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  • Molly Fletcher works in her office at Career Sports and Entertainment on Wednesday morning, March 22, 2006. Fletcher must juggle her busy family life --she has a husband and three children--with a more than full-time job representing several top sports personalities.<br />
    molly fletcher 07.jpg
  • After attending a session at The Music Class with her children, sports agent Molly Fletcher puts her daughters in a van with the help of nanny Dottie Page (in driver's seat) on Wednesday, March 22, 2006 before heading away to a lunch meeting. Fletcher juggles a busy family life with her more than full-time job representing several top sports personalities.
    molly fletcher 05.jpg
  • Sports agent Molly Fletcher speaks to a client by cell phone before heading up to her office at Career Sports and Entertainment on Wednesday morning, March 22, 2006. Fletcher must juggle a busy family life with her more than full-time job representing several top sports personalities.<br />
    molly fletcher 04.jpg
  • Sports agent Molly Fletcher plays with her daughters before heading to work on Wednesday morning, March 22, 2006. Fletcher juggles a busy family life with her more than full-time job representing several top sports personalities.<br />
    molly fletcher 03.jpg
  • Sports agent Molly Fletcher (right) has lunch with friend Heidi DeRosa--whose husband, Mark DeRosa, is one of Fletcher's baseball clients--at Garrison's Broiler and Tap in Vinings on Wednesday morning, March 22, 2006. Fletcher juggles a busy family life with her more than full-time job representing several top sports personalities.<br />
    molly fletcher 08.jpg
  • Sports agent Molly Fletcher plays with her daughters at The Music Class on Wednesday, March 22, 2006. Fletcher must juggle a busy family life with her more than full-time job representing several top sports personalities.<br />
    molly fletcher 02.jpg
  • Sports agent Molly Fletcher (center) and her family get ready for the day on Wednesday morning, March 22, 2006. With Fletcher are her husband Fred (cq) and their daughters. Fletcher juggles a busy family life with her more than full-time job representing several top sports personalities.<br />
    molly fletcher 01.jpg
  • Molly Fletcher works in her office at Career Sports and Entertainment on Wednesday morning, March 22, 2006. Fletcher must juggle her busy family life --she has a husband and three children--with a more than full-time job representing several top sports personalities.<br />
    molly fletcher 06.jpg
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as037.dng
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as021.dng
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as063.dng
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as061.dng
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as057.dng
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as054.dng
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as027.dng
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as001.jpg
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as048.dng
  • Mechel Glass speaks about board and card games she developed--Beat Debt and Paid Off!, respectively--to help people manage and overcome their financial problems. She sold rights to the games to Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
    goodworks0719_as012.dng
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (bottom left), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_009.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (right), a male, and Kazi, a female--play near their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_015.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (bottom left), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_014.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (not seen), a male, and Kazi, a female (at top)--hang on to their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, as father Taz, 17 years old, sits in front at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_013.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (bottom left), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_011.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (bottom left), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_010.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (hanging on below), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_002.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (bottom right), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_001.jpg
  • LuLu, a seven-year-old western lowland gorilla, plays with a sack at Zoo Atlanta. Her twin siblings--Kali, a male, and Kazi, a female--turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_016.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (bottom left), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_012.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (bottom left), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_008.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (bottom left), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_007.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (top left), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_006.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (left), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_005.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (top left), a male, and Kazi, a female--hang on to their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, as father Taz, 17 years old, watches at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_004.jpg
  • A rare set of western lowland gorilla twins--Kali (hangiing on below), a male, and Kazi, a female--with their mother, 22-year-old Kuchi, at Zoo Atlanta. The twins turned one year old today and are the only twins in a captive population to be entirely mother-reared. "The decision to allow Kuchi to raise both of her offspring was a difficult one and unprecedented," said Dr. Tara Stoinski, Zoo Atlanta manager of conservation partnerships. "But we decided to stick to our philosophy that mother-rearing is best. With this success we have established a new precedent for the management of gorilla offspring in zoos."<br />
    061031gorilla_twins_003.jpg
  • 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
  • Guests pass through the acrylic tunnel at the Georgia Aquarium during the opening reception for the annual meeting of the International Association of Exhibition Managers on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005.  The reception at the Georgia Aquarium was one way to impress on the attendees Atlanta's viabilty as a convention destination.
    051129 georgia aquarium 003.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 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_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
  • Guests mingle at the Georgia Aquarium during the opening reception for the annual meeting of the International Association of Exhibition Managers on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005.  The reception at the Georgia Aquarium was one way to impress on the attendees Atlanta's viabilty as a convention destination.
    051129 georgia aquarium 011.jpg
  • Guests drink, dine and wander the Georgia Aquarium during the opening reception for the annual meeting of the International Association of Exhibition Managers on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005.  The reception at the Georgia Aquarium was one way to impress on the attendees Atlanta's viabilty as a convention destination.
    051129 georgia aquarium 006.jpg
  • Guests mingle and wander the Georgia Aquarium during the opening reception for the annual meeting of the International Association of Exhibition Managers on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005.  The reception at the Georgia Aquarium was one way to impress on the attendees Atlanta's viabilty as a convention destination.
    051129 georgia aquarium 002.jpg
  • Melissa Szumlinksi, shelter manager of the temporary shelter set up at the Columbia, SC airport, speaks with her team after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-35.jpg
  • Rapper and R & B artist T-Pain (right), whose "Buy U a Drank (Shawty Snappin')" has hit the top of the charts, and his manager, Chris Boogie, at Strip Steaks and Sushi in Atlanta, Georgia on Wednesday, May 23, 2007.
    070523 tpain 017.dng
  • Rapper and R & B artist T-Pain (right), whose "Buy U a Drank (Shawty Snappin')" has hit the top of the charts, and his manager, Chris Boogie, at Strip Steaks and Sushi in Atlanta, Georgia on Wednesday, May 23, 2007.
    070523 tpain 016.dng
  • Rapper and R & B artist T-Pain (right), whose "Buy U a Drank (Shawty Snappin')" has hit the top of the charts, and his manager, Chris Boogie, at Strip Steaks and Sushi in Atlanta, Georgia on Wednesday, May 23, 2007.
    070523 tpain 014.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_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 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
  • 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_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
  • 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_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
  • 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
  • Guests view the beluga whales at the Georgia Aquarium during the opening reception for the annual meeting of the International Association of Exhibition Managers on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005.  The reception at the Georgia Aquarium was one way to impress on the attendees Atlanta's viabilty as a convention destination.
    051129 georgia aquarium 010.jpg
  • Justine McVaney of Washington, D.C. speaks with Rick Geritz of Frederick, Md. and Wayne S. Crawford of Washington, D.C. (not shown) by the kelp forest exhibit at the Georgia Aquarium during the opening reception for the annual meeting of the International Association of Exhibition Managers on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005.  The reception at the Georgia Aquarium was one way to impress on the attendees Atlanta's viabilty as a convention destination.
    051129 georgia aquarium 009.jpg
  • Brian Strickland of Washington, D.C. (left) peruses his digital photos with Briana Mackey of Las Vegas at the Georgia Aquarium during the opening reception for the annual meeting of the International Association of Exhibition Managers on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005. Pedro Garcia of Las Vegas (right) admires a whale shark swimming above. The reception at the Georgia Aquarium was one way to impress on the attendees Atlanta's viabilty as a convention destination.
    051129 georgia aquarium 007.jpg
  • Pedro Garcia of Las Vegas checks out arawana and arapaima the Georgia Aquarium during the opening reception for the annual meeting of the International Association of Exhibition Managers on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005. The reception at the Georgia Aquarium was one way to impress on the attendees Atlanta's viabilty as a convention destination.
    051129 georgia aquarium 005.jpg
  • Michelle Koertgen of Wheaton, Ill. gets drinks for herself and a friend at the Georgia Aquarium during the opening reception for the annual meeting of the International Association of Exhibition Managers on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005. The reception at the Georgia Aquarium was one way to impress on the attendees Atlanta's viabilty as a convention destination.
    051129 georgia aquarium 004.jpg
  • Tia Pope, manager of puppy mill investigations, marks a pen during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-57.jpg
  • Tia Pope, manager of puppy mill investigations, marks a pen during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-9.jpg
  • Rapper and R & B artist T-Pain (right), whose "Buy U a Drank (Shawty Snappin')" has hit the top of the charts, and his manager, Chris Boogie, at Strip Steaks and Sushi in Atlanta, Georgia on Wednesday, May 23, 2007.
    070523 tpain 015.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_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
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