View allAll Photos Tagged person...
600 persons visited the International Criminal Court (ICC) on Sunday, 29 September 2013, when it opened its doors for The Hague International Day. Visitors engaged with speakers representing the Judges, the Prosecution, the Defence, the Legal Representatives of Victims, and the Registry during an interactive session held in the ICC Courtroom in The Hague (Netherlands). They had the opportunity to participate in a one-hour presentation in the ICC public gallery. Questions from visitors focused on the various aspects of the Court’s work, including its mandate, structure and ongoing cases.
you are still the only one who uses my english name out loud
noluthando where the hell are you going
i told you that my advisor said we must learn to engage, invite and embrace the unwanted persons of the world or that we are relatively purposeless beings and that when he said that i thought i loved him a little bit even though no one really terrifies me more and i'm sure i didn't completely understand what he said but i looked at his pictures in his office and felt very heavy and irrelevant and also ethically lacerated
into the face of a small boy he photographed in soweto, holding a sandwich in his little skinny hands
wonderbread crumbs
nothing less nutritious, maybe
a series on malnutrition?!?!?!?!!?
a series on hiv/aids?!?!?!?!?!
he said, can american photographers be remotely interested in doing series in africa on anything but poverty, famine, or disease in africa? can they look at something beyond obnoxiously obvious suffering?
CAN THEY FEEL SOMETHING FOR SOMEONE WHOSE BODY IS NOT DYING, RATHER, WHOSE BRAIN IS?
i said i didn't know whether or not that was true
he said, well, they want shock value, they want statistics without humanity
a photograph of a skinny black body can make a name for someone, he said
a picture of someone dying can seal the deal, he said
americans and their fucking cameras, i am grateful for the opportunity to teach you how to do it right, he said
i can sit in your office and you can say bad things about "americans" like i am not one of them
but i know i am, you know i am
is there a difference between the harvard lawyer
and the hungry guitarist
ollen says, no
you say, yes
i say, where is the fire
thandile says, probably
sudoku warriors at a mini mall
on the phone with my mom she says, how is it going
"i have never tried more at anything else in my entire life"
if you want to cure your apathy
your summertime blues
your old school tennishhh shoes
GO TO A THIRD WORLD COUNTRY
"i want to learn how to surf but i also really don't want to wear a puka shell necklace. are they mutually exclusive?"
rodney king goes to niagra falls
niagra falls is going right this second!
is there is enough water in the world for niagra falls, forever
you can put on a sweatervest very quickly for someone your age
where is the fire?
wake up to hayley taking a picture of me sleeping
what the hell are you doing?
and laugh and feel very stupid until it's time to go
"ambiguity is too much like water to not actually exist"
you are beautiful like a tree
you are beautiful like a tomato
you are beautiful like some colors, or apricot, or granulated disco ball sugar
some colors are yours and some are mine and some are both of ours and when i say "you" it is indiscriminate and without indication of who i actually am talking about or perhaps there is no conviction towards anyone and it is honestly not directed at anyone and yet somehow still written with thankful and consciously super saturated conviction
Randy Cohen will interview Pulitzer Prize-winning Irish poet Paul Muldoon and his wife novelist Jean Hanff Korelitz for his public radio program Person, Place, Thing on Monday, September 29 at 7 p.m. in the Community Room at the Princeton Public Library. Guests on the program are asked to speak about a person, a place, and a thing they find meaningful, rather than about themselves.
Paul Muldoon is the Howard G.B. Clark ’21 university professor in the Humanities at Princeton and the founding chair of the Lewis Center for the Arts where he is a professor of creative writing. He is also the poetry editor for The New Yorker. His new collection One Thousand Things Worth Knowing: Poems will be published by Farrar Straus and Giroux in January. According to the publisher, “Muldoon can be somber or quick-witted — often within the same poem: The mournful refrain of “Cuthbert and the Otters” is ‘I cannot thole the thought of Seamus Heaney dead,’ but that doesn’t stop Muldoon from quipping that the ancient Danes “are already dyeing everything beige/In anticipation, perhaps, of the carpet and mustard factories.”
Nick Laird’s assessment, in The New York Review of Books, is that Muldoon is “the most formally ambitious and technically innovative of modern poets,” an experimenter and craftsman who “writes poems like no one else.”
Publishers Weekly calls Jean Hanff Korelitz’s new novel You Should Have Known (Grand Central $26) an “excellent literary mystery” that “unfolds with authentic detail in a rarified contemporary Manhattan.” Her 2009 novel, Admission, about a reader in Princeton University’s Office of Admissions, was made into a movie starring Tina Fey in 2013. Her other novels include The White Rose, The Sabbathday River, and A Jury of Her Peers.
Randy Cohen won multiple Emmy awards as a writer for Late Night with David Letterman and for 12 years wrote “The Ethicist” column for The New York Times Magazine.
- I have a digital camera - my new friend - Canon G10
- this is first picture, I photograhed myshelf in front of big mirror .
By Albert Kenyani
The first person to own a bicycle and latter a car in western province was King Nabongo Mumia.
The second person to own a car and latter a bus company in the province was Elijah Ukiru. As for present day Vihiga County, Ukiru was the first person on both accounts.
Elijah Ukiru was already driving a car in the 1940's when the number of Africans who owned a car in Kenya was not more than ten.
While Odinga Oginga was mobilising funds from his Luo Community to start a bus company, Ukiru was the main shareholder in Andimi Bus Company that operated in present day Vihiga, Kakamega, Kisumu, Kisii and Migori Counties.
Today we have a significant population of fourth generation Maragoli who reside in Uriri Constituency in Migori, and in Lugari Constituency in Kakamega County. Their grandfathers landed in the area in the 1940's, 1950's and early 1960's on an Andimi Bus.
Elijah Ukiru was my maternal grandfather who loved me dearly. In the mid-1960's, as a child of less than 10 years, I would jump on the bus to visit places whenever I felt like. The bus company collapsed a few years after the death of Ukiru in the year 1966.
He had very good words for me the day before he died.
This guy is a homeless person, although at first glance he is not so totally down and out. He has another modus operandi.