Allen Sullivan Media

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
150 images found
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • Young friends on the island of Roatan, Honduras.
    honduras_kids.jpg
  • On a break from competition in the U.S. Paralympics Track and Field National Championships at Lakewood Stadium in Atlanta, athletes have a less formal pattycake battle in the shade on Saturday, July 1, 2006. Clockwise from left are Ryan Chalmers of New York, Maggie Frederick of Kennesaw, Doug Forbis of Illinois, and Dana Fink of Atlanta. The Paralympics event is the qualifier to gain entry on the U.S. Team for the International Paralympic Committee Athletics Championships in Switzerland.
    paralympics_05.jpg
  • Tomi Rae Hynie, long-time partner of James Brown, walks off a stage after her husband was the guest starter of the 2006 Ford Tour de Georgia pro cycling race in Augusta, Ga. on Tuesday, April 18, 2006. James Brown died in Atlanta on Monday, Dec. 25.
    060418_tomiraehynie002.jpg
  • Children stand by a tree at sunset on the island of Roatan, Honduras in the early 1980s. Backlit silhouette.
    HondurasKids.tif
  • Tomi Rae Hynie, long-time partner of James Brown, walks off a stage after her husband was the guest starter of the 2006 Ford Tour de Georgia pro cycling race in Augusta, Ga. on Tuesday, April 18, 2006. James Brown died in Atlanta on Monday, Dec. 25.
    060418_tomiraehynie001.jpg
  • James Brown walks off a stage after being the guest starter of the 2006 Ford Tour de Georgia pro cycling race in Augusta, Ga. on Tuesday, April 18, 2006. His long-time partner, Tomi Rae Hynie, is second from left. James Brown died in Atlanta on Monday, Dec. 25.
    060418_jamesbrown001.jpg
  • Teens play a street soccer game shortly before the lightless night settles over Jacmel in southern Haiti. The 7.0 earthquake that devastated parts of Haiti on January 12 killed hundreds of thousands of people. January's earthquake killed hundreds of thousands of people and caused significant and lasting structural and economic damage in the Caribbean nation.
    haiti_031.JPG
  • High Museum director Michael Shapiro (left) and Louvre director Henri Loyrette at the Anne Cox Chambers Wing of the High Museum of Art. Over the next three years, the High Museum will feature hundreds of works of art from the Musée de Louvre.
    061005_louvreatlanta_019.jpg
  • High Museum director Michael Shapiro (left) and Louvre director Henri Loyrette at the Anne Cox Chambers Wing of the High Museum of Art. Over the next three years, the High Museum will feature hundreds of works of art from the Musée de Louvre.
    061005_louvreatlanta_018.jpg
  • High Museum director Michael Shapiro (left) and Louvre director Henri Loyrette at the Anne Cox Chambers Wing of the High Museum of Art. Over the next three years, the High Museum will feature hundreds of works of art from the Musée de Louvre.
    061005_louvreatlanta_017.jpg
  • High Museum director Michael Shapiro (right) and Louvre director Henri Loyrette at the Anne Cox Chambers Wing of the High Museum of Art. Over the next three years, the High Museum will feature hundreds of works of art from the Musée de Louvre.
    061005_louvreatlanta_016.jpg
  • Abby the dog playing in the Chattahoochee River.
    070601 abby 4.dng
  • A small dog sits in front of colonial home in Guatemala on Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021.
    20210206 dog sits in front of red do...tif
  • Dog sleeping on chair, 2009.
    20090616 abby 018.tif
  • Abby the dog playing in the Chattahoochee River.
    070601 abby 5.dng
  • Abby the dog playing in the Chattahoochee River.
    070601 abby 2.dng
  • Abby the dog playing in the Chattahoochee River.
    070601 abby 3.dng
  • Abby the dog playing in the Chattahoochee River.
    070601 abby 1.dng
  • From left, Louvre curator Varena Forcione, Louvre director Henri Loyrette, High Museum director Michael Shapiro and Louvre curator Catherine Loisel at the Anne Cox Chambers Wing of the High Museum of Art. Over the next three years, the High Museum will feature hundreds of works of art from the Musée de Louvre.
    061005_louvreatlanta_033.jpg
  • 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
  • Jess Jones (from left), Nikita Kardivar, Andiak Daniel and Hannah King shake hands after their match--the boys won--during the FedEx Shootout Atlanta at Kennesaw State University on Saturday, Dec. 9, 2006.
    TENNIS010a.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 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
  • 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 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
  • 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_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_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
  • 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
  • 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_010.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_002.jpg
  • Sandra Pritchett (left) and her daughter Tabitha wave to one of Tabitha's college friends in line at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta on Sunday during registration to audition for the hit television show "American Idol." Tryouts will be held on Tuesday at the Dome. Tabitha said she wasn't sure what she will audition with, but "it will probably be a country song."
    idol signup 06.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_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_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_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 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 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
  • 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_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 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_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
  • 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_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
  • 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 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 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
  • 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
  • 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_014.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_006.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_005.jpg
  • Josefa Icaj Esquina, of Panabaj, Guatemala, with one of her children in a room in a school that has been transformed into a shelter. She lost her husband and two other children when Panabaj, a small Mayan town, was destroyed by mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Friends say Josefa is suffering from psychological shock after the disaster, and she breaks out in fits of anger and does not eat sufficiently. Hundreds of survivors from Panabaj are being housed in shelters in nearby Santiago Atitlan. Residents say hundreds of victims are buried under the massive Panabaj mudslide.
    102405santiago3.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_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_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_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_290.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 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_231.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_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_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_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_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
  • 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
  • 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_016.dng
  • 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_012.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_011.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_009.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_008.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_007.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_004.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_003.jpg
  • Josefa Icaj Esquina, of Panabaj, Guatemala, with one of her children in a room in a school that has been transformed into a shelter. She lost her husband and two other children when Panabaj, a small Mayan town, was destroyed by mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Friends say Josefa is suffering from psychological shock after the disaster, and she breaks out in fits of anger and does not eat sufficiently. Hundreds of survivors from Panabaj are being housed in shelters in nearby Santiago Atitlan. Residents say hundreds of victims are buried under the massive Panabaj mudslide.
    102405santiago4.jpg
  • Josefa Icaj Esquina, of Panabaj, Guatemala, with two of her children in a room in a school that has been transformed into a shelter. She lost her husband and two other children when Panabaj, a small Mayan town, was destroyed by mudslides earlier in the month when Hurricane Stan spawned torrential rains over parts of Central America. Friends say Josefa is suffering from psychological shock after the disaster, and she breaks out in fits of anger and does not eat sufficiently. Hundreds of survivors from Panabaj are being housed in shelters in nearby Santiago Atitlan. Residents say many victims are buried under the massive Panabaj mudslide.
    102405santiago2.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_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_288.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
  • 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
  • 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_001.jpg
  • Relatives of James Brown and a friend sing hymnals by a statue of the hometown singer on Broad Street in Augusta, Ga. on Tuesday, Dec. 26, 2006. From left are great-granddaughter Saquoia Walton, granddaughter-in-law Carmen Schultz, family friend Dana Wideman, Brown's daughter Venisha Brown, great-granddaughter Chelsea Dean and daughter-in-law Diane D. Rowes. Brown died in Atlanta on Monday, Dec. 25.<br />
    061226_james_brown_statue059_1.DNG
Next