, Iran, Seoul, Seoul, Korean officials, crude oil, special adviser, Korean government, arms control
Chicago in B+W
Don't you just love when you go back to a color photo and find that it looks 100x better in B+W? Chicago's skyline is one of my favorite subjects. This image is one that I keep coming back to as it was a fun day and a great spot.
Canon 7d and 15-85
Postwork done in Nik Silverfx Pro
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RIYADH—Saudi Arabia's king replaced the hard-line chief of the country's morality police with a more liberal cleric who has encouraged greater women's rights, a change welcomed by activists as a sign that the monarchy would continue to pursue cautious social reforms in the face of political upheaval in the Middle East.
Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al Saud on Friday appointed Sheik Abdulatif al-Sheikh to oversee the religious police, who roam the kingdom's shopping malls and streets enforcing a rigorous version of Islamic law among the 27 million residents of Saudi Arabia.
Sheik Sheikh opposed child marriage in his role as senior member of the Council of Senior Scholars, one of the two highest religious authorities in the kingdom. He also defended Saudi women's rights under Islam to work and to mix with men in public places, as long as they are dressed properly, in a 2010 interview with a London-based newspaper.
The king decreed, without explanation, that Sheik Sheikh would succeed Sheik Abdulaziz al-Humain as the head of the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, which enforces compliance to the ultra-puritan Wahhabi form of Islam.
Rights activists said they hoped the religious police under Sheik Sheikh would enforce a more lenient interpretation of Islamic law.
"The king has been trying to show a more tolerant version of Islam and al-Sheikh could finally make that happen," said a Riyadh-based human-rights activist. "Even though we weren't given a reason for replacing al-Humain, we know that it is because he disappointed the people and didn't carry out the reforms the king and the Saudis want," the activist said.
The move also allayed concerns among some more liberal Saudis about the king's naming last year of a conservative crown prince.
King Abdullah, who is believed to be 87 and underwent three back operations in less than a year, named his half-brother, Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz, as crown prince in October, raising the prospect of Prince Nayef's ascension to the throne of the world's top oil-exporting country.
Some more liberal Saudis who say Crown Prince Nayef, as interior minister since 1975, has blocked social and political change and overseen crackdowns on political dissidents. He has been quoted as saying he saw no need for Saudi women to drive or vote. Many Saudis have watched for the government to take a more conservative turn with his appointment.
Many Saudis favor stringent enforcement of Islamic law and social code, leading even pro-reform Saudi officials to move cautiously.
The choice of a more liberal chief of religious police "could be an indicator that Prince Nayef is more moderate" than perceived, said Eman Fahad al Nafjan, a university professor and leading blogger on women's issues in Riyadh, the capital of Saudi Arabia.
Although the ruling al Saud family and senior religious authorities have maintained a close alliance, they have sometimes clashed over the government's attempts to limit the role of religion in education, to give women greater freedoms, and to standardize the country's Islamic legal system.
After the spread of popular Arab revolutions across the Mideast last year, the clergy stood behind the ruling family by issuing fatwas barring political protests, and the government appeared to back off efforts to promote social changes. Authorities arrested some women who broke the no-driving rule in a popular campaign last year.
Some activists argue that reforms by King Abdullah, who in September gave women the right to participate in local elections and to become members of the country's top advisory body, seem to be limited and may take years to be effective.
Sheik Humain, after his appointment by King Abdullah in 2009 with a mandate to reform the religious police, has been criticized by some Saudis for trying to knock back government initiatives to liberalize Saudi society.
Sheik Humain's dismissal came a week after a government deadline for Saudi stores to comply with a decree by King Abdullah ordering that only women can work in stores that deal with women's goods, such as lingerie. In recent days, religious police have harassed women who took such jobs, according to local media reports.
Such stores have been run by men, as restrictions on women and men interacting in public have largely limited women to working in health, education and a few office jobs.
Sheik Sheikh, in the 2010 interview, he argued that ikhtilat, the mixing of males men and females, isn't proscribed by Islamic law and that women can do all jobs in Saudi society.
Women working as clerks in stores dealing with women's goods wasn't only "permissible, but desirable," Sheik Sheikh told the newspaper.
Write to Summer Said at summer.said@dowjones.com and Ellen Knickmeyer at ellen.knickmeyer@dowjones.com
Sheik Sheikh, Sheik Sheikh, King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al Saud, King Abdullah, Sheik Abdulatif al-Sheikh, religious police, religious police, religious authorities, Sheik Abdulaziz al-Humain, women's rights, Prince Nayef, Saudi women, Islamic law, Islamic law, RIYADH—Saudi Arabia
Where South Meets Center
Or something like that.
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Introducing: "The morning light"...
I appreciate all your comments, favs, notes and expos, long or short!
Thank you very much to all!
-San Ignacio Adventure Hostel-
San Ignacio - Misiones - Argentina
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© Pablo Reinsch Photography
Please don't use this image without my permission.
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Streetlife Museum of Transport, Hull, East Yorkshire.
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20111231-47-Hobart NYE 2012 early childrens fireworks from Glebe
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