Show Navigation

Elizabeth Dalziel

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area

Elizabeth Dalziel

Search Results

4 images

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)

Loading ()...

  • An Indian woman wearing a traditional Indian Sari sips her tea at the end cocktail party for the Pizza hut Polo tournament at the Jaipur Polo Ground in New Delhi, India Sunday Nov. 3, 2002. "The chiffon and pearl brigade, we call it," said Asmita Agarwal, a tough-talking polo and fashion writer for the Hindustan Times. "Women in chiffon saris dripping with huge diamonds ... They're all royalty, or at least they're trying to be royalty."  In many ways, that's what modern Indian polo is about joining the new royalty.
    INDIA POLO 03
  • Children follow their teacher as they head back to school, on the first day back to classes after the tsunami in the town of Panadura, Sri Lanka Monday Jan. 10, 2005.  Some 8,000 children will start lessons in makeshift school rooms _ some in tents pitched near their destroyed schools, some in buildings that did not fall and some using emergency "school-in-a-box" kits provided by UNICEF consisting of exercise books, pencils, chalk, teaching aids and some puzzles.
    SRI LANKA TSUNAMI
  • A soldier from the  2nd Battalion extends a salute with the Maoist greeting, a clenched right fist, to villagers gathered to welcome them after they descended from the mountains to take part in a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Thursday April 22, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 03
  • Indian waiters and servants sitting behind curtains where the spectators and Polo crowd are seated, wait next to Indian trade mark Ambassador car for the Pizza cup final to end and for the cocktail to begin at the Jaipur Polo Ground in New Delhi, India Sunday Nov. 3, 2002. "The chiffon and pearl brigade, we call it," said Asmita Agarwal, a tough-talking polo and fashion writer for the Hindustan Times. "Women in chiffon saris dripping with huge diamonds ... They're all royalty, or at least they're trying to be royalty."  In many ways, that's what modern Indian polo is about joining the new royalty.
    INDIA POLO 09