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Friday, October 19, 2012

The Picture Show

Extreme Animal Portraits: Wildlife Photographer Of The Year Winners

Winner - Behavior: Cold-blooded Animals - A yacare caiman waits for fish to come within snapping reach in the shallow, murky waters of Brazil's Pantanal - the biggest wetland in the world. Caimans can grow to be three meters in length.

October 19, 2012 The competition celebrates the inner soul and beauty of animals from around the world.

Summary

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Shots - Health News

How The Taliban Is Thwarting The War On Polio

Children in a Lahore slum after heavy rains. The slum has a large population of Pashtuns who came from Pakistan's lawless tribal regions; many carry the polio virus with them.

October 17, 2012 Polio is deadly, but so is what's required to stamp it out once and for all in Pakistan: facing down Islamist extremists. The virus thrives in Pakistan's lawless — and largely inaccessible — tribal regions. To stop polio's spread, health workers must be courageous, clever and relentless.

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The Picture Show

On The Campaign Trail: With Instagram

Reporter Ashley Parker transmitted these two different views of the campaign trail via Instagram. In the photo on the left, Mitt and Ann Romney stroll on the beach. On the right, the media pool chases after them.

October 17, 2012 Photojournalists and reporters on the campaign trail are using Instagram to transmit behind-the-scenes photos that you otherwise wouldn't see.

Summary

Shots - Health News

At Polio's Epicenter, Vaccinators Battle Chaos And Indifference

Sahya Idriss, a service provider at the health clinic in Minjibir, carries a vial of the polio vaccine.

October 17, 2012 Northern Nigeria is the only region in the world where the number of polio cases is on the rise. International groups have poured money and volunteers into the area to combat the disease. But vaccinators face daunting challenges — from security threats like terrorist bombings to a lack of basic resources like electricity.

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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Shots - Health News

Wiping Out Polio: How The U.S. Snuffed Out A Killer

Many people infected with polio don't show any symptoms. Some become temporarily paralyzed; for others, it's permanent. In 1952, the polio epidemic reached a peak in U.S.: almost 58,000 reported cases and more than 3,000 deaths.

October 16, 2012 During the early 20th century, polio killed thousands of American children each summer and paralyzed many more. Now, as the world fights to eradicate the virus globally, we look back at the development of the polio vaccine and its successful deployment around the world.

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Friday, October 05, 2012
Thursday, October 04, 2012

The Picture Show

Inside Every Stormtrooper Is A Beating Heart

Sandtrooper.

October 4, 2012 Evan Prince's portraits of Star Wars bad guys at a convention show that even a Stormtrooper is capable of emotion.

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Friday, September 28, 2012

The Picture Show

Illuminating The Underworld In A Deep, Dark French Cave

Cavers cross Lake Cadoux in a small dingy inside the Gouffre Berger cave. A 4-meter-deep (approximately 13 feet) pool of water blocks the way forward through the Starless River.

September 28, 2012 The Gouffre Berger cave in France was once dubbed the world's deadliest. Now it's a rite of passage for new cavers. Photographer Robbie Shone illuminates its dark, and cold, depths.

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Election 2012

Election 2012: Early Voting, By State

September 26, 2012 Early voting is now an option in most of the country, and roughly a third of all Americans casting a ballot in the 2012 presidential race are expected to do so before Nov. 6, Election Day.

Summary

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

The Picture Show

Photographing Ganesh: The Lord Of New Beginnings

At left, one of the many processions of Lord Ganesh; at right a woman decorates her hair with fresh jasmine.

September 25, 2012 Not much brings Mumbai, India, to a standstill, but the annual Ganesh Chaturthi festival does just that. Diptychs offer a glimpse into the merriment and mayhem of the 10-day festival.

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Monday, September 24, 2012

The Picture Show

Losing 160 Pounds, One Photo At A Time

Julia Kozerski

September 24, 2012 Julia Kozerski lost 160 pounds in one year and documented her changing body by taking photos in dressing rooms. The images tell a poignant story of transition and self-discovery along the way.

Summary

Friday, August 31, 2012

Shots - Health News

So You Want To Be A Disease Detective?

Disease detective Dr. Barbara Knust suits up to investigate an Ebola outbreak in Uganda last month. Knust chatted on Twitter last Wednesday about her career tracking down outbreaks for the Centers of Disease and Prevention.

August 31, 2012 A team of doctors and scientists, known as disease detectives, fly around the world on a moments notice to investigate mystery illnesses or contain outbreaks. These Sherlock Holmes of medicine chatted on Twitter about what it's like to be a disease detective and how you snag the gig.

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Friday, August 17, 2012

The Salt

Rwandan Coffee Farmers Turn Premium Beans Into Harvest Gold

Welcome to Rwanda's coffee land, where some of the world's best coffee is grown. Here, Minani Anastase, president of Musasa Coffee Cooperative in northern Rwanda, looks over the coffee drying tables.

August 17, 2012 The rising popularity of premium coffee in the U.S. is having a direct positive effect on some of the poorest farmers in the world. Freelance photographer Jonathan Kalan has seen it firsthand, and explains how this business sprung up in Rwanda and how it continues to benefit the family farmers.

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Thursday, August 16, 2012

Energy

Infographic: How Tar Sands Oil Is Produced

Infographic: Explaining the process of extracting oil from tar sands

August 16, 2012 High oil prices and technological advances have made it economically viable to ramp up oil production from Canada's tar sands. The oil pulled out of the ground is so thick and sticky that it needs complex, energy-intensive processing just to get it into a pipeline.

Summary

The Picture Show

Behind The Curtain Of Communism

An attendant stands near the tracks as a metro train arrives in a subway station in Pyongyang, North Korea on August 20, 2007.

August 16, 2012 Photographer Tomas van Houtryve entered North Korea with an illegal passport and concocted an elaborate lie to avoid being detained. It was all part of his project to document modern-day communism.

Summary

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