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PEOPLE: Als Rauchen noch Salonfähig war - Promis posieren mit Zigarette
Sep. 14, 1966 - Hamburg, Germany - SENORITA FATIMA from the Spanish National Circus is in Hamburg, Germany. In this picture she is standing in her hands holding and smoking a cigarette with her feet. (Credit Image: © Keystone Press Agency/Keystone USA via ZUMAPRESS.com)
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PEOPLE - Muhammad Ali im Alter von 74 gestorben (Archiv Bilder)
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Monty Fresco / Daily Mail / Rex Features (891717a)
Muhammad Ali (formerly Cassius Clay) Training Using A Punch Bag.
Muhammad Ali (formerly Cassius Clay) Training Using A Punch Bag.
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Essex Social Services, Essex, Britain - 1970s
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 764721a )
Woman using a sewing machine
Essex Social Services, Essex, Britain - 1970s
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Motor Racing
Mandatory Credit: Photo by LAT Photographic/REX/Shutterstock (3597022a)
Brands Hatch, England. 16-18 July 1976. James Hunt (McLaren Ford) 1st position, but was disqualified later for using the spare car in the restart, on the podium with Niki Lauda (Ferrari 312T2) 2nd position. Ref-8877 #22A
Motor Racing
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Various
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Philip Dunn / Rex Features ( 1348606l )
Using an old farm tractor, three fishermen wearing oilskins launch a small lobster boat down the wet cobble slip of Robin Hood's Bay, Yorkshire, Britain
Various
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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NEWS - Operation Wüstensturm: Vor 25 begann der 2. Golfkrieg
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Steve Back/ANL/REX/Shutterstock (1407270a)
Gulf War Mobilisation Of Us Forces : Us Forces Army U.s. Forces Using A M109 Howitzer Tank In Saudi Arabia
Gulf War Mobilisation Of Us Forces : Us Forces Army U.s. Forces Using A M109 Howitzer Tank In Saudi Arabia
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Section Of Iraqi Supergun Loaded On To A Lorry At Raf Sealand In Clwyd. Siezed By Customs At Teeside Docks Two Years Ago. The Harp Gun Developed By Dr Gerald Bull Was The Basis For The Iraqi 'supergun' Parts Of Which Were Manufactured In Britain An
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Clive Howes/Evening Standard/REX/Shutterstock (2064244a)
Section Of Iraqi Supergun Loaded On To A Lorry At Raf Sealand In Clwyd. Siezed By Customs At Teeside Docks Two Years Ago. The Harp Gun Developed By Dr Gerald Bull Was The Basis For The Iraqi 'supergun' Parts Of Which Were Manufactured In Britain And Smuggled Into Iraq. Twenty Years Ago Dr Gerald Bull's Harp Weapon Had A 172ft 16-inch Barrel Longer Than The Teesport Find But Less Than Half The Bore. The Mammoth Steel Gun Barrel Has Astonished The World's Artillery Experts Who Belive It Would Kill More Iraqi Loaders Than Any Enemy. To Fire It Would Require 200 People And A Space As Large As Wembley Stadium. And With An Hour Needed To Reload--enough Time For Anyone To Locate And Destroy It--it Must Be At Most A One Or Two-shot Weapon. But Using Conventional Explosives It Could Target Israel Or Iran--and With A Rocket-assisted Device It Could Reach Large Areas Of Europe The Soviet Union And North Africa.
Section Of Iraqi Supergun Loaded On To A Lorry At Raf Sealand In Clwyd. Siezed By Customs At Teeside Docks Two Years Ago. The Harp Gun Developed By Dr Gerald Bull Was The Basis For The Iraqi 'supergun' Parts Of Which Were Manufactured In Britain An
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MUSLIM WOMEN IN BRITAIN - AUG 1995
Mandatory Credit: Photo by ADRIAN BROOKES / Rex Features ( 247194c )
MUSLIM WOMEN IN TRAFALGAR SQUARE, LONDON USING MOBILE PHONE
MUSLIM WOMEN IN BRITAIN - AUG 1995
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VARIOUS
No Poster or Greeting Card use without prior consent
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Mint Images / Rex Features (1968999a)
Penguins live in large colonies in the Antarctic region
VARIOUS
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VARIOUS - 1996
Mandatory Credit: Photo by IPC MAGAZINES: EVA / Rex Features (254325c)
WOMAN WITH COCAINE
VARIOUS - 1996
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VARIOUS
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andrew Drysdale / Rex Features ( 273184i )
WOMAN TAKING COCAINE
VARIOUS
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Duchess:verbier Switzerland 16feb98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Sti
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Steve Back/Daily Mail /REX (880184a)
Duchess:verbier Switzerland 16feb98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Princess Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Stick Because Of A Thick Bandage Around A Sprained Right Wrist Ferguson Sped Down The Mountainside And Easily Negotiated Sharp Turns.
Duchess:verbier Switzerland 16feb98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Sti
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Duchess: Verbier Switzerland 16 Feb 98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Steve Back/Daily Mail /REX (1053459a)
Duchess: Verbier Switzerland 16 Feb 98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Stick Because Of A Thick Bandage Around A Sprained Right Wrist Ferguson Sped Down The Mountainside And Easily Negotiated Sharp Turns - 1998
Duchess: Verbier Switzerland 16 Feb 98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski
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Duchess:verbier Switzerland 16feb98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Sti
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Steve Back/Daily Mail /REX (880185a)
Duchess:verbier Switzerland 16feb98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Princess Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Stick Because Of A Thick Bandage Around A Sprained Right Wrist Ferguson Sped Down The Mountainside And Easily Negotiated Sharp Turns.
Duchess:verbier Switzerland 16feb98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Sti
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Duchess:verbier Switzerland 16feb98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Sti
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Steve Back/Daily Mail /REX (880186a)
Duchess:verbier Switzerland 16feb98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Princess Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Stick Because Of A Thick Bandage Around A Sprained Right Wrist Ferguson Sped Down The Mountainside And Easily Negotiated Sharp Turns.
Duchess:verbier Switzerland 16feb98 - Sarah Ferguson Britain's Duchess Of York And Her Daughters Eugenie (r) And Beatrice Pose For Photographers Prior To Going Skiing On The Slopes Near The Swiss Resort Of Verbier February 16. Using Only One Ski Sti
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BUSINESSMAN USING COCAINE (SIMULATED)
Mandatory Credit: Photo by JIM PICKERELL / Rex Features ( 395066a )
MODEL RELEASED - MAN USING COCAINE
BUSINESSMAN USING COCAINE (SIMULATED)
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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BUSINESSMAN USING COCAINE (SIMULATED)
Mandatory Credit: Photo by JIM PICKERELL / Rex Features (395066a)
MODEL RELEASED - MAN USING COCAINE
BUSINESSMAN USING COCAINE (SIMULATED)
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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NUDE DEMONSTRATION AGAINST WAR WITH IRAQ, JOHN D MACARTHUR BEACH STATE PARK, WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA, AMERICA - 14 FEB 2003
Mandatory Credit: Photo by TAYLOR JONES / Rex Features ( 404321b )
Anti war protesters using their naked bodies to form a peace sign
NUDE DEMONSTRATION AGAINST WAR WITH IRAQ, JOHN D MACARTHUR BEACH STATE PARK, WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA, AMERICA - 14 FEB 2003
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RALLY FOR ISLAM, LONDON, BRITAIN
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Philippe Hays / Rex Features ( 440024b )
A muslim woman using a video camera
RALLY FOR ISLAM, LONDON, BRITAIN
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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NANNIES BEING TRAINED AT NORLAND COLLEGE, INTERNATIONALLY RECOGNISED AS A PREMIER PROVIDER OF CHILDCARE TRAINING, BATH, BRITAIN - 03 FEB 2004
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Adrian Dennis/REX/Shutterstock (446513g)
A student demonstrates using a puppet, part of their creative projects
NANNIES BEING TRAINED AT NORLAND COLLEGE, INTERNATIONALLY RECOGNISED AS A PREMIER PROVIDER OF CHILDCARE TRAINING, BATH, BRITAIN - 03 FEB 2004
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FARMER CAROL MCGUIRE WHO IS USING LLAMAS TO PROTECT HER SHEEP FROM FOXES, BANCHOVY, ABERDEENSHIRE, SCOTLAND, BRITAIN - JUL 2004
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jonathan McDonell / Rex Features (459337a)
Farmer Carol McGuire has drafted in llamas as unlikely security guards to protect her sheep from foxes. After sheepdogs proved useless she desperately needed some other method to keep her flock safe, and since investing in the exotic animals, who fend off predators by spitting, she hasn't lost any sheep. Carol said: 'Getting in llamas was the best thing I've ever done. The sheepdogs kept getting injured and they didn't bond with my sheep at all. But the llamas work because they think of the sheep as one of their own herd. They take extra special care of them'
FARMER CAROL MCGUIRE WHO IS USING LLAMAS TO PROTECT HER SHEEP FROM FOXES, BANCHOVY, ABERDEENSHIRE, SCOTLAND, BRITAIN - JUL 2004
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FARMER CAROL MCGUIRE WHO IS USING LLAMAS TO PROTECT HER SHEEP FROM FOXES, BANCHOVY, ABERDEENSHIRE, SCOTLAND, BRITAIN - JUL 2004
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jonathan McDonell / Rex Features (459337b)
Farmer Carol McGuire has drafted in llamas as unlikely security guards to protect her sheep from foxes. After sheepdogs proved useless she desperately needed some other method to keep her flock safe, and since investing in the exotic animals, who fend off predators by spitting, she hasn't lost any sheep. Carol said: 'Getting in llamas was the best thing I've ever done. The sheepdogs kept getting injured and they didn't bond with my sheep at all. But the llamas work because they think of the sheep as one of their own herd. They take extra special care of them'
FARMER CAROL MCGUIRE WHO IS USING LLAMAS TO PROTECT HER SHEEP FROM FOXES, BANCHOVY, ABERDEENSHIRE, SCOTLAND, BRITAIN - JUL 2004
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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FARMER CAROL MCGUIRE WHO IS USING LLAMAS TO PROTECT HER SHEEP FROM FOXES, BANCHOVY, ABERDEENSHIRE, SCOTLAND, BRITAIN - JUL 2004
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jonathan McDonell / Rex Features (459337c)
Farmer Carol McGuire has drafted in llamas as unlikely security guards to protect her sheep from foxes. After sheepdogs proved useless she desperately needed some other method to keep her flock safe, and since investing in the exotic animals, who fend off predators by spitting, she hasn't lost any sheep. Carol said: 'Getting in llamas was the best thing I've ever done. The sheepdogs kept getting injured and they didn't bond with my sheep at all. But the llamas work because they think of the sheep as one of their own herd. They take extra special care of them'
FARMER CAROL MCGUIRE WHO IS USING LLAMAS TO PROTECT HER SHEEP FROM FOXES, BANCHOVY, ABERDEENSHIRE, SCOTLAND, BRITAIN - JUL 2004
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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FARMER CAROL MCGUIRE WHO IS USING LLAMAS TO PROTECT HER SHEEP FROM FOXES, BANCHOVY, ABERDEENSHIRE, SCOTLAND, BRITAIN - JUL 2004
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jonathan McDonell / Rex Features (459337d)
Farmer Carol McGuire has drafted in llamas as unlikely security guards to protect her sheep from foxes. After sheepdogs proved useless she desperately needed some other method to keep her flock safe, and since investing in the exotic animals, who fend off predators by spitting, she hasn't lost any sheep. Carol said: 'Getting in llamas was the best thing I've ever done. The sheepdogs kept getting injured and they didn't bond with my sheep at all. But the llamas work because they think of the sheep as one of their own herd. They take extra special care of them'
FARMER CAROL MCGUIRE WHO IS USING LLAMAS TO PROTECT HER SHEEP FROM FOXES, BANCHOVY, ABERDEENSHIRE, SCOTLAND, BRITAIN - JUL 2004
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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JAPAN - 2005
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Sutton-Hibbert / Rex Features ( 558621ak )
Japanese youths using mobile phones, Yoyogi Park, Tokyo, Japan.
JAPAN - 2005
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Kodak products - 2000s
Mandatory Credit: Photo by London News Pictures / Rex Features (1547991a)
A Kodak Cine film box photographed using Kodachrome film made by kodak
Kodak products - 2000s
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VARIOUS
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Mark Hunt/REX/Shutterstock (3824856a)
MODEL RELEASED, Pest control technician using high pressure spray gun and hose on lawns
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FEATURE - "Swim Call" - Matrosen hüpfen zu hunderten von ihren Navy-Schiffen
CREDIT: US Navy/REX Shutterstock. Editorial use only. Not stock
Mandatory Credit: Photo by US Navy/REX/Shutterstock (5593693t)
ARABIAN SEA (Oct. 5, 2012) Sailors jump from an aircraft elevator during a swim call aboard Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69). Dwight D. Eisenhower is deployed to the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility conducting maritime security operations, theater security cooperation efforts and support mission as part of Operation Enduring Freedom. The U.S. Navy has a 237-year heritage of defending freedom and projecting and protecting U.S. interests around the globe. Join the conversation on social media using #warfighting. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Ryan D. McLearnon/Released)
U.S. Navy 'swim calls' - 2016
When you're job is sailing the seas, the World is your swimming pool.
These amazing pictures show sailors and marines from the U.S. Navy taking part in what they call 'swim calls'.
Most recently pictured earlier this month (Feb) are those cooling off by jumping from into the Indian Ocean from guided-missile cruiser USS Antietam.
With the ship anchored, Swim Calls are seen as a refreshing break from the job of keeping high-tech battleships running.
The activity often occurs in warm foreign waters, such as the Mediterranean, Arabian and South China seas, the Indian and Pacific oceans.
Suffice to say, there will be people tasked with shark watch, from the ship and rigid-hulled inflatable boats.
Swimmers are able to clamber back onto the ship via landing docks or by climbing cargo nets.
YOUTUBE VIDEO: https://youtu.be/9AwCeXypRLY
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PRINCE CHARLES AND TESSA JOWELL VISITING POUNDBURY, DORSET, BRITAIN - 10 MAR 2006
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Penman / Rex Features ( 577900c )
Prince Charles opened a garden centre using a pair of shears to cut ivy hanging over a memorial plaque.
PRINCE CHARLES AND TESSA JOWELL VISITING POUNDBURY, DORSET, BRITAIN - 10 MAR 2006
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PRINCE CHARLES AND TESSA JOWELL VISITING POUNDBURY, DORSET, BRITAIN - 10 MAR 2006
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Dave Penman / Rex Features ( 577900c )
Prince Charles opened a garden centre using a pair of shears to cut ivy hanging over a memorial plaque.
PRINCE CHARLES AND TESSA JOWELL VISITING POUNDBURY, DORSET, BRITAIN - 10 MAR 2006
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LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, AMERICA
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 588383cc )
Slot machines, Las Vegas, Nevada, America. (Model Released)
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, AMERICA
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Kate Middleton out and about in Richmond, London, Britain - 13 Dec 2006
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 629593e )
Kate Middleton talking on her mobile phone whilst shopping
Kate Middleton out and about in Richmond, London, Britain - 13 Dec 2006
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Kate Middleton out and about in London, Britain - 19 Mar 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 651788c )
Kate Middleton texting on her mobile phone
Kate Middleton out and about in London, Britain - 19 Mar 2007
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Man in underwear using a scarf to tie woman's hands behind her back, close up, view from behind
Mandatory Credit: Photo by DK Images / Rex Features (667904a)
Model released - Man In Underwear Using A Scarf to Tie Womans Hands Behind Her Back, Close Up, View From Behind
Man in underwear using a scarf to tie woman's hands behind her back, close up, view from behind
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Florence ITALY
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eye Ubiquitous / Rex Features ( 1246639a )
Moped scooters parked in side street with a chef in uniform standing on the pavement sidewalk using a mobile cell phone. ITALY
Florence ITALY
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ITV ARCHIVE
Mandatory Credit: Photo by ITV / Rex Features ( 701358bf )
Vodaphone Summer Series of Music at Somerset House, London. TV - 2007.{br}Amy Winehouse.
WINEHOUSE FORCED TO COVER UP EXPLICIT TATTOO FOR GRAMMYS
Apparently, the organisers of this year's Grammy Awards weren't just concerned about singer Amy Winehouse's drug use, but her risqué tattoos too.
The Back to Black singer had to get creative with a black eyeliner pencil before her performance via satellite in order cover up a tattoo featuring a naked woman.
So as not to offend any of America's more 'puritanical viewers', Amy drew a black bikini top on a tattoo of a buxom topless woman that she has on her left arm.
Something she was able to wash straight off following her performance.
Winehouse, 24, scooped five awards at the event including Best New Artist and Song of the Year.
She has recently been receiving treatment for substance abuse after being caught on camera apparently using crack cocaine.
However, with the singer's recent emergence from rehab as a seemingly happier and healthier person, it would seem that the soul sensation is cleaning up her act in more ways than one.
MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Rex Features
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VPSGJQCE (FOTO:DUKAS/REX) -
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Out of the Dust - A Life in Afghanistan, by Hans Stakelbeek
STRICTLY ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUCTION WITH COVERAGE OF THE EXHIBITION 'OUT OF THE DUST A LIFE IN AFGHANISTAN'
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Hans Stakelbeek / Rex Features ( 786840AA )
Out of the Dust ¿ Life in Afghanistan, by Hans Stakelbeek- 2007
*STRICTLY ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUCTION WITH COVERAGE OF THE EXHIBITION 'OUT OF THE DUST - A LIFE IN AFGHANISTAN'*
OUT OF THE DUST - LIFE IN AFGHANISTAN
A powerful collection of images of everyday life in Afghanistan will be displayed for the first time in the UK in a new exhibition this summer.
'Out of the Dust - Life in Afghanistan' features images by Dutch photographer Hans Stakelbeek. The exhibition runs from 30 July-31 August 2008 at PM Gallery in west London.
In 2007 Hans Stakelbeek was commissioned by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs to document the reconstruction of Afghanistan during the efforts to restore peace and stability to the country.
Stakelbeek made four trips last year, shooting in Kabul and Uruzgan, as well as other remote areas.
As the project developed, he also became interested in capturing the stories of the people he came to know, as well as the reconstruction efforts required by his official posting.
'Out of the Dust' presents a set of images that pays tribute to the determination of the Afghan people to survive and live as normally as possible through the upheaval - building homes, going to school and working and playing in testing and frightening times.
The collection gives a rare view of daily life in Afghanistan without a military slant and each photograph comes complete with Stakelbeek's own written commentary, which reveals the stories within.
The exhibition is an up-to-date presentation of current life and an opportunity to see how the country is changing, how the reconstruction is progressing and to witness the perseverance of ordinary people in an extraordinary situation.
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For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/XUIAZC
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A lifesize marble sculpture of the brain of Einstein by Michael Blow, Britain - 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by David White / Rex Features ( 661547c )
A magnificent lifesize marble sculpture of the brain of Einstein has just been completed by Bristol Stonemason and artist Michael Blow. Mike has carved the brain using original photographs as templates. The marble which the brain is carved from is from Michelangelo's statuary, the same quarry and the same stone as Michelangelo used to carve David. Mike's sculpture is one of the last pieces of stone to be taken from the quarry, which is now shut.
The sculpture is to be part of Mike's application to join the British society of sculptors.
A lifesize marble sculpture of the brain of Einstein by Michael Blow, Britain - 2007
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A lifesize marble sculpture of the brain of Einstein by Michael Blow, Britain - 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by David White / Rex Features ( 661547a )
A magnificent lifesize marble sculpture of the brain of Einstein has just been completed by Bristol Stonemason and artist Michael Blow. Mike has carved the brain using original photographs as templates. The marble which the brain is carved from is from Michelangelo's statuary, the same quarry and the same stone as Michelangelo used to carve David. Mike's sculpture is one of the last pieces of stone to be taken from the quarry, which is now shut.
The sculpture is to be part of Mike's application to join the British society of sculptors.
A lifesize marble sculpture of the brain of Einstein by Michael Blow, Britain - 2007
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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A lifesize marble sculpture of the brain of Einstein by Michael Blow, Britain - 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by David White / Rex Features ( 661547b )
A magnificent lifesize marble sculpture of the brain of Einstein has just been completed by Bristol Stonemason and artist Michael Blow. Mike has carved the brain using original photographs as templates. The marble which the brain is carved from is from Michelangelo's statuary, the same quarry and the same stone as Michelangelo used to carve David. Mike's sculpture is one of the last pieces of stone to be taken from the quarry, which is now shut.
The sculpture is to be part of Mike's application to join the British society of sculptors.
A lifesize marble sculpture of the brain of Einstein by Michael Blow, Britain - 2007
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Amy Winehouse leaving her home in Camden, London, Britain - 26 Sep 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 697501o )
Amy Winehouse tattoo
WINEHOUSE FORCED TO COVER UP EXPLICIT TATTOO FOR GRAMMYS
Apparently, the organisers of this year's Grammy Awards weren't just concerned about singer Amy Winehouse's drug use, but her risqué tattoos too.
The Back to Black singer had to get creative with a black eyeliner pencil before her performance via satellite in order cover up a tattoo featuring a naked woman.
So as not to offend any of America's more 'puritanical viewers', Amy drew a black bikini top on a tattoo of a buxom topless woman that she has on her left arm.
Something she was able to wash straight off following her performance.
Winehouse, 24, scooped five awards at the event including Best New Artist and Song of the Year.
She has recently been receiving treatment for substance abuse after being caught on camera apparently using crack cocaine.
However, with the singer's recent emergence from rehab as a seemingly happier and healthier person, it would seem that the soul sensation is cleaning up her act in more ways than one.
MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Rex Features
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VPSGJQCE (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Paris Fashion For S/s 2008......the Stella Mccartney Show. Stella Mccartney's Dresses Billowed Down The Catwalk Knitwear Was Loose. There Was A Floral Riot On The Stella Mccartney Catwalk Today As Models In Silk Voile Dresses Printed With Multicolou
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cavan Pawson / Rex Features ( 945650a )
Paris Fashion For S/s 2008......the Stella Mccartney Show. Stella Mccartney's Dresses Billowed Down The Catwalk Knitwear Was Loose. There Was A Floral Riot On The Stella Mccartney Catwalk Today As Models In Silk Voile Dresses Printed With Multicoloured Blooms Walked Out Looking Pretty As Pictures And Managed The Unthinkable A Smile. Models Are Notorious For Looking Sultry It Is Almost Written In Their Contract Not To Grin. But Perhaps Because The Clothes Were So Feminine They Couldn't Help Themselves. More Likely Mccartney Told Them To. She Has After All Built Her Reputation Around 'knowing What Makes Chicks Tick' And A Procession Of Smiley Models Is More Likely To Connect With Women Than A Succession Of Glowering Ones. Mccartney Has Found A Winning Formula And Is Sticking To It. All Her Signature Looks Were Here: A Loose Chiffon Tea Dress Worn Over A Mannish Cream Tailored Jacket A Spaghetti Strap Dress Of Thin Parachute Silk With Flounces And Tiers To The Hem And The Floorskimming Wide-leg Trousers Which Always Lend A Seventies Feel To Her Collections. So Many Other Designers Are Hell-bent On Reinventing Themselves Every Season That The Customer Never Knows Quite Where She Stands. But If Your Idea Of Easy Summer Dressing Is To Wear A Cotton Loose-knit Cardie Over A Billowing Silk Sundress Mccartney Is Your Woman. Key To The Show Were The Loose Silk Voile Dresses And Playsuits In Blue And Brown Paisley A Bold Multicoloured Floral Print Or A More Washed-out Version For Evening. Cobalt Blue With Loose Satin Shirt Dresses Sported Rolled Up Sleeves. Hand-carved Wooden Clogs Were Mccartney's Latest Way To Avoid Using Leather. Swimwear Was Fifties-style Or Seventies La Particularly A Dolphin-printed Vest Top Worn With Tiny Shorts And Matching Cardigan. Tailoring Also Had Its Roots In The Seventies. Tuxedos Were Thrown Over The Lightest Silk Dresses For A Masculine/feminine Mix. Ever Caring About The E...
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Amy Winehouse, London, Britain - 08 Nov 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 711596l )
Amy Winehouse buying newspapers
WINEHOUSE FORCED TO COVER UP EXPLICIT TATTOO FOR GRAMMYS
Apparently, the organisers of this year's Grammy Awards weren't just concerned about singer Amy Winehouse's drug use, but her risqué tattoos too.
The Back to Black singer had to get creative with a black eyeliner pencil before her performance via satellite in order cover up a tattoo featuring a naked woman.
So as not to offend any of America's more 'puritanical viewers', Amy drew a black bikini top on a tattoo of a buxom topless woman that she has on her left arm.
Something she was able to wash straight off following her performance.
Winehouse, 24, scooped five awards at the event including Best New Artist and Song of the Year.
She has recently been receiving treatment for substance abuse after being caught on camera apparently using crack cocaine.
However, with the singer's recent emergence from rehab as a seemingly happier and healthier person, it would seem that the soul sensation is cleaning up her act in more ways than one.
MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Rex Features
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VPSGJQCE (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Hawaii, America - 2008
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Patrick Frilet / Rex Features (727053bg)
Hulihee Palace, once a royal retreat in the town of Kona, was built in 1838 using native lava rock, coral lime mortar, and koa and ohia timbers. Today, it is a museum housing historical artefacts from Hawaiian past. Big Island, Hawaii, America.
Hawaii, America - 2008
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Amy Winehouse Grammy performance, Riverside Studios, London, Britain - 10 Feb 2008
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Richard Young / Rex Features ( 731998d )
Amy Winehouse, Performance and live link to the Grammy Awards, where she won five awards
WINEHOUSE FORCED TO COVER UP EXPLICIT TATTOO FOR GRAMMYS
Apparently, the organisers of this year's Grammy Awards weren't just concerned about singer Amy Winehouse's drug use, but her risqué tattoos too.
The Back to Black singer had to get creative with a black eyeliner pencil before her performance via satellite in order cover up a tattoo featuring a naked woman.
So as not to offend any of America's more 'puritanical viewers', Amy drew a black bikini top on a tattoo of a buxom topless woman that she has on her left arm.
Something she was able to wash straight off following her performance.
Winehouse, 24, scooped five awards at the event including Best New Artist and Song of the Year.
She has recently been receiving treatment for substance abuse after being caught on camera apparently using crack cocaine.
However, with the singer's recent emergence from rehab as a seemingly happier and healthier person, it would seem that the soul sensation is cleaning up her act in more ways than one.
MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Rex Features
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VPSGJQCE (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Amy Winehouse Grammy performance, Riverside Studios, London, Britain - 10 Feb 2008
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Richard Young / Rex Features ( 731998ac )
Amy Winehouse, Performance and live link to the Grammy Awards, where she won five awards
WINEHOUSE FORCED TO COVER UP EXPLICIT TATTOO FOR GRAMMYS
Apparently, the organisers of this year's Grammy Awards weren't just concerned about singer Amy Winehouse's drug use, but her risqué tattoos too.
The Back to Black singer had to get creative with a black eyeliner pencil before her performance via satellite in order cover up a tattoo featuring a naked woman.
So as not to offend any of America's more 'puritanical viewers', Amy drew a black bikini top on a tattoo of a buxom topless woman that she has on her left arm.
Something she was able to wash straight off following her performance.
Winehouse, 24, scooped five awards at the event including Best New Artist and Song of the Year.
She has recently been receiving treatment for substance abuse after being caught on camera apparently using crack cocaine.
However, with the singer's recent emergence from rehab as a seemingly happier and healthier person, it would seem that the soul sensation is cleaning up her act in more ways than one.
MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Rex Features
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VPSGJQCE (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Bats invade the Botanic Gardens, Sydney, Australia - 29 Feb 2008
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James D. Morgan / Rex Features ( 740384C )
It is census time in Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens.But it is not humans who are being counted. It is the furry winged invaders that occupied the green sanctuary during the drought and have turned it into their inner-city squat. A year ago, said Tim Entwisle, the executive director of the Botanic Gardens Trust, it was thought the gardens were home to about 11,000 grey-headed flying foxes. Now, he suspects, there could be twice that many. "They are slowly trashing the place," he said. Branches have been breaking under their weight and their urine and droppings have been poisoning plants. "They are destroying the palm grove," said Dr Entwisle. "They are killing the trees. We have had 12 trees die and 45 are on the critical list. A couple on the critical list were planted in the 1820s."Although the new count, being undertaken by volunteers, will not be completed for several weeks, Dr Entwisle expects it will confirm that previous estimates of the flying fox population have been wildly underestimated. Among trees under threat is a flowering ash that was almost killed by the drought.In the 1990s, flying fox numbers were dramatically reduced by staff bashing metal lids, frightening the animals away. Now the gardens trust is seeking government permission to resume the evictions, possibly using mobile loud speakers on buggies to disturb them. Dr Entwisle said the evictions, if approved, would probably not begin until autumn next year, after the next breeding season. "The welfare of the flying foxes is important to us."
Bat Colony Overwhelming Botanic Garden
BAT COLONY OVERWHELMING BOTANIC GARDEN
It's census time at Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens; however, it isn't people or even flowers that are due to be counted but a swarm of furry winged squatters.
A drought has meant that the lush spaces of the botanical gardens have...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CHXGHDT
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Bats invade the Botanic Gardens, Sydney, Australia - 29 Feb 2008
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James D. Morgan / Rex Features ( 740384H )
It is census time in Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens.But it is not humans who are being counted. It is the furry winged invaders that occupied the green sanctuary during the drought and have turned it into their inner-city squat. A year ago, said Tim Entwisle, the executive director of the Botanic Gardens Trust, it was thought the gardens were home to about 11,000 grey-headed flying foxes. Now, he suspects, there could be twice that many. "They are slowly trashing the place," he said. Branches have been breaking under their weight and their urine and droppings have been poisoning plants. "They are destroying the palm grove," said Dr Entwisle. "They are killing the trees. We have had 12 trees die and 45 are on the critical list. A couple on the critical list were planted in the 1820s."Although the new count, being undertaken by volunteers, will not be completed for several weeks, Dr Entwisle expects it will confirm that previous estimates of the flying fox population have been wildly underestimated. Among trees under threat is a flowering ash that was almost killed by the drought.In the 1990s, flying fox numbers were dramatically reduced by staff bashing metal lids, frightening the animals away. Now the gardens trust is seeking government permission to resume the evictions, possibly using mobile loud speakers on buggies to disturb them. Dr Entwisle said the evictions, if approved, would probably not begin until autumn next year, after the next breeding season. "The welfare of the flying foxes is important to us."
Bat Colony Overwhelming Botanic Garden
BAT COLONY OVERWHELMING BOTANIC GARDEN
It's census time at Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens; however, it isn't people or even flowers that are due to be counted but a swarm of furry winged squatters.
A drought has meant that the lush spaces of the botanical gardens have...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CHXGHDT
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Bats invade the Botanic Gardens, Sydney, Australia - 29 Feb 2008
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James D. Morgan / Rex Features ( 740384I )
It is census time in Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens.But it is not humans who are being counted. It is the furry winged invaders that occupied the green sanctuary during the drought and have turned it into their inner-city squat. A year ago, said Tim Entwisle, the executive director of the Botanic Gardens Trust, it was thought the gardens were home to about 11,000 grey-headed flying foxes. Now, he suspects, there could be twice that many. "They are slowly trashing the place," he said. Branches have been breaking under their weight and their urine and droppings have been poisoning plants. "They are destroying the palm grove," said Dr Entwisle. "They are killing the trees. We have had 12 trees die and 45 are on the critical list. A couple on the critical list were planted in the 1820s."Although the new count, being undertaken by volunteers, will not be completed for several weeks, Dr Entwisle expects it will confirm that previous estimates of the flying fox population have been wildly underestimated. Among trees under threat is a flowering ash that was almost killed by the drought.In the 1990s, flying fox numbers were dramatically reduced by staff bashing metal lids, frightening the animals away. Now the gardens trust is seeking government permission to resume the evictions, possibly using mobile loud speakers on buggies to disturb them. Dr Entwisle said the evictions, if approved, would probably not begin until autumn next year, after the next breeding season. "The welfare of the flying foxes is important to us."
Bat Colony Overwhelming Botanic Garden
BAT COLONY OVERWHELMING BOTANIC GARDEN
It's census time at Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens; however, it isn't people or even flowers that are due to be counted but a swarm of furry winged squatters.
A drought has meant that the lush spaces of the botanical gardens have...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CHXGHDT
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DUKAS_5285329_REX
Bats invade the Botanic Gardens, Sydney, Australia - 29 Feb 2008
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James D. Morgan / Rex Features ( 740384P )
It is census time in Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens.But it is not humans who are being counted. It is the furry winged invaders that occupied the green sanctuary during the drought and have turned it into their inner-city squat. A year ago, said Tim Entwisle, the executive director of the Botanic Gardens Trust, it was thought the gardens were home to about 11,000 grey-headed flying foxes. Now, he suspects, there could be twice that many. "They are slowly trashing the place," he said. Branches have been breaking under their weight and their urine and droppings have been poisoning plants. "They are destroying the palm grove," said Dr Entwisle. "They are killing the trees. We have had 12 trees die and 45 are on the critical list. A couple on the critical list were planted in the 1820s."Although the new count, being undertaken by volunteers, will not be completed for several weeks, Dr Entwisle expects it will confirm that previous estimates of the flying fox population have been wildly underestimated. Among trees under threat is a flowering ash that was almost killed by the drought.In the 1990s, flying fox numbers were dramatically reduced by staff bashing metal lids, frightening the animals away. Now the gardens trust is seeking government permission to resume the evictions, possibly using mobile loud speakers on buggies to disturb them. Dr Entwisle said the evictions, if approved, would probably not begin until autumn next year, after the next breeding season. "The welfare of the flying foxes is important to us."
Bat Colony Overwhelming Botanic Garden
BAT COLONY OVERWHELMING BOTANIC GARDEN
It's census time at Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens; however, it isn't people or even flowers that are due to be counted but a swarm of furry winged squatters.
A drought has meant that the lush spaces of the botanical gardens have...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CHXGHDT
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