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18 October 2020

Photo exhibit podcast now live

9 Oct. 2020. This year's members' photography exhibit is featured in National Press Club's latest podcast, part of the Club's Update-1 podcast series. The 23-minute discussion features exhibit participants Diane Stamm and Ron Hoffer, who describe their photos and the stories behind them.

Diane Stamm, a freelance writer based in Paris, tells Club podcast interviewer Adam Konowe how she gets the stunning photos of faces she's displayed both this year and last. And Diane describes how the Washington Post's travel photo contest had to compete with the Club's exhibit this year for one of her images, which won second prize in the Washington Post contest.

All of Ron Hoffer's entries in the members' photo exhibit are part of a collection of images from his work in Russia and eastern Europe in the 1990s. Ron, a groundwater scientist working for the U.S. EPA and World Bank, tells about his exhibit entries during this tumultuous decade. He recently published this collection in a photo memoir, first in Europe and now available in the U.S.

You can listen to the podcast on the Club's web site at https://www.press.org/newsroom/npc-annual-photo-exhibit-displays-online ... ... And follow along with Diane's and Ron's photos in the exhibit catalog at https://technewslit.com/npc/photoex2020/

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5 September 2020

Annual photo exhibit now live. Opening reception on Friday.

2020 Annual Meeting(New Orleans, La.) NRECA 2020 Annual Meeting – New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center – Wynonna and the Big Noise

Alan Kotok, September 02, 2020

Last October, freelance writer Skip Kaltenheuser visited Wuhan, China, when a clear sunny day instead of the usual haze brought crowds of residents into the streets. Kaltenheuser captured photos of those crowded outdoor venues, with everyone unaware that in a few weeks Wuhan would become synonymous with the global Covid-19 pandemic.

Those photos are now on display in the 21st annual National Press Club members photo exhibit.

The exhibit is the Club's annual celebration of visual story-telling. This year, 49 Club members are taking part, displaying 173 images with descriptions and stories in the show's catalog. Because of the pandemic, the exhibit is available only online, although the Club's Photography Team is ready to return the show to big-screen monitors in the 13th floor lobby when conditions permit.

The exhibit's official opening reception, also held virtually this year, is set for 5 p.m. Friday, Sept. 4. Details are available online.

The pandemic figures into many of the images this year. Photos from first-time exhibitor Christine Schiffner show empty Washington streets and Metro stations during the lockdown, while Jan Zastrow displays a deserted Senate office building, and Nancy Hart shows a shuttered Rockefeller Center bar in New York. The collection has several pandemic-inspired family photos, with Craig Shearman presenting a completely masked family portrait, and Eeda and Derek Wallbank showing their kids acting a little silly after the "circuit breaker," Singapore's term for lockdown, is lifted.

Several photos focus on pre-pandemic pleasures, including Denny Gainer's shot from country singer Wynonna Judd's last concert (pictured above), first-time exhibitor Lou Michaels's photo of minor league baseball in St. Paul, Minnesota, and Al Teich's photo of closely packed bicycle racers in Waukesha, Wisconsin.

While the exhibit can be seen on mobile devices, the images are best viewed on a laptop or desktop computer.

Link: https://www.press.org/newsroom/annual-photo-exhibit-now-live-opening-reception-friday

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1 August 2020

Annual photo exhibit instructions ready for download, entries begin Monday

NPC 2020 members photo exhibit(Logo design, Laura Coker)

Alan Kotok. July 31, 2020

The 21st members photo exhibit, National Press Club's annual celebration of visual storytelling, is rapidly approaching, with the event's instructions and guidelines now available on the Club's web site. Members can download the document by clicking here.

Due to limitations of the pandemic, only electronic images are displayed this year. The downloaded document has all of the entry steps and deadlines, but here are highlights ...

- Members can enter up to four electronic images in the exhibit.
- The entry period runs from Monday, Aug. 3 to Saturday, Aug. 22.
- The entry form is available online.
- The exhibit itself runs from Sept. 1 to 30.
- And a reminder, the event is an exhibit, not a contest. No judges or judging are involved.

As in previous exhibits, the Club's Photography Committee asks for your best, original photos shown for the first time in the annual show. However, images displayed in the Club's Coronvirus Life gallery may be entered for the members exhibit this year.

In addition, the exhibit features an online catalog, where participants can tell more about their images and themselves. The exhibit entry form has fields for capturing these details. Taking part in the catalog is optional. See the document for other instructions, guidelines, and key dates.

Questions? Contact Photo Committee co-chair Alan Kotok at alankotok@gmail.com.

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18 July 2020

Annual members photo exhibit set for September; enter beginning Aug. 3

Homeless man in Paris Displayed in 2019 National Press Club members photo exhibit. Photo: Diane Stamm

Alan Kotok, 17 July 2020

The National Press Club members photography exhibit, the 21st annual display of visual storytelling, takes place Sept. 1 to Sept. 30. Now is the time for members to go through their collections and pick out their best work for this year's show because the entry period for images begins on Aug. 3.

The annual show, sponsored by the Club's Photography Team, offers an opportunity for members to display their top-quality photos and tell the stories behind them. It is not a contest. There are no judges or prizes.

This year, of course, is different from previous years because of the COVID-19 pandemic and all the changes to much of our daily routines, as well as sharply reduced in-person activities at Club. As a result, this year -- and we hope, just this year -- the exhibit will display only electronic images, not print photos. If public health and conditions at the Club allow for more activity, the Photo Team will ask the staff to display slide shows of the images in the main lobby during September.

Members may enter up to four images in the exhibit. Entries for the exhibit are accepted from Aug. 3 through Aug. 22. Members should start going through their collections now to find those images that capture special moments, times, and places. The Photo Team will provide an online form for members to enter their details and upload their photos.

And as before, photos or images displayed this year cannot be repeated from earlier annual exhibits. However, images submitted for the Club's Coronavirus Life collection may be entered in this year's show. Full instructions and guidelines for the exhibit will be ready shortly.

As last year, the exhibit features an online catalog where participants can tell a little about themselves as well as the stories behind their photos. And the catalog lets members display links to online stories, galleries, podcasts, videos, and social media posts related to their photos. The 2019 exhibit catalog is available online.

Questions? Contact Photo Committee co-chair Alan Kotok at alankotok@gmail.com

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8 July 2020

Photo Committee to feature next generation news photographers, July 1

Photo Committee speakers, 1 July 2020Dorothy Mills-Gregg, left, and Katina Zentz (Courtesy photos)

Alan Kotok, 21 June 2020

At its next meeting, the National Press Club's Photography Committee will hear from two early-career, yet award-winning photojournalists. The virtual event happens at 2 p.m. Wednesday, July 1, and is open to all Club members, with free advance online registration requested.

The July 1 virtual meeting will be held by Zoom. Registration by June 29 is appreciated. Members signing up will receive an email with the link to Zoom session.

Attendees will meet Dorothy Mills-Gregg, who combines news reporting and photography in her work. She received a degree in journalism at Northwestern University in 2019, and that same year won first prize for news photography in National Press Club's annual awards contest. Mills-Gregg is a National Press Club and Photography Committee member.

Participants will also hear from Katina Zentz, a spring 2020 graduate from University of Iowa, majoring in art and journalism. At Iowa, Zentz served as photographer and creative director for the Daily Iowan, where she won the Iowa Newspaper Association's top awards in 2020 for best news feature photo and best slideshow. Just this month, Zentz took second place in the annual Hearst national photojournalism championship.

The Photo Committee's program is inspired by the National Press Club Journalism Institute's campaign to highlight outstanding new journalism colleagues receiving their degrees in this less-than-ideal academic and job-hunting year.

Questions? Contact Photo Committee co-chair Alan Kotok at alankotok@gmail.com.

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10 May 2020

Pulitzer Prize winner Stephen Crowley offers news photography insights, May 13

May 7, 2020. Pulitzer Prize winner and former New York Times senior photographer Stephen Crowley will discuss how news photos can convey humanity, irony, and humor as well as news in an online presentation with National Press Club's Photography Team and Washington Photography Roundtable.

The joint virtual meeting takes place at 3 p.m. on Wednesday, May 13, via the video conferencing service Zoom. Registration is required by Monday, May 11, to receive log-in instructions. The event is free.

Crowley is a winner of the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for feature photography along with four other New York Times photographers for their coverage of the war in Afghanistan. That same year the White House News Photographers' Association recognized Crowley as its Photographer of the Year for his work in Afghanistan and a photo essay on a day in the life of President Bush. In 2001, he was part of a team at the New York Times that won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting on race in America.

In his talk with the Club's Photography Team and Photography Roundtable, Crowley will provide insights from his career and offer examples of infusing humanity, irony, and humor in his personal work, with images of the country's character as hinted by physical structures, shifting light patterns, and happenstance. After his talk, Crowley will take questions from participants for 15 minutes.

Questions? Contact Photo Team co-chair Alan Kotok at alankotok@gmail.com or Photographer Roundtable founder Marshall Cohen at bigmarsh@verizon.net.

Reprinted from National Press Club web site: https://www.press.org/newsroom/pulitzer-prize-winner-stephen-crowley-offers-news-photography-insights-may-13

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10 May 2020

Photos of life and work amid coronavirus now on display

May 3, 2020. Images captured by National Press Club members and staff of their work and day-to-day life in this unique moment in history are now on display in an online gallery.

View the photos here.

While many of the photos sent in from the 45 members and staff show scenes probably considered routine in normal times, these are hardly normal times. Other images depict healthcare workers and ordinary citizens helping out people in need.

The gallery, organized by the Club's Photography Committee, displays the effects of Covid-19 lockdowns. Images show emptied-out venues from the usually bustling Embarcadero in San Francisco and quais in Paris, to the boardwalk at Ocean City, and food stalls at Eastern Market in Washington, D.C. Photos also show social-distanced seating arrangements for a cancelled garden party and social distancing practiced at a family funeral.

Many more photos display work-from-home arrangements by members and staff, including a television interview in progress from a living room. And many other photos show family activities and pets, both with and without face masks.

Ed Hazelwood, for example, contributed photos of healthcare staff as they tested patients at the drive-through Covid-19 testing site in Arlington, Va., and Nancy Shia's contribution shows a passerby in the Adams Morgan section of Washington helping a person who collapsed on the street.

More than 100 photos are now on display in the Coronavirus Life gallery, with more recently arriving photos expected to be posted shortly. The Club's membership department and web site manager are still accepting photos for the collection. Send your photos as email attachments to members@press.org and include a caption and credit for each.

Reprinted from National Press Club web site: https://www.press.org/newsroom/photos-life-and-work-amid-coronavirus-now-display

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8 April 2020

Join the collection of Club member photos showing life and work during COVID-19

2 Apr. 2020. If you have photos of doing your work or day-to-day life under the coronavirus siege of 2020, National Press Club's Photography Team wants them. To date, 25 of your fellow Club members and staff have sent in some 60 photos about life and work during this unique time in history.

The collection so far shows work-from-home offices -- both with and without kids and pets -- and videoconferences in progress from the living room sofa. Photos from members also show the impact of COVID-19 on economic life, with empty streets, empty beaches and parks, empty buses and ferries, a nearly empty Ocean City boardwalk, a closed-down movie theater with "I'll be back" on the marquee, and shuttered artist stalls along the Seine in Paris.

In addition, the images offer a look into daily life with grocery shoppers in rubber gloves, an elevator sign warning against crowding to prevent viral transmission, the drive-through COVID-19 testing site in Arlington, and plenty of face masks. The collection even has a photo from a member's family funeral, showing mourners keeping a safe physical distance from each other.

The Club will post images from the collection in galleries on the website. In the meantime, if you have photos to contribute, please send them as e-mail attachments to members@press.org. Be sure to include a brief caption and credit for each image. If sharing the images on Twitter or Instagram, please tag @PressClubDC in your posts. Recommended social media hashtags are #CoronavirusNPC, #NPCsocialdistancing, or #NPCstayathome.

And don't worry if the photo subjects seem ordinary. In these unusual times, there's little that's ordinary. Questions? Contact Photo Committee co-chairs Alan Kotok at alankotok@gmail.com or Cheriss May at cheriss@cherissmay.com.

Alan Kotok, alankotok@gmail.com

Reprinted from National Press Club web site: https://www.press.org/newsroom/join-collection-club-member-photos-showing-life-and-work-during-covid-19

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8 April 2020

Getting Ready To Play Hockey

Hockey players(Pixabay, Pexels)

                                                                 - Contributed content -

8 Apr. 2020. Hockey is a sport that has always been popular. It does not get the recognition it deserves. However, it has long been enjoyed in schools and sports clubs all over the country. Nevertheless, if you really want to enjoy this sport, you need to make sure you purchase high-quality hockey equipment. If you fail to do so, your game will be negatively impacted and you won’t enjoy it as much. To ensure this does not happen to you, read on to discover the aspects you must consider when looking for the best store to buy your equipment from…

The first thing you should assess is the range of hockey products the company sells. You want to make sure they have everything you require. You may only need to purchase a hockey stick when you are starting off, but if you start to enjoy the sport you will undoubtedly need to make further purchases in the future. Moreover, if you are buying on behalf of a school or club you will obviously need access to a wide selection of hockey equipment. Thus, make sure the company sells everything from shin pads and balls, to goalkeeping equipment and mouth guards. You may even want to go further than this, and look for more hockey items, such as hockey games and memorabilia. There is a great PlayStation and Xbox game from EA Sports for fans to enjoy!

Aside from looking at the range of products sold by the company, you should also take a look at the brands they sell. This will give a good indication of the company’s level of quality and their standing in the industry. After all, well-known and reputable brands are likely to offer top quality products. Keeping that in mind, some of the top brands in the world of hockey include Grays, Adidas, Mercian, TK, Mazon, and Voodoo. If you purchase items from these brands you can be sure you are likely to be happy with what you receive in the post.

The third factor you should evaluate is the company’s reputation. Read reviews that have been left by previous customers to see what they have to say about the products they received and the service they experienced. This is the greatest way to get a truthful look into the level of quality you are likely to experience. After all, if people have been unsatisfied with the company, you can be certain they will have taken to the Internet to express this dissatisfaction.

Price is always an important factor to take into consideration. No one wants to empty his or her bank balance in order to enjoy a new sport! Nonetheless, you should never search for items merely based on their price, as this is a recipe for disaster. You will almost always suffer from poor quality products as a result. The best way to make savings that will not affect quality is to shop in the sales section. You will be able to buy last season’s products at extremely low rates.

If you consider all of the points that have been mentioned in this post, you should have no issue finding the ideal store to buy your hockey equipment and you are likely to be more than happy with the products you receive at your front door.

All you need to know about purchasing hockey sticks online

If you are considering taking up hockey as a hobby then the first thing that you will need to purchase is a hockey stick. After all, without this piece of equipment, you won’t be able to participate in the sport. When you search online you will see that there is a vast selection of different hockey sticks available; these differ with regards to size, weight, materials utilized, head shape and style. Therefore it is highly recommended that you take the time and effort to seek a hockey stick that is best suited to you.

First and foremost you should define a budget before you begin to search. After all, the vast selection of sticks available means that there is a large diversification with regards to price as well. Nevertheless, it is worth noting that going for the cheapest option is not always the most recommended. After all, you could suffer from a lack of quality and thus you will probably have to spend even more money on buying a new one.

Once you have deciphered a budget you then need to seek a hockey stick that is suited to you and your style of play. You need to determine whether you are going to play attacking or defending, as this determines whether you opt for a hook (attacker) or maxi (defender) head. Moreover, you need to ensure that you purchase a hockey stick which is the right size for you. The standard size is 36.5 inches. Nevertheless, if you are tall then 37.5 inches is the recommended choice.

Finally, you can then narrow down your search by finding a hockey stick that looks good. After all, there are some extremely stylish and sporty sticks available. Therefore, you may as well find a hockey stick that looks good so that you can play the sport in style. Some of the major sports brands boast some fantastic looking hockey sticks, thus it is worth looking at all of the different selections.

Reasons why you should purchase hockey goalie equipment on the Internet

Hockey is a fascinating sport that has long been popular. If you play hockey, and you are a goalie, you will need to buy slightly different equipment from the other players on the pitch. Some of the hockey goalie equipment you will need includes leg guards, helmets, protective shorts, kickers, and more. You can actually find goalie sets that will incorporate everything you need in one package. However, before you dash off to start shopping, read on to discover why it is best to buy your hockey goalie equipment online.

There is only one place to begin, and this is with the fact that you will have a much greater product selection to choose from. If you buy the equipment from your local sports store, the selection that is available is going to be very limited. Depending on where you live, there is no guarantee that you are even going to be able to get your hands on the full set of hockey goalie equipment that you require. You will never have this trouble when you are shopping online.

You are also much more likely to benefit from better prices when you go down this route. There are several reasons why this is the case. Firstly, you can search from a whole host of retailers, and thus you have a better opportunity to find a good deal. Not only this, but online retailers compete with so many companies, and thus they have to do all in their power to stand out. One of the ways they do this is by lowering their prices or offering special deals.

Last but not least, you are better placed to find the perfect hockey equipment when you shop on the Internet. This is because you have an abundance of information available to you. You will be able to refer to shopping guides, and you can read the reviews that have been left by past customers too. This will ensure that you do not fall into the trap of something that is not of a high quality. This type of assistance is not available to you when you shop in-store.

                                                                                    *     *     *

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8 April 2020

Show us your photos of work, life under COVID-19

27 Mar. 2020. While the COVID-19 pandemic enormously disrupts the lives of National Press Club members and staff, along with most everyone else worldwide where the virus reaches, the Club's Photography Team is asking members to help document this unique moment with your photos of working and daily life under the threat of coronavirus infections.

Your photos can show how you're coping with remote work, such as your home office or studio set-up, video conferencing, juggling family life with work demands, and even your hand washing routines. And when you can venture out -- keeping a safe six-foot distance from others, of course -- show us the empty streets, Metro stations, or store shelves you've encountered, people helping their neighbors, or other scenes we will not likely see again for some time.

You can use any technology to capture the photos: your phone, a screenshot, point-and-shoot, or digital SLR camera. Please send your best images by email to members@press.org. Be sure to include a brief caption and credit for each image. Club staff will periodically post photos they receive in a gallery on the press.org web site.

And feel free to share the images in your own social media feeds. Please remember to tag @PressClubDC on your Twitter and Instagram posts. Recommended hashtags are #CoronavirusNPC, #NPCsocialdistancing, or #NPCstayathome. Questions? Contact Photo Committee co-chairs Alan Kotok at alankotok@gmail.com or Cheriss May at cheriss@cherissmay.com.

Alan Kotok, alankotok@gmail.com

Reprinted from National Press Club web site: https://www.press.org/newsroom/show-us-your-photos-work-life-under-covid-19

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