下面这段图文介绍来自《纽约时报》。一直很喜欢The New York Times的新闻照片,拍得都很有气魄,特好看。
Technorati 标签: ,
On the cusp of becoming the first African-American to capture a major party nomination, Senator Barack Obama remains a protean political figure, inspiring devotion in supporters who see him as a transformative leader even as he remains inscrutable to critics.
Photo: Doug Mills/The New York Times
Mr. Obama was directed to a small room backstage for a strategy session before holding a press conference in Kingstree, S.C. in January. He has written of his "spooky good fortune" in politics, and vaulting ambition and self-possession define his rise.
Photo: Damon Winter/The New York Times
In early January, Mr. Obama traveled to a rally in Rochester, N.H., a state he lost to Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton. Throughout the campaign, he has stumbled and fumbled more than once. Mrs. Clinton confounded him, pushing him back on his heels, his irritation too apparent.
Photo: Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times
Mr. Obama played basketball in Union Mills, Ind., in May. The senator is a man of contradictions: He is an idealist who pursues the national spotlight with the intensity of a bloodhound and finds the top prize almost within grasp, yet he holds tight to the belief that he can draw a curtain of normalcy about his family.
Photo: Jae C. Hong/Associated Press
He jokes with his Secret Service agents and carries his own bags off buses and and planes -- or, as pictured here in May, on a plane in Indianapolis. He jogs to the stage with the cocky ease of an athlete.
Photo: Doug Mills/The New York Times
His ache for time lost with his daughters feels palpable. Recently, he described the nightly calls home. Nine-year-old Malia, left, is loquacious, rattling off every detail of her day. Sasha, 6, whom he has nicknamed "Cool Breeze," goes monosyllabic.
Photo: Doug Mills/The New York Times
Mr. Obama's wife, Michelle, with the candidate at a rally in March in Houston, is a Harvard-trained lawyer whose fires often burn hotter than those of her husband. She pointedly advises Mr. Obama to forswear the cerebral and embrace the visceral.
Photo: Damon Winter/The New York Times
He favors moderate tastes, preferring organic tea to a tumbler of gin, salmon to steak, a fruit plate to fries. He jokes with audiences about tossing back a beer, but usually takes only a swig or two from a bottle, seemingly trying to prove to television cameras that he is a regular guy, as he did in May at the Raleigh Times bar in Raleigh, N.C.
【免费咨询报名电话:010-6801 7975】
咨询报名MSN:xueliedu@hotmail.com
试一试网上报名
咨询报名QQ:
1505847972 | 1256358232 | 1363884583 | 1902839745 | 800072298 | 754854002 |
中专升大专 | 中专升本科 | 高升专 | 高升本 | 专升本 | 自考 |