<font size="3">
I received this photo gallery by email on yesterday. The gallery was put together by the Chicago Tribune and is hosted on its website. Since I can't post the gallery as a frame, I have posted each picture below in the order that it appears in the gallery.
Having reviewed the gallery, a thought occured: What was the point of posting the gallery. Of course, the gallery says it is a depiction of the "young Obama." Obama's heritage is what it is. Nevertheless, somehow I wondered whether the Tribune was trying to send a message via the gallery
What do you all think?
QueEx
Chicago Tribune webpage: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/070323obama-early-photogallery,0,5458360.photogallery
__________________________________
Barack Obama rides a tricycle during
his childhood in Hawaii. (Photo
courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng)
The 1960 high school yearbook
photo of Stanley Ann Dunham,
Barack Obama's mother. She
attended Mercer Island High
School in Washington.
THE DUNHAMS: precocious, self-assured Stanley Ann (left);
her impetuous father, who named his only child after himself;
her mother, Madelyn, the quiet, firm influence in the home.
Old friends say they see flashes of them all in Stanley Ann's
son, Sen. Barack Obama. (Photo courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng)
Chip Wall, a Mercer Island High School classmate of Barack
Obama's mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, says: "She was not
a standard-issue girl of her times. ... She wasn't part of the
matched-sweater-set crowd." (Tribune photo by Chuck Berman)
Susan Blake, a Mercer Island High School friend of Barack
Obama's mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, says of her
classmate, "Hers was a mind in full tilt." (Tribune photo
by Chuck Berman)
A young Barack Obama is shown
with his mother, Ann, in Hawaii
shortly after his father, Barack
Obama Sr., left the two to pursue
his studies at Harvard. Barack's
mother was given the name
Stanley Ann Dunham because
of her father's strong desire to
have a son. (Photo courtesy of
Maya Soetoro-Ng / March 23,
2007)
Barack walks along Waikiki Beach
shortly before he and his mother
moved from Hawaii to Indonesia
to live with her second husband,
Lolo Soetoro, in 1967. (Photo
courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng /
March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama Sr., a native of
Kenya, met his future wife while
they were students at the
University of Hawaii. In 1963,
he essentially abandoned his
family to continue his studies
at Harvard. (Photo courtesy
of Maya Soetoro-Ng / March
23, 2007)
At their home in Jakarta, Ann Dunham poses in this undated
photo with her second husband, Lolo Soetoro, their daughter,
Maya, and Barack Obama. (Photo courtesy of Barack Obama)
Children play at Jakarta’s Elementary School Menteng No. 1,
where Barack Obama was a student in 1970-71. (Getty/AFP
photo by Sonny Tumbelaka / March 23, 2007)
Barack poses with his mother, Ann,
half sister, Maya, and maternal
grandfather Stanley Dunham in
Hawaii in the early 1970s after the
family returned from Indonesia.
Neighbors remember the close
relationship between young Barack
and his grandfather. (Photo
courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng /
March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama Sr. poses with his son in the Honolulu airport
during Obama Sr.'s only visit to see his son while he was
growing up in Hawaii. Young Barack was in the 5th grade
when the photo was taken. (Photo courtesy of Barack
Obama / March 23, 2007)
A page from Barack Obama's senior yearbook features his
personalized message to family, friends and teammates.
(Photo from The Oahuan yearbook / March 23, 2007)
In 1979, Barack played for the
Punahou School varsity basketball
team his senior year when the
squad captured the state high
school championship. Although
he was not a starter, he was
an adept long-range shooter,
earning the nickname "Barry
O'Bomber" from his teammates.
(Photo from The Oahuan, the
yearbook of Punahou School
/ March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama poses with the Hawaii high school champs in
this 1979 yearbook photo. Obama, known as Barry then, is
in the top row, far right. The others pictured are identified
as: Front row: Greg Ramos, manager; Chris McLachlin, head
coach; Dan Moore, manager. Second row: Matt Hiu, Alan
Lum, Tom Topolinski, Darin Mauerer, Dan Hale, John Kamana.
Third row: Darryl Gabriel, Boy Eldredge, Greg Orme, Larry
Tavares and Jason Oshima. (Photo from The Oahuan
yearbook / March 23, 2007)
A senior year photo of Keith Kakugawa
from the 1977 edition The Oahuan year
book of Punahou School. In Barack
Obama's autobiography "Dreams from
My Father," he described his friendship
with an angry young man named "Ray"
who railed against the racisim of their
elite prep school. "Ray" was later revealed
to be a pseudonym for Kakugawa. (Photo
from The Oahuan yearbook / March 23, 2007)
An undated photo shows Keith Kakugawa,
a forrmer high school classmate of Barack
Obama whom he called "Ray" in his memoir
"Dreams from My Father," during one of his
stints in the California prison system.
(California Department of Corrections photo
/ March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama shakes hands during his graduation ceremony
from Punahou School in 1979. While in his early teens, Obama
chose to stay at the school and live with his grandparents
after his mother decided to move back to Jakarta, Indonesia.
(Photo courtesy of Barack Obama / March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama hugs his younger half
sister Maya at his high school
graduation. (Photo courtesy of Maya
Soetoro-Ng / March 23, 2007)
At his high school graduation, Barack Obama gets a hug from
his grandmother Madelyn as his grandfather Stanley beams.
His maternal grandparents raised Obama in Hawaii while his
mother was living in Indonesia. (Photo courtesy of Maya
Soetoro-Ng / March 23, 2007)
Students at Punahou School in downtown Honolulu hang out
in the campus quad between classes. (Tribune photo by
Chuck Berman / March 23, 2007)
While a student in the late 1970s, Barack Obama carved his
name in the pavement outside the cafeteria of Punahou School.
A representative of the school said she believes "King" was
written by another student. (Tribune photo by Chuck Berman /
March 23, 2007)
Punahou School teacher Pal Eldredge stands in front of the
Castle, where he taught Barack Obama's 5th-grade class.
(Tribune photo by Chuck Berman / March 23, 2007)
Alan Lum stands next to the Oct. 23, 2006, Time magazine
cover featuring his former classmate. Lum is a 2nd-grade
teacher at Punahou School and displays the cover in his
classroom. (Tribune photo by Chuck Berman / March 23, 2007)
Maya Soetoro-Ng, Barack Obama's half sister, teaches her
Education in American Society class at the University of
Hawaii. (Tribune photo by Chuck Berman / March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama poses at Columbia University in New York City
during a visit by his grandparents Stanley and Madelyn
Dunham. (Photo courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng / March 23,
2007)
I received this photo gallery by email on yesterday. The gallery was put together by the Chicago Tribune and is hosted on its website. Since I can't post the gallery as a frame, I have posted each picture below in the order that it appears in the gallery.
Having reviewed the gallery, a thought occured: What was the point of posting the gallery. Of course, the gallery says it is a depiction of the "young Obama." Obama's heritage is what it is. Nevertheless, somehow I wondered whether the Tribune was trying to send a message via the gallery
What do you all think?
QueEx
Chicago Tribune webpage: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/070323obama-early-photogallery,0,5458360.photogallery
__________________________________
Barack Obama rides a tricycle during
his childhood in Hawaii. (Photo
courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng)
The 1960 high school yearbook
photo of Stanley Ann Dunham,
Barack Obama's mother. She
attended Mercer Island High
School in Washington.
THE DUNHAMS: precocious, self-assured Stanley Ann (left);
her impetuous father, who named his only child after himself;
her mother, Madelyn, the quiet, firm influence in the home.
Old friends say they see flashes of them all in Stanley Ann's
son, Sen. Barack Obama. (Photo courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng)
Chip Wall, a Mercer Island High School classmate of Barack
Obama's mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, says: "She was not
a standard-issue girl of her times. ... She wasn't part of the
matched-sweater-set crowd." (Tribune photo by Chuck Berman)
Susan Blake, a Mercer Island High School friend of Barack
Obama's mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, says of her
classmate, "Hers was a mind in full tilt." (Tribune photo
by Chuck Berman)
A young Barack Obama is shown
with his mother, Ann, in Hawaii
shortly after his father, Barack
Obama Sr., left the two to pursue
his studies at Harvard. Barack's
mother was given the name
Stanley Ann Dunham because
of her father's strong desire to
have a son. (Photo courtesy of
Maya Soetoro-Ng / March 23,
2007)
Barack walks along Waikiki Beach
shortly before he and his mother
moved from Hawaii to Indonesia
to live with her second husband,
Lolo Soetoro, in 1967. (Photo
courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng /
March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama Sr., a native of
Kenya, met his future wife while
they were students at the
University of Hawaii. In 1963,
he essentially abandoned his
family to continue his studies
at Harvard. (Photo courtesy
of Maya Soetoro-Ng / March
23, 2007)
At their home in Jakarta, Ann Dunham poses in this undated
photo with her second husband, Lolo Soetoro, their daughter,
Maya, and Barack Obama. (Photo courtesy of Barack Obama)
Children play at Jakarta’s Elementary School Menteng No. 1,
where Barack Obama was a student in 1970-71. (Getty/AFP
photo by Sonny Tumbelaka / March 23, 2007)
Barack poses with his mother, Ann,
half sister, Maya, and maternal
grandfather Stanley Dunham in
Hawaii in the early 1970s after the
family returned from Indonesia.
Neighbors remember the close
relationship between young Barack
and his grandfather. (Photo
courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng /
March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama Sr. poses with his son in the Honolulu airport
during Obama Sr.'s only visit to see his son while he was
growing up in Hawaii. Young Barack was in the 5th grade
when the photo was taken. (Photo courtesy of Barack
Obama / March 23, 2007)
A page from Barack Obama's senior yearbook features his
personalized message to family, friends and teammates.
(Photo from The Oahuan yearbook / March 23, 2007)
In 1979, Barack played for the
Punahou School varsity basketball
team his senior year when the
squad captured the state high
school championship. Although
he was not a starter, he was
an adept long-range shooter,
earning the nickname "Barry
O'Bomber" from his teammates.
(Photo from The Oahuan, the
yearbook of Punahou School
/ March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama poses with the Hawaii high school champs in
this 1979 yearbook photo. Obama, known as Barry then, is
in the top row, far right. The others pictured are identified
as: Front row: Greg Ramos, manager; Chris McLachlin, head
coach; Dan Moore, manager. Second row: Matt Hiu, Alan
Lum, Tom Topolinski, Darin Mauerer, Dan Hale, John Kamana.
Third row: Darryl Gabriel, Boy Eldredge, Greg Orme, Larry
Tavares and Jason Oshima. (Photo from The Oahuan
yearbook / March 23, 2007)
A senior year photo of Keith Kakugawa
from the 1977 edition The Oahuan year
book of Punahou School. In Barack
Obama's autobiography "Dreams from
My Father," he described his friendship
with an angry young man named "Ray"
who railed against the racisim of their
elite prep school. "Ray" was later revealed
to be a pseudonym for Kakugawa. (Photo
from The Oahuan yearbook / March 23, 2007)
An undated photo shows Keith Kakugawa,
a forrmer high school classmate of Barack
Obama whom he called "Ray" in his memoir
"Dreams from My Father," during one of his
stints in the California prison system.
(California Department of Corrections photo
/ March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama shakes hands during his graduation ceremony
from Punahou School in 1979. While in his early teens, Obama
chose to stay at the school and live with his grandparents
after his mother decided to move back to Jakarta, Indonesia.
(Photo courtesy of Barack Obama / March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama hugs his younger half
sister Maya at his high school
graduation. (Photo courtesy of Maya
Soetoro-Ng / March 23, 2007)
At his high school graduation, Barack Obama gets a hug from
his grandmother Madelyn as his grandfather Stanley beams.
His maternal grandparents raised Obama in Hawaii while his
mother was living in Indonesia. (Photo courtesy of Maya
Soetoro-Ng / March 23, 2007)
Students at Punahou School in downtown Honolulu hang out
in the campus quad between classes. (Tribune photo by
Chuck Berman / March 23, 2007)
While a student in the late 1970s, Barack Obama carved his
name in the pavement outside the cafeteria of Punahou School.
A representative of the school said she believes "King" was
written by another student. (Tribune photo by Chuck Berman /
March 23, 2007)
Punahou School teacher Pal Eldredge stands in front of the
Castle, where he taught Barack Obama's 5th-grade class.
(Tribune photo by Chuck Berman / March 23, 2007)
Alan Lum stands next to the Oct. 23, 2006, Time magazine
cover featuring his former classmate. Lum is a 2nd-grade
teacher at Punahou School and displays the cover in his
classroom. (Tribune photo by Chuck Berman / March 23, 2007)
Maya Soetoro-Ng, Barack Obama's half sister, teaches her
Education in American Society class at the University of
Hawaii. (Tribune photo by Chuck Berman / March 23, 2007)
Barack Obama poses at Columbia University in New York City
during a visit by his grandparents Stanley and Madelyn
Dunham. (Photo courtesy of Maya Soetoro-Ng / March 23,
2007)


