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7 result(s) for "Souza, Pete, photographer"
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Dream big dreams : photographs from Barack Obama's inspiring and historic presidency : a book for young readers
\"Pete Souza served as Chief Official White House Photographer for President Obama's full two terms. He was with the President during more crucial moments than anyone else - and he photographed them all, capturing scenes both classified and candid.\"-- Provided by publisher.
No return to glory, only ruins
A Kabul mosque that was virtually destroyed by factional fighting in the 1990s as it looked in November 2001. A displaced door protrudes from the Afghan landscape alongside a road north of Kabul. An Afghan boy scampers through the remains of a Kabul neighborhood last month that was devastated by factional fighting in the 1990s. A stairway that leads to the balcony in a movie theater was damaged during combat in the 1990s. City buses destroyed and looted in the past decade are piled up in a Kabul lot.
Shade : a tale of two presidents
The former official White House photographer compares the most recent two administrations via photos of Barack Obama side-by-side with tweets, headlines, and quotes from the Trump administration.
A nation goes to war ; Step one: Making soldiers
Recruits at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., listen to their instructors before their Night Offensive Course, the final stage of basic military training. Part of the way through the basic training obstacle course, the challenge becomes vertical. Welcome to the United States Army. What the Army gets on the front end at Ft. Leonard Wood is, essentially, soft teenagers it must transform, through intensive mental and physical training, into men and women equipped for the next level of combat training. Traversing the overhead bars, recruits work their way through part of the obstacle course, sometimes helping their partners and sometimes going it alone. In a tradition familiar to generations of enlistees, a drill sergeant searches recruits for ammunition they might be carrying, intentionally or accidentally, after time on a rifle firing range.
Obama : an intimate portrait
\"Obama: An Intimate Portrait reproduces more than 300 of Souza's most iconic photographs with fine-art print quality in an oversize collectible format. Together they document the most consequential hours of the Presidency--including the historic image of President Obama and his advisors in the Situation Room during the bin Laden mission--alongside unguarded moments with the President's family, his encounters with children, interactions with world leaders and cultural figures, and more.\"--Dust jacket.
VIEWS OF NEW ORLEANS
When you walk down any street here, you notice the silence. Human voices are now virtually non-existent. Instead, when you stop and listen, really listen, you hear the sounds of what remains. Loose siding from a broken-down house creaks in the wind. Water drips slowly from a detached pipe. A window fan, lying on its side, flicks blades of overgrown weeds as it twirls around and around in the afternoon breeze.
The House that Rahm built ; Rahm Emanuel, Chicago's profane, ruthless, savvy operative, remade the Democrats in his image--and helped the party overcome 12 years of humiliation
PHOTOS 12 GRAPHICS 2; Rep. [Rahm Emanuel] has taken a sledgehammer to political niceties, making plenty of enemies along the way. During the campaign, Rahm Emanuel spent a lot of time traveling or on the phone, or both. At home, his son asked him to stop talking business on his cell as they played. Emanuel attends an event in Connecticut for a congressional candidate. He had to be familiar with roughly 50 races: the candidates, the interest groups, the voting blocs. Making an unscheduled appearance at an event in Albany, N.Y., Emanuel gets the attention of a campaign worker in an effort to go onstage with [Bill Clinton]. In Syracuse, N.Y., Emanuel talks at a fundraiser for Dan Maffei. Emanuel is not known as a great speaker: He can lapse into a confusing shorthand on politics or legislation. The campaign took its toll on Emanuel. His hair turned whiter, he lost 14 pounds, and thinking about the details of all the races kept him awake. Emanuel and his wife, [Amy Rule], head to their polling place Tuesday in Chicago with daughters [Ilana] and Leah. When Emanuel was on the road, he called home several times a day. Tribune photo by Nancy Stone In Utica, N.Y., Emanuel whispers a Scrabble word to Julia White after a campaign event for Mike Arcuri. Tribune photos by Pete Souza Rahm Emanuel in high school Rahm Emanuel working on 1989 Mayor [Richard M. Daley] campaign Tribune file photo (Rahm Emanuel walking with President Clinton and two others) Agence France-Presse photo by Joyce Naltchayan TRIBUNE SPECIAL REPORT: ARCHITECT OF A TURNAROUND Abrasive, controversial, brilliant. Those adjectives are used to describe Rahm Emanuel, the Democratic congressman from Chicago, whose strategies helped the Democrats regain the House. Tribune correspondent Naftali Bendavid had unprecedented access inside Emanuel's campaign that led the Democrats to victory and ended an era of Republican rule. The behind-the-scenes story unfolds in SECTION 2 of today's newspaper. Getty Images photo by Chip Somodevilla (News section, Page 1) Democrats take the House ELECTION RESULTS BY DISTRICT Republicans, Democrat DEMOCRATS' SEATS PRE-ELECTION 202 POST-ELECTION 230* *As of Friday, if trends continue in undecided races, 232. - See microfilm for complete graphic.