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Israel's Military Bigwigs Graduate [56K warning]

Posted: 2009-08-01 04:28am
by The Grim Squeaker
My baby officers from my military service are all grown up " :cry: Sniff" and I was invited to their graduation ceremony, which is just in front of where my math and physics studies are held in Mt Scopus (Jerusalem university), so that was convenient for me to visit :).

The graduation ceremony of the 36th Israeli National Defense College, complete with the Prime Minister of Israel Bibi Netanyahu, COS Gabi Ashkenazi, Minister of Defense Ehud Barack, the head of the Uni of Haifa, ambassadors, Germans, Marines, Pilots, snipers and lots of senior civil service officials from the various branches of the government whose members participated and graduated this year :):

Ending speech by the Prime Minister of Israel: Darth Bibi.
Subtitle: How we will crush the Rebels and will have Peace
INDC-12
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(Seriously, he was congratulating a bit then talking about international fellowship, the Iranian atom, support for a demilitarized Palestinian state, peace, and the need for international cooperation to deal with terrorism and the threat of nuclear terrorism).
INDC-11
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INDC-10
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INDC- German student
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Ltc dr :).

INDC-8
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Part of the back crowd

INDC- Navy
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INDC- USA
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Marine

INDC- USA
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Navy Pilot. (Best damn X X pilot in the navy 3 years running).

INDC-4
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INDC- Marine
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INDC- Sniper
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One of 3 snipers watching the ceremony

INDC-1
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Gershon Hacohen, head of the IDF colleges. Nice guy, but very biblical.

INDC
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IDF philharmonic.

(I was sitting far away and my light metering isn't working, so cut me some metering/blurryness slack, I don't know what happened to my stupid camera :P. Working on manual at 300mm at night is a headache).
Also, it's not just military officers in the INDC, there are also police officers of high ranks, officers from the prison service, the former head of the Suroqa research facility as well as other civilian research facilities, etc'.

Re: Israel's Military Bigwigs Graduate [56K warning]

Posted: 2009-08-01 05:08am
by Thanas
Ltc dr? Did he have a doctorate?

Re: Israel's Military Bigwigs Graduate [56K warning]

Posted: 2009-08-01 05:27am
by The Grim Squeaker
Thanas wrote:Ltc dr? Did he have a doctorate?
Yup. He was an assistant professor in education and small infantry tactics in Germany at one point in his career, he had a thesis in education before he came to ISrael and did the second degree (and graduated with distinction). He's also a Lieutenant Colonel.

It's funny how Germans stack titles, to be honest I wish I could do that myself. (Well, morel like I wish I had titles to stack :))

Re: Israel's Military Bigwigs Graduate [56K warning]

Posted: 2009-08-01 08:48am
by Simplicius
INDC-4 could have been good if the guy was properly in-frame as a subject, but he's just coming out of the bottom and is badly lit, so no dice there. That first one is awesome, though - that's a keeper.

Re: Israel's Military Bigwigs Graduate [56K warning]

Posted: 2009-08-01 08:51am
by The Grim Squeaker
Simplicius wrote:INDC-4 could have been good if the guy was properly in-frame as a subject, but he's just coming out of the bottom and is badly lit, so no dice there.
I liked him being in the dark compared to the illuminated straight flag. And poking his head in.
That first one is awesome, though - that's a keeper.
Hehe. A have better expressions of him, but most went in the bin, the focus and light metering were SEVERELY fucked up.

Re: Israel's Military Bigwigs Graduate [56K warning]

Posted: 2009-08-01 02:21pm
by Simplicius
The Grim Squeaker wrote:I liked him being in the dark compared to the illuminated straight flag. And poking his head in.
That may be so, but what draws more attention: big bright areas or small dark ones? What says "I am important": occupying 75 percent of the frame, or just poking into a bottom corner? A little dark guy in a little dark corner next to a huge bright white flag is plainly not an important part of the picture and probably got in there by accident, otherwise he would be properly-lit and given a prominent place in the frame.

This is why basic composition is important. Photographs tell stories, and composition is the way that the story the photographer wants to tell is clearly told. It, more than anything else, marks the line between good and bad photographs, whether "good" is an interesting snapshot, a fortuitous candid, or a carefully-made studio scene.