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TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 2018 WESTERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY
PHOTO
SILAS WALKER • HERALD
Six-foot Harlem Globetrotters’ guard “Flip” (19) flips off the hoop after climbing on top to block the General’s Shots during their performance in E.A. Diddle Arena on Monday, Mar. 12.
SPRING BREAK RECAP BY NIC HUEY HERALD.PHOTO@WKU.EDU
O
ur photo staff traveled far and wide over spring break, cameras in hand, and returned with some
spectacular images. Chris Kohley went to Chicago where he captured the St. Patrick’s Day festivities, including the annual dying of the Chicago River, a tradition that dates back to 1962. Abigail Dollins travelled to Los Angeles where she visited the Urban Light
art instillation and the Point Vicente Lighthouse. Silas Walker stayed here in Bowling Green, where he had the opportunity to photograph the Harlem Globetrotters, a performing basketball group that’s known for their extreme drunks.
ABIGAIL DOLLINS • HERALD
ABIGAIL DOLLINS • HERALD
The Urban Light, located at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, features restored street lamps from the early 1900s that once shined on the streets of Los Angeles.
The sun sets over the Point Vicente Lighthouse just north of Los Angeles, California. The lighthouse was opened in 1926 and stands on the most southwesterly point of the Palos Verdes Peninsula.
CHRIS KOHLEY • HERALD
CHRIS KOHLEY • HERALD
Thousands gather along the Chicago River on St. Patrick’s Day to watch it be dyed green. The dyeing of the river dates back to 1962.
Members of the Chicago Plumbers Union spray green dye into the Chicago River on St. Patrick’s day 2018. Thousands of spectators gathered along the river at 9 a.m. to watch the more than 50-year-old tradition.