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The Newseum, a museum of the news industry, posts dailies from around the U.S. and a few from around the world, in front of the museum entrance on Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., in Washington, D.C.
see how it looks the next morning after snow storm. www.flickr.com/photos/dandc/12500182424/
(Best viewed large) This is a memorial to jouranlists who have died in the line of duty, in Freedom Park, Rosslyn VA (Arlington). The tower houses WJLA ABC TV, on Wilson Blvd. (June 2008: I discovered this month that the memorial has been dismantled from this location; no word on where it is now, but it might have been relocated to the new home of the Freedom Forum's Newseum, in DC.
There were plenty of these in downtown D.C. the weekend of the World Bank/IMF meetings. This one was idling near the Treasury Department.
government contractors galore, Crystal City, Arlington, Virginia (Washington, D.C.), adjacent to Reagan National Airport.
The MSC Charleston on its way to the port of Oakland, and a ferry boat apparently on its way to Alcatraz Island on its way out of the embarcadero in downtown San Francisco.
Best viewed large.
Cargo ship arrivals are announced in the San Francisco Chronicle business section:
Lobby of the new New York Times headquarters building on 8th Ave.
The installation in the lobby is called "Moveable Type," 2007, by Mark Hansen and Ben Rubin (vacuum florescent displays, copper and steel cables, custom software, two grids, each overall: 20'x53'6" x 1"). A description mounted on the wall of the lobby says the displays feature fragments of news, quotes, numbers, obituaries, and other information elements culled from the databases of the newspaper.
The R.R. Donnelley Building houses the corporate headquarters of United Airlines. Wacker Drive and Clark Street.
News World, a newsstand on Farragut Square in Washington, D.C., sells extra editions of newspapers covering the inauguration. January 21, 2009.