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xmsw Another extreme winter image: The Missouri River, frozen
« le: Décembre 11, 2024, 07:54:28 pm »
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 The divorce rate among soldiers and Marines increased last year as military marriages suffered continuing stress from America s two ongoing wars.There were an estimated 10,200 failed marriages in the active duty Army and 3,077 among Marines, according to figures obtained by The Associated Press for the budget year ended Sept. 30.That s a divorce rate of 3.5 percent among more than 287,000 married troops in the Army, up from 3.3 percent in the previous fiscal year, according to Defense Department figures. With increasing demands placed on Army families and soldiers - including frequent deploymen stanley quencher ts and relocations - intimate relationships are tested,  said Army spokesman Paul Boyce.The new data shows 3.7 percent of more than 84,000 ma stanley polska rried Marines divorced in fiscal year 2008, up from 3.3 percent in 2007. The Marine Corps called the increase statistically small and said offici stanley cup als would need to examine them farther.         That said, Marine Corps leadership is keenly aware of the burden military families carry in a time of war,  said Col. Dave Lapan, a spokesman.  Our leaders, from the commandant on down, are paying serious attention to the strain. Some veteran and family groups question whether Pentagon figures are too low, saying they do not take into account many who divorce after leaving the service. The groups are unable to offer other estimates. Divorce rates are up - no doubt about it - a kind of predictable ripple effect of this pace of operations,  Paul Rieckhoff of th Kumd Hey, Jim Webb, If You   re Running For President At Least Get an HD Camera
 William Eggleston is a photographer who rose to prominence in the 197 stanley cup website 0s for his photos of American life, many of which are now iconic. Those decades of pictures have come from dozens of different cameras stanley taza , and Eggleston himself was kind enough to share with the Wall Street Journal a picture of some of his tools of the trade.     What we see are two rows of Leica cameras鈥攂ut not the M Series you are used to seeing everywhere. These are all Leica III series cameras, manufactured from 1933-1960. These were smaller and lighter than the M Series rangefinders, and had an older screw mount instead of a bayonet mount. On the left are a handful of Canon rangefinders from the same period that mimic the Leica design very closely. Clearly, Eggleston preferred small and inconspicuous cameras鈥攚hich goes hand-in-hand with his shooting style, which is naturalistic and composed of candid, everyday scenes. Here are a couple of his shots: Eggleston   photo of his cameras represents only part of his camera collection. Even though he doesn ;t usually work digitally, the shot was taken with a Fujifilm X-Pro1. The Wall Street Journal solicited the photo from him for the June issue of WSJ Magazine. Head  stanley canada over to The WSJ   Photo Journal blog to see some of his best-known photographs. And if you live in NYC, you can view some of the works in person at the Metropolitan Museum of Art right now, in the exhibition At War with the Obvious. [Wall Street Journal via PetaPixel] https://gizmodo/