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  • ESPN reporter Erin Andrews at home in Dunwoody, Ga. on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2006. She says she'll often stay up until 2 a.m. reading team guides and surfing the Internet to help her prepare to report a game. Andrews will be a contestant on the television show "Dancing With the Stars."
    Erin Andrews 06.jpg
  • ESPN reporter Erin Andrews at home in Dunwoody, Ga. on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2006. She says she'll often stay up until 2 a.m. reading team guides and surfing the Internet to help her prepare to report a game. Andrews will be a contestant on the television show "Dancing With the Stars."
    Erin Andrews 05.jpg
  • ESPN reporter Erin Andrews at home in Dunwoody, Ga. on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2006. She says she'll often stay up until 2 a.m. reading team guides and surfing the Internet to help her prepare to report a game. Andrews will be a contestant on the television show "Dancing With the Stars."
    Erin Andrews 07.jpg
  • ESPN reporter Erin Andrews at home in Dunwoody, Ga. on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2006. She says she'll often stay up until 2 a.m. reading team guides and surfing the Internet to help her prepare to report a game. Andrews will be a contestant on the television show "Dancing With the Stars."
    Erin Andrews 04.jpg
  • ESPN reporter Erin Andrews at home in Dunwoody, Ga. on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2006. She says she'll often stay up until 2 a.m. reading team guides and surfing the Internet to help her prepare to report a game. Andrews will be a contestant on the television show "Dancing With the Stars."
    Erin Andrews 03.jpg
  • ESPN reporter Erin Andrews at home in Dunwoody, Ga. on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2006. She says she'll often stay up until 2 a.m. reading team guides and surfing the Internet to help her prepare to report a game. Andrews will be a contestant on the television show "Dancing With the Stars."
    Erin Andrews 02.jpg
  • ESPN reporter Erin Andrews at home in Dunwoody, Ga. on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2006. She says she'll often stay up until 2 a.m. reading team guides and surfing the Internet to help her prepare to report a game. Andrews will be a contestant on the television show "Dancing With the Stars."
    Erin Andrews 01.jpg
  • Cat in front yard of intown home, looking at camera
    cat in front yard 1.tif
  • A childrens play feature is wrapped in yellow caution tape in the town of Franklin, North Carolina, United States on Friday, April 10, 2020 during the worldwide coronavirus pandemic. Local emergency orders forbid use of playgrounds as authorities try to prevent viral infection from spreading.
    20200410 franklin nc playground covid
  • Wilma Janet Chacon (left), 17, learns at a children's court that she will not be given custody of her daughter until she proves that she will stay off the street and off drugs. Geovanni Marroquín, the child's father at right, is a reformed former street youth now back at home and in school. The mediator told Chacon she has two months to straighten up. A week later, she was back on the streets.
    delacalle018.dng
  • Alison Bechdel reads from her graphic novel, "Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic," at Outwrite Bookstore & Coffeehouse in Atlanta on Sept. 26, 2006. The author of the comic "Dykes To Watch Out For" is on a multi-city tour promoting the memoir of her family life.
    060926_alison_bechdel_346.jpg
  • Alison Bechdel reads from her graphic novel, "Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic," at Outwrite Bookstore & Coffeehouse in Atlanta on Sept. 26, 2006. The author of the comic "Dykes To Watch Out For" is on a multi-city tour promoting the memoir of her family life.
    060926_alison_bechdel_343.jpg
  • Alison Bechdel reads from her graphic novel, "Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic," at Outwrite Bookstore & Coffeehouse in Atlanta on Sept. 26, 2006. The author of the comic "Dykes To Watch Out For" is on a multi-city tour promoting the memoir of her family life.
    060926_alison_bechdel_345.jpg
  • Alison Bechdel reads from her graphic novel, "Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic," at Outwrite Bookstore & Coffeehouse in Atlanta on Sept. 26, 2006. The author of the comic "Dykes To Watch Out For" is on a multi-city tour promoting the memoir of her family life.
    060926_alison_bechdel_344.jpg
  • Kevin, 11 years old, shines shoes in Chimaltenango, far from his parents and home in Quetzaltenango. Poor Guatemalan children are often sent off to bring in money for families that cannot afford to feed them. Kevin said he has never been to school.
    delacalle007.dng
  • Kevin, 11 years old, shines shoes in Chimaltenango, far from his parents and home in Quetzaltenango. Poor Guatemalan children are often sent off to bring in money for families that cannot afford to feed them. Kevin said he has never been to school.
    062105 guate strt kids014.dng
  • Kevin, 11 years old, shines shoes in Chimaltenango, far from his parents and home in Quetzaltenango. Poor Guatemalan children are often sent off to bring in money for families that cannot afford to feed them. Kevin said he has never been to school.
    062105 guate strt kids010.dng
  • David Wood (from left), Abigayle, 5, Caroline, 8, and Anna Marie Wood make Abigayle's birthday cake at home in Lawrenceville, Ga. on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2006. Abigayle was born on Sept. 11, 2001. Anna Marie Wood said the attacks on that day caused her to go into early labor.<br />
    060910_911_birthday_005.jpg
  • Anna Marie Wood watches her daughters Abigayle Wood (right), 5, and Caroline, 8, play at home in Lawrenceville, Ga. on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2006. Abigayle was born on Sept. 11, 2001. Wood said the attacks on that day caused her to go into early labor.<br />
    060910_911_birthday_003.jpg
  • Abigayle Wood (left), 5, plays with her eight-year-old sister Caroline (cq) at home in Lawrenceville, Ga. on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2006. Abigayle was born on Sept. 11, 2001. Anna Marie Wood said the attacks on that day caused her to go into early labor.<br />
    060910_911_birthday_002.jpg
  • Abigayle Wood, 5, plays with her eight-year-old sister Caroline at home in Lawrenceville, Ga. on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2006. Abigayle was born on Sept. 11, 2001. Her mother, Anna Marie Wood, said the attacks on that day caused an early labor.<br />
    060910_911_birthday_001.jpg
  • Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team racer George Hincapie eats with his daughter Julia and wife Melanie at home. Long successful in the European classics, in addition to being Lance Armstrong's right hand man on the team, Hincapie took his first Tour de France stage win in 2005.<br />
    121305_George_Hincapie_26.jpg
  • Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team racer George Hincapie eats with his daughter Julia at home. Long successful in the European classics, in addition to being Lance Armstrong's right hand man on the team, Hincapie took his first Tour de France stage win in 2005.<br />
    121305_George_Hincapie_25.jpg
  •  Abigayle Wood, 5, helps make her birthday cake at home in Lawrenceville, Ga. on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2006. Abigayle was born on Sept. 11, 2001. Anna Marie Wood said the attacks on that day caused her to go into early labor.<br />
    060910_911_birthday_004.jpg
  • Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team racer George Hincapie eats with his daughter Julia at home. Long successful in the European classics, in addition to being Lance Armstrong's right hand man on the team, Hincapie took his first Tour de France stage win in 2005.<br />
    121305_George_Hincapie_24.jpg
  • Firefighter Will Mondesir (at left) leaves a fire-damaged home in Port-au-Prince, Haiti as people gather to watch the owner toss out his damage possessions. Heavy traffic and narrow streets prevented the crew from getting its water truck to a blaze at the two-story home, so the owners had to put it out themselves with water buckets. A few dozen under-equipped firefighters are tasked with providing fire service to a damaged city of over two million people.
    201009_haiti_FF_PS027.JPG
  • John Madut (cq) counts a cash drawer at the start of his shift at the Toco Hills Publix on Friday, Sept. 1, 2006. One of the "Lost Boys of Sudan," Madut has worked at the grocery store since 2003. This year he returned to Sudan for the first time since leaving and saw that his home town is in desperate need of clean drinking water. He's trying to help by raising funds for a new well, but has found the effort to be a financially monumental task.
    lostboys_01.jpg
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_020.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_004.dng
  • Gert McMullin reads an emotional story at the AIDS Memorial Quilt headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_276.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_145.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_132.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_130.dng
  • Miriam Violeta Montufa, mother of Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano  Montufa, 15, sits in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor063.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, and niece in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor068.dng
  • John Madut (cq) counts a cash drawer at the start of his shift at the Toco Hills Publix on Friday, Sept. 1, 2006. One of the "Lost Boys of Sudan," Madut has worked at the grocery store since 2003. This year he returned to Sudan for the first time since leaving and saw that his home town is in desperate need of clean drinking water. He's trying to help by raising funds for a new well, but has found the effort to be a financially monumental task.
    lostboys_02.jpg
  • Part of Gert McMullin's shrine to lost friends at the AIDS Memorial Quilt headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_282.dng
  • Gert McMullin takes a break after reading an emotional story at the AIDS Memorial Quilt headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_279.dng
  • Gert McMullin stacks sections of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_251.dng
  • Gert McMullin stores a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_158.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_143.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_142.dng
  • Julie Rhoad, executive director of The Names Project Foundation, speaks with a visitor at the AIDS Memorial Quilt's headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_098.dng
  • The AIDS Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_096.dng
  • The AIDS Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_069.dng
  • The AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_050.dng
  • Deneice Garland pauses while storing panels of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_041.dng
  • The AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_030.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_024.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_002.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor059.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, and niece in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor052.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, and niece in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor007.dng
  • John Madut (cq) works at the Toco Hills Publix on Friday, Sept. 1, 2006. One of the "Lost Boys of Sudan," Madut has worked at the grocery store since 2003. This year he returned to Sudan for the first time since leaving and saw that his home town is in desperate need of clean drinking water. He's trying to help by raising funds for a new well, but has found the effort to be a financially monumental task.
    lostboys_04.jpg
  • John Madut (cq) (right) rings up the groceries of Stephen Kagan and his daughter Juliana (both cq) at the Toco Hills Publix on Friday, Sept. 1, 2006. One of the "Lost Boys of Sudan," Madut has worked at the grocery store since 2003. This year he returned to Sudan for the first time since leaving and saw that his home town is in desperate need of clean drinking water. He's trying to help by raising funds for a new well, but has found the effort to be a financially monumental task.
    lostboys_03.jpg
  • Gert McMullin repairs a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_319.dng
  • Gert McMullin repairs a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_303.dng
  • Gert McMullin repairs a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_294.dng
  • Gert McMullin reads an emotional story at the AIDS Memorial Quilt headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_272.dng
  • A note by Gert McMullin at the AIDS Memorial Quilt headquarters attached to a section she hopes will be the last one added to the quilt, if deaths from AIDS ever cease. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_267.dng
  • Gert McMullin stacks sections of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_255.dng
  • Gert McMullin designs a panel of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_249.dng
  • Gert McMullin designs a panel of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_236.dng
  • Deneice Garland (right) speaks with Gert McMullin at the AIDS Memorial Quilt headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_151.dng
  • Julie Rhoad, executive director of The Names Project Foundation, speaks with a visitor at the AIDS Memorial Quilt's headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_100.dng
  • The AIDS Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_078.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_062.dng
  • A photograph at the AIDS Memorial Quilt headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_056.dng
  • The AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_026.dng
  • Deneice Garland stores panels of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. The quilt, at 54 tons, now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said Gert McMullin, the quilt's production manager. McMullin, who says she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS, was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco and she moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_016.dng
  • Loretta Brown monitors a video screen at the Green Manor Restaurant in Union City, Ga. on Saturday night, Jan. 20, 2007. Several members of the West Georgia Paranormal Research Society spent the night at the house to investigate suspected activity. People have said the ghost of a woman, Florence Westbrook, is active in the historic home.
    METHAUNT_as009.jpg
  • Loretta Brown helps investigate suspected paranormal activity at the Green Manor Restaurant in Union City, Ga. on Saturday night, Jan. 20, 2007. Several members of the West Georgia Paranormal Research Society spent the night at the house. People have said the ghost of a woman, Florence Westbrook, is active in the historic home.
    METHAUNT_as006.jpg
  • Melanie Sheppard checks for existing electromagnetic activity during a paranormal investigation at the Green Manor Restaurant in Union City, Ga. on Saturday night, Jan. 20, 2007. Several members of the West Georgia Paranormal Research Society spent the night at the house. People have said the ghost of a woman, Florence Westbrook, is active in the historic home.
    METHAUNT_as003.jpg
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor067.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor066.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor065.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor064.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, and niece in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor053.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, and niece in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor084.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, and niece in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor070.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, and niece in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor001.dng
  • Alma de Los Angeles Sambrano Montufa, 15, sits with her mother, Miriam Violeta Montufa, and niece in their home in Chimaltenango, Guatemala on Thursday, March 8, 2007. Alma worked at Legumex, a vegetable and fruit company that exports to the United States, for a year and a half. Her mother also used to work at the plant, but can no longer work due to an illness. Both Alma and her mother say they know for certain that the plant hires underage workers for sometimes 14-hour shifts.
    gualabor071.dng
  • John Madut (cq) steps in to bag groceries at the Toco Hills Publix on Friday, Sept. 1, 2006. One of the "Lost Boys of Sudan," Madut has worked at the grocery store since 2003. This year he returned to Sudan for the first time since leaving and saw that his home town is in desperate need of clean drinking water. He's trying to help by raising funds for a new well, but has found the effort to be a financially monumental task.
    lostboys_05.jpg
  • Gert McMullin repairs a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_332.dng
  • Gert McMullin repairs a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_330.dng
  • Gert McMullin repairs a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_316.dng
  • Gert McMullin repairs a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_313.dng
  • Gert McMullin designs a panel of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_247.dng
  • Gert McMullin designs a panel of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_240.dng
  • Gert McMullin designs a panel of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_232.dng
  • Gert McMullin designs a panel of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_225.dng
  • Gert McMullin stores a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_190.dng
  • Gert McMullin stores a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_182.dng
  • Gert McMullin stores a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_170.dng
  • Gert McMullin stores a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_166.dng
  • Gert McMullin stores a section of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at its headquarters. Weighing 54 tons, the quilt now has over 5700 12' X 12' panels encompassing about 80,000 names of people whose lives the disease has claimed, said McMullin, the quilt's production manager. She said she has lost about 300 friends to AIDS and was one of the two original volunteers that started the quilt in San Francisco. She moved along with it to its present home in Atlanta.
    061212_aids_quilt_159.dng
  • Debi Heaton measures temperatures at the Green Manor Restaurant in Union City, Ga. on Saturday night, Jan. 20, 2007. Several members of the West Georgia Paranormal Research Society spent the night at the house to investigate suspected activity. People have said the ghost of a woman, Florence Westbrook, is active in the historic home.
    METHAUNT_as007.jpg
  • Joey Ward sets up a video camera to investigate activity at the Green Manor Restaurant in Union City, Ga. on Saturday night, Jan. 20, 2007. Several members of the West Georgia Paranormal Research Society spent the night at the house. People have said the ghost of a woman, Florence Westbrook, is active in the historic home.
    METHAUNT_as005.jpg
  • Scott Wilson rigs monitoring equipment to investigate activity at the Green Manor Restaurant in Union City, Ga. on Saturday night, Jan. 20, 2007. Several members of the West Georgia Paranormal Research Society spent the night at the house. People have said the ghost of a woman, Florence Westbrook, is active in the historic home.
    METHAUNT_as001.jpg
  • The home of Kathryn Johnston, an elderly woman who was allegedly shot to death by Atlanta police officers on Tuesday night, November 21, at 933 Neal Street. Authorities have said Johnston was 88 years old, while family and friends say she was 92. It was initially said that Johnston shot at officers when they broke down her front door on that night under a search warrant. They returned fire, killing her. The case is under investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation and the Fulton County district attorney's office.
    061129_johnston_shooting_013.jpg
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