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  • 8
    Nov
    2012
    1:07pm, EST

    Their wedding photos are ready – after only 88 years

    TODAY

    The beaming couple had their picture taken as part of an initiative by local amateur photographers to take pictures for elderly couples who were unable to have them when they were married.

    By Scott Stump, TODAY contributor

    Eighty-eight years after getting married, a Chinese couple have finally gotten their wedding photos taken -- and they're still smiling.

    Cameras were scarce in China in 1924, when Wu Conghan, 101, and wife Wu Sognshi, 103, tied the knot, so they have no photos from their big day. But nearly nine decades later, they re-created the happiness of the event.

    In the long overdue pics, Sognshi wears a full wedding gown and veil and holds a bouquet of roses, while Conghan sports a jacket, white shirt and bow tie. Leaning on their canes for support in one photo and sitting down in others, the couple are all smiles.

    TODAY

    Wu Conghan, 101, and wife Wu Sognshi, 103, had their wedding photos taken 88 years later because cameras were scarce in China when they were married in 1924.

     

    A local photographer snapped the keepsake shots as part of an initiative started by a collective of photographers in the couple’s hometown of Nanchong, in Sichuan province. As part of the program, local photographers have volunteered to take pictures of elderly couples who were not able to have pictures taken at their weddings.

    TODAY

    The happy couple check out their wedding photos on a laptop.

    After posing for the pictures, the smiling couple were able to view them on a laptop. The local villagers then held a wedding celebration for them.

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    Bold bridal: Unique wedding gown trends

     

    23 comments

    This is so beautiful and heartwarming. That's such a long time. What an example for us youngins. I hope that one day I will find the right woman that will stay on my side until we're just two collagen-free sacks of wrinkly skin. So I can tell her that I will be faithful to her and will die by her si …

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    Explore related topics: china, photos, weddings, wedding-photos, sichuan-province, 88-years, wu-conghan, wu-sognshi, nanchong
  • 18
    Sep
    2012
    3:25pm, EDT

    Chinese protesters: 'The Diaoyu islands belong to China!'

    September 18, the anniversary of Japan's 1931 invasion of Manchuria, is seen as a day of national humiliation in China, marked by protests even when relations with Japan are stable. This year's anniversary came amidst a Sino-Japanese dispute over an island chain called the Senkaku islands in Japanese and known to Chinese as the Diaoyu islands. NBC's Angus Walker reports.

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING – Following a weekend of anti-Japanese protests that engulfed China, demonstrations hit a crescendo Tuesday with the 81st anniversary of the start of Japan’s occupation of China.

    The Mukden Incident, also known as the Manchurian Incident, was a staged bombing by the Japanese military that served as the pretext for the Japanese invasion of China in 1931.


    The painful anniversary served to enflame a dispute that has been growing for months over ownership of East China Sea islands called the Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.

    Emotional anniversary reignites anti-Japan protests in China

    During recent protests in more than 80 cities across China, Chinese citizens have expressed themselves by taking to the streets and loudly demonstrating outside of Japanese consulates, businesses and online. However, unlike previous protests on the mainland in recent years, the collective anger has been well-documented and disseminated freely online, giving us a unique look at Chinese nationalism unleashed.

    See images of some of the more unusual expressions of anti-Japanese anger below.

     

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    105 comments

    I am a Chinese American, but I don't agree with what they are doing in China right now, the Chinese government is using nationalism of her people as a tool to test the water with Japan. Remember Third Reich and the Sudetenland, the only different this time is they are only rocks and no inhabitants.  …

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    Explore related topics: japan, china, protests, photos, featured, diaoyu-islands, ed-flanagan, storify
  • 14
    Sep
    2012
    6:44am, EDT

    Prince William, Kate 'hugely saddened' by publication of topless photos

    Shamshahrin Shamsudin / EPA

    Prince William, right, and wife Kate arrive at the As-Syakirin Mosque in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Friday.

    By Sara James, NBC News, and ITV News

    KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia -- Britain's Duke and Duchess of Cambridge -- Prince William and Kate Middleton -- said Friday their privacy has been "invaded in a grotesque and totally unjustifiable manner" after topless pictures of Middleton were printed by a French magazine.

    Blurry, long-lens shots of Kate, taken while she and William were on vacation in Provence, in the south of France last week, were printed in Closer magazine on Friday.

    A statement from St. James's Palace, in London, said the pair were "hugely saddened" by the publication, adding that William and Kate "had every expectation of privacy in the remote house" where they were sunbathing at the time the pictures were taken.


    The news comes as the couple makes an official tour of south-east Asia. Kate has been basking in the glow of rave reviews for her performing during her second overseas tour as a duchess -- and just 24 hours after her heralded first public speech on the international stage.

    Video: Nude Prince Harry photos leaked from Vegas party

    William and Kate, who were in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia early Friday, were told at breakfast about the embarrassing photographs, according to ITV News' Royal Correspondent Tim Ewart.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "The pictures almost certainly won't be published in Britain, although The Sun did print photographs of Prince Harry naked in Las Vegas," he reported. "It hardly matters, though. They will be readily available on the internet."

    The statement issued by St James’s Palace in London on Friday said:

    Their Royal Highnesses have been hugely saddened to learn that a French publication and a photographer have invaded their privacy in such a grotesque and totally unjustifiable manner.

    The incident is reminiscent of the worst excesses of the press and paparazzi during the life of Diana, Princess of Wales, and all the more upsetting to The Duke and Duchess for being so.

    Their Royal Highnesses had every expectation of privacy in the remote house. It is unthinkable that anyone should take such photographs, let alone publish them.

    Officials acting on behalf of Their Royal Highnesses are consulting with lawyers to consider what options may be available to The Duke and Duchess.

     

    UK's Prince Harry returns to battle in Afghanistan

    William, who was devastated by the death of his mother Princess Diana following a high-speed car chase by paparazzi in 1997, had hoped to shield his wife from the darker side of a live lived in public.

    See more news on The Royals from TODAY.com

    For the couple, who were vacationing at the home of a friend, the end of their honeymoon with some quarters of the media is sure to spark wider anger, especially given her pitch-perfect performance on this high-profile tour.

    "The Duke and Duchess remain focused currently on their tour of Singapore, Malaysia, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu," a palace spokesperson said.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    42 comments

    The 12th century Queen, Eleanor of Aquitaine, accompanied her first husband, King Louis of France, on Crusade. (She later married Henry II of England) Contemporary accounts describe her as riding with Louis, dressed like an Amazon, bare breasted. This has never been substantiated. In the film, "Lion …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: britain, royals, duke, kate, william, topless, photos, paparazzi, featured, duchess
  • 24
    May
    2012
    3:58pm, EDT

    New photos of alleged 9-11 mastermind may have been spirited out of 'Gitmo'

    Al-Ebdaa via Flashpoint Partners

    Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is seen in one of the photos apparently taken at the Guantanamo detention center and published this week by an Islamist website.

    By Jim Miklaszewski, NBC News

    U.S. military officials are investigating whether new images of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, alleged mastermind of al-Qaida’s 9-11 terror attacks, posted on a jihadist website were smuggled out of the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.


    Follow Open Channel on Twitter and Facebook.


    The photos, which show a relaxed and often smiling Mohammed, were published Wednesday by "Al-Ebdaa," an jihadist media group, and documented by Flashpoint Partners, a global security company run by NBC News terrorism analyst Evan Kohlmann.


    Kohlmann said the images appear to have been taken at GTMO, the U.S. Navy base and detention facility in Cuba, where Mohammed is currently facing a military tribunal with four other alleged al-Qaida members on murder and terrorism charges in connection with the 2001 terrorist attacks on New York City’s World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

    Pentagon officials told NBC News on Thursday that investigators were attempting to determine if the photos were in fact taken at GTMO or had been photo-shopped. If it is determined that they are photos from GTMO, the investigators would attempt to determine how the photos could have left GTMO. 

    Under GTMO regulations, unauthorized photos of detainees are not permitted to be taken or distributed. 

    Mohammed and his fellow defendants, who defiantly refused to enter pleas in their initial appearance before the tribunal early this month, face a possible death penalty if they are found guilty of organizing the attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people.

    Jim Miklaszewski is chief Pentagon correspondent; msnbc.com's Mike Brunker also contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Submit ideas Share your story ideas with Open Channel

    Send documents Send us a document

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    218 comments

    He is some ugly dude! Can't wait until he and his minnions are all executed. Scum. A note to NBC News: How about employing those who have at least learned how to spell properly.

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    Explore related topics: terrorism, al-qaida, photos, 9-11, featured, khalid-sheikh-mohammed
  • 19
    Apr
    2012
    2:41pm, EDT

    Lack of leadership to blame for soldiers' bad behavior

    The Obama administration is trying to contain the fallout from newly-published photos showing U.S. soldiers posing with the body parts of Taliban suicide bombers. MSNBC military analyst Jack Jacobs weighs in.

    By Col. Jack Jacobs , NBC News military analyst

    News commentary

    Those who have been in combat will testify to the catastrophic insults to the body that modern weapons can inflict. War is horrifying, and nothing can prepare the novice for the destruction that it can cause. Nor do we easily get used to the images of it, and they stay with us forever.

    Recently released by the Los Angeles Times, the grisly photos of soldiers posing with the remains of dead Taliban fighters  have raised a variety of observations: From the notion that they are similar to the harmless pranks of adolescents to the assessment that their publication will be a catastrophe for the American mission in Afghanistan.

    As with most extremes, neither is the case. We should also reject the argument that this incident, the burning of Korans and the deliberate murder of women and children, such as those allegedly carried out by Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, are all the same. 


    No excuses
    Here are the facts: The pictures are about two years old and were of Taliban fighters killed when a bomb they were putting into position detonated prematurely. The photos were sent to the Times by someone who said he wanted to highlight the threat to our troops caused by the poor leadership of the unit, a part of the 82nd Airborne Division.

    But, although the Times suggested that the concern was merely inadequate physical security rather than a climate of generally weak discipline, it is the latter issue that is the most striking.

    When the Times notified the Defense Department that it had the photos, the Pentagon asked the paper not to publish them, arguing that they would incite the enemy to attack Americans. The Times responded that it had an obligation to publish them, citing their readers' right to be informed.

    Pictures taken two years ago showing American soldiers posing with the severed legs of a dead Taliban suicide bomber are being condemned by the Pentagon. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    In my view, both the Defense Department and the newspaper are full of baloney: The Taliban don't need any encouragement to attack us, and a big part of the motivation of the Los Angeles Times is to sell newspapers.

    More nuanced has been comment from some quarters that the troops, who were mugging for the camera, were letting off the steam that accumulates under the duress of war; that their actions were in response to having lost buddies to the mindless ferocity of the Taliban.

    While these are understandable reasons, they are not excuses, of course, and the paratroopers' actions were publicly decried by government officials. Many cited long-standing rules, promulgated after similarly embarrassing episodes, stating that such antics are impermissible.

    Lack of leadership
    But the truth is that you can't merely legislate against dumb behavior. In and out of combat, good units get that way because they are well led.

    Poor leadership can create poor units in a very short period of time, particularly under stress. While good leadership can bring any organization through the most horrendous circumstances with only physical scars.

    The leadership of the brigade in the 82nd that is at the center of this photo controversy was evidently already known as weak by the chain-of-command above it. There are many military organizations that have endured more harrowing circumstances with less damage to discipline.

    It is not easy being a leader in uniform, but there is a responsibility attached to it that is found nowhere else in society. Military service is a sacrifice and those who volunteer for it are our patriots. But service is no game, and because so much is at stake, standards of deportment must be extremely high.

    We are frequently reminded of it, but it bears repeating nonetheless: a commander is responsible for everything that happens or fails to happen in his unit, and it is he who sets the standards in his organization. Accepting less than professional behavior will minimize the service and sacrifice of those who have taken seriously their responsibilities as the guardians of our freedom.

    Col. Jack Jacobs was awarded the Medal of Honor for “conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty” in the battle he describes above. His first assignment in the Army, in 1966-1967, was in Company C, 2nd Battalion (Airborne) 505th Infantry of the 82nd Airborne Division, the same division as the troops in this incident.

    Click here to read the complete Medal of Honor citation. 

    He is the author of a memoir: “If Not Now, When? Duty and Sacrifice in America’s Time of Need”

     

    159 comments

    Oh hell no people....I'll tell you exactly why this is happening. We've had our servicemembers in combat for over a decade. One tour is enough to wreck people for life. I still have a hard time coping with what I experienced over there, let alone people on multiple tours.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: afghanistan, soldiers, photos, featured, us-military, jack-jacobs
  • 21
    Feb
    2012
    5:01am, EST

    Family photos lost in Japan tsunami debris are slowly reunited with survivors

    A tsunami victim looks through albums for her photographs on Monday.

    By Reuters

    OFUNATO, Japan -- In a large, bright room not far from the ocean that raged through this coastal Japanese city nearly a year ago, a handful of people with magnifying glasses pore over boxes of photographs of friends or loved ones.

    The massive March 11 tsunami that leveled buildings and flattened towns along a wide swathe of northern Japan, including Ofunato, also took a more subtle toll, with hundreds of thousands of photographs lost to the churning waters.


    But now these memories are slowly making their way back to their owners, thanks to the painstaking efforts of a team that cleans them of mud, dirt and oil.

    "I got one photo blown up, and I was so thankful for that. I put it in a frame, and it brought tears to my eyes," said 77-year-old resident Yoshiko Jindai, looking through boxes of photographs.

    Toru Hanai / Reuters

    Recovered photographs are hung to dry after cleaning.

    Ofunato has enlisted a team of seven part-time staffers to help sort though the over 350,000 photos that have accumulated after being brought in by police, firefighters, rescue workers and average citizens who were looking through the rubble.

    In charge of cleaning and restoring the photos is paper conservator Satoko Kinno, who said her job is the second stage in the marathon of returning the photos to their owners after they are found.

    In the immediate aftermath of a monstrous earthquake that triggered a tsunami, fires, and nuclear power plant warnings, Dateline NBC reports on the current state of Japan and its people.

    Zen priest battles 'invisible demons' of radiation

    "I try to remember that people found these photos in the midst of rubble, and that I have to take the baton from them. So that's where I get my motivation," Kinno said.

    The photos are frozen once found to prevent bacteria and mold from growing on them until they can be properly cleaned and packed for display.

    The facility holds the photos in its industrial-sized freezer bins until they can be dealt with. Once cleaned, they are packed into photo albums and taken around to temporary housing complexes in the hopes of finding their owners.

    Other people choose to sort through boxes of photos themselves for hours on end, looking for snapshots of their lives thought lost to the forces of nature.

    Seven months after the earthquake and tsunami struck Japan, debris from the disaster was tracked slowly moving across the Pacific Ocean toward the U.S. NBC News' Kate Snow reports.

    Some laugh and chat as they search, as if at a casual social occasion. Others grab the books and flip through quickly, almost desperately.

    But even those who don't find anything are grateful for the chance to sort through albums filled with thousands of photos of children, graduations and even scenery of areas struck by the tsunami, now devastated. "I have some photos and videos at my home, but it's still very nice of them to do this," said 79-year-old Kimiko Tanaka.

    If somebody finds photos that might belong to another person, a member of Kinno's team will make the rounds of temporary housing to take the memories back to them.

    Toru Hanai / Reuters

    Tsunami victims look through albums for their photographs.

    Report: Japan withheld scary nuclear scenario

    Thousands have made their way back to grateful owners, but many thousands more remain unclaimed -- or still frozen.

    Kinno vows to continue until the last photo goes home.

    "I've really started to realize the depth and meaning that each and every photo has to it, and as such I want to do what I can to return as many photos as I can," she added.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    12 comments

    When one thinks of the numerous disasters that can sweep our homes away. The only things inside that can't be replaced is pictures! Great work cleaning thousands of them in hopes of finding their owners :)

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