


Will stands in my way for the duration of the concert.



A police officer stands in front of a barricade where a parade was supposed to pass through near Parliament on Remembrance Sunday, an anniversary of the end of hostilities of World War I. It turned out that the section of the road we were standing at was barricaded for no reason; the parade went in another direction, and upon asking, even the police didn't know why this particular road was closed off.
Businessmen and women walk through Nash Court in Canary Wharf, London. This public art display, called Six Public Clocks, was installed following a design competition for Nash Court in 1999 won by German designer Konstantin Grcic.
Diversity and economy in one shot? Oh my!

I've been trying to make a flash player for my soundslide. The content, of course, is also mine but I was trying to make the player itself. I've been fiddling around with Adobe Flash CS3 lately, because Newhouse won't teach me. Though in all fairness, I'm not there this semester.
I would have went just down the street to Edgware Road for diversity pictures, but most of us have had bad experiences photographing those of Middle-Eastern descent. Actually we didn't feel that welcomed at Chinatown either. No one agreed to have their photos taken, but thank goodness for telephoto lenses.
Finding economy-related photos in London is more difficult than I thought, despite it being a major world economic center. It didn't help that every financial building is closed to the public. Canary Wharf is supposed to be a huge financial center, so I took the Jubilee line down there from Edgware after running into some delays (there apparently was a person "under a train" at the Oxford Circus Station, causing the station's closure and massive delays on several tube lines).
I was denied entry into two financial buildings and had a feeling the others would be the same. So I checked online, and yes, not just anyone can enter these financial buildings. It took some effort to get up as early as I did, so I wasn't too pleased. And then I went to Bank and the St. Paul's area in London, to the Bank of England (no photography allowed, and not to be confused with the Bank of England Museum, with which I didn't bother). Then I tried the London Stock Exchange. It too was closed to the public. Hooray.
This was an unproductive weekend.
Cabs drive by the Bank Tube Station. Old-time style.