Sunrise over Lake Michigan:
April 1993, Canon EOS Rebel using Kodachrome 64, exposure unrecorded, approximately here.
The British Museum:
11 February 2001, Kodak DC-4800 at ISO-100, 1/180 at f/2.8, 6mm, here.
Dusty Baker walks from the mound to the dugout at Wrigley Field for the last time as manager of the Cubs:
1 October 2006, ISO-200, 1/800 at f/6.3, 200mm, here.
It's impressive, isn't it, that four of the last seven Illinois governors earned felony convictions and jail time? Rod Blagojevich was today found guilty on 17 of 20 counts. From the Trib:
This marks the second time in less than a year that the 54-year-old Blagojevich, the only Illinois chief executive ever impeached and ousted from office, had been convicted of a crime. The jury at his first trial last summer found him guilty of lying to theFBI, though that panel deadlocked on all the other counts. That impasse set the stage for a retrial.
This time the verdict was unequivocal, with the jury of 11 women and one man finding Blagojevich guilty on 17 criminal counts he faced, including charges of wire fraud, attempted extortion, bribery and conspiracy. The marquee charge in the case involved an attempt by Blagojevich in late 2008 to cash in on his power to name a replacement in the U.S. Senate for newly elected President Barack Obama.
The jury acquitted Blagojevich on one count and deadlocked on two others.
Blagojevich, the fourth former Illinois governor convicted of felonies since 1973, likely faces a significant prison sentence.
You know, I feel sorry for the guy. He had this thing, and it was f'ing golden...
On the other hand, the guy is dumber than a box of hair. As the Trib drolled: "Blagojevich’s turn on the witness stand, something he had promised to do in his first trial before backing out, proved a double-edged sword. Under cross-examination he came off as a quibbler as a prosecutor drew a bead on his credibility from the very first question: 'You are a convicted liar, correct?' "
I'm not a practicing attorney, but even I could have guessed the government would lead the cross-examination with that question. Hell, the lawyers who advertise on the bus for slip-fall clients could have guessed that. But ol' Blago...wow.
I just realized that today's news comes in time for tonight's Daily Show taping. I can't wait to watch.
Scotland, on the Kyle of Lochalsh train:
23 June 1992, Kodachrome 64, Canon T-90 with Tamron 35-210mm f/4.5-5.6, exposure unrecorded, probably about here.
Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) in the Chicago Pride Parade this afternoon:
ISO-200, 1/800 at 4/5.6, 250mm, here.
I've got more photos from the event up on SmugMug.
In honor of last night's historic law in the Empire State:
25 July 1984, Kodachrome 64, exposure unrecorded, 50mm, here (I think).
Last night the New York Senate passed a same-sex marriage law making the state the sixth to legalize it and effectively doubling the population of SSM-legal jurisdictions.
Connecticut, D.C., Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, and Vermont now allow same-sex marriage; civil unions or domestic partnerships are recognized in California, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, Washington, and Wisconsin (to greater or lesser extent).
One part of the country lurches into the 21st century while another staggers back to the 19th...
Map: Wikipedia
St. Michael's Monestery, Kiev, Ukraine:
9 May 2009, Canon 20D, ISO-200, 1/1000 at f/8, 200mm, here.