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  • Barbara Blum puts a bib on her husband Jack before breakfast in their suburban Atlanta, Ga. apartment on Friday morning, Feb. 17, 2006. Mrs. Blum, 77, has taken on the role of caregiver for her 88-year-old husband, whom a doctor believes has Alzheimer's disease, she said. The four to five hours of sleep she gets each night is sufficient, but the situation might be taking a toll, she said. "I am sure I'm depressed," she said. "I'm not interested in socializing."
    060217 alzheimers couple.tif
  • 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_130.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
  • 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 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 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
  • 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_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_236.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
  • 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_143.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
  • 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_313.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
  • 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
  • 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 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_159.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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_096.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
  • 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
  • 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_337.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_324.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_322.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_317.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_312.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 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_290.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_288.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
  • Gert McMullin (right) and Roddy Williams work at the AIDS Memorial Quilt headquarters. McMullin plans for the section on the table to 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_266.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_254.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_231.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_174.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_161.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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_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
  • The office of the Speaker Law Firm, practice of tuberculosis patient Andrew Harley Speaker.
    070521 speaker law firm 005.dng
  • The office of the Speaker Law Firm, practice of tuberculosis patient Andrew Harley Speaker.
    070521 speaker law firm 024.dng
  • The office of the Speaker Law Firm, practice of tuberculosis patient Andrew Harley Speaker.
    070521 speaker law firm 021.dng
  • Media workers outside the office of the Speaker Law Firm (center right door), practice of tuberculosis patient Andrew Harley Speaker.
    070521 speaker law firm 017.dng
  • Lime powder, thrown about to help fight the spread of disease, covers the ground in an area where people died in mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Hundreds of people and houses were buried in the mudslide that caught the area of Lake Atitlán by surprise in the early morning hours.<br />
    102305panabaj6.jpg
  • Street teenagers Julio and Aura make out in Guatemala City's Zone 8. Pilar Lopez, coordinator of Medicos Sin Fronteras, said street kids often come to her clinic with sexually transmitted diseases. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle027.dng