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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 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 (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
  • 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
  • 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
  • UGA softball coach and mother of two Lu Harris-Champer speaks with the team during practice in Athens, Ga. on Wednesday, May 27, 2006. She is due to give birth to another daughter next week. Her husband, Jerry Champer, is an assistant coach for the UGA swimming team.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_233.jpg
  • UGA softball coach and mother of two Lu Harris-Champer hits grounders to the team during practice in Athens, Ga. on Wednesday, May 27, 2006. She is due to give birth to another daughter next week. Her husband, Jerry Champer, is an assistant coach for the UGA swimming team.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_352.jpg
  • UGA softball coach and mother of two Lu Harris-Champer catches a ball while hitting grounders to the team during practice in Athens, Ga. on Wednesday, May 27, 2006. She is due to give birth to another daughter next week. Her husband, Jerry Champer, is an assistant coach for the UGA swimming team.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_328.jpg
  • UGA softball coach Lu Harris-Champer (left) and her husband, assistant swimming coach Jerry Champer, play in the softball stadium with their twin daughters, Emma (in white shirt) and Jenna, on Wednesday, May 17, 2006. Harris-Champer is due to give birth to another daughter early next week.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_144.jpg
  • UGA softball coach Lu Harris-Champer plays in the softball stadium with one of her twin daughters, Jenna, on Wednesday, May 17, 2006. Harris-Champer is due to give birth to another daughter early next week.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_093.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_009.jpg
  • UGA softball coach and mother of two Lu Harris-Champer hits grounders to the team during practice in Athens, Ga. on Wednesday, May 27, 2006. She is due to give birth to another daughter next week. Her husband, Jerry Champer, is an assistant coach for the UGA swimming team.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_362.jpg
  • Emma, one of UGA softball coach Lu Harris-Champer's twin daughters, plays at the softball stadium on Wednesday, May 17, 2006. Harris-Champer and her husband, assistant swimming coach Jerry Champer, are expecting another daughter early next week.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_075.jpg
  • UGA softball coach Lu Harris-Champer (right) and her husband, assistant swimming coach Jerry Champer, play in the softball stadium with their twin daughters, Emma (in white shirt) and Jenna, on Wednesday, May 17, 2006. Harris-Champer is due to give birth to another daughter early next week.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_064.jpg
  • ASA pilot Darrin Greubel looks skyward as his son Milon, 4, appears preoccupied with other matters at The Great Georgia Airshow at Falcon Field Airport in Peachtree City, Ga. on Sunday, Oct. 15, 2006.<br />
    061015 ptc air show 007.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 (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 (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
  • UGA softball coach Lu Harris-Champer plays in the softball stadium with one of her twin daughters, Jenna, on Wednesday, May 17, 2006. Harris-Champer is due to give birth to another daughter early next week.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_122.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_014.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 (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 (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
  • University of Georgia softball coach Lu Harris-Champer with one of her twin daughters, Emma, on Wednesday, May 17, 2006. Harris-Champer is due to give birth to another daughter early next week.
    060517 SPTugasoftball_056.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
  • Floyd and his wife Leigh, a couple from North Carolina in the United States, sit with their newly adopted baby, Blake, in the Marriott hotel in Guatemala City, Guatemala on Saturday, June 18, 2005. Floyd, who declined to give his last name, said he expects that he and his wife will pay about U.S. $30,000 in total for Blake's adoption process, then the same again for another Guatemalan baby they plan to adopt.
    061805adoptive_parents.dng
  • Pamela Adams advises her 6-foot-6-inch tall Delta mechanic husband, Ryan, to smile during his taped audition at a Dreams N2 Reality show and casting call at Philips Arena in Atlanta on Saturday, August 4, 2007. People offered their auditions in hopes of gaining spots on game shows and others in the reality TV genre.
    audition03.dng
  • Song and Delta Air Lines plane on the tarmac at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. US Airways has made a bid to take over Delta Air Lines, which is headquartered in Atlanta. Song was once Delta's low-cost subsidary; now the airline is being absorbed into its parent.<br />
    061106_delta_usair_010.jpg
  • Song and Delta Air Lines plane on the tarmac at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. US Airways has made a bid to take over Delta Air Lines, which is headquartered in Atlanta. Song was once Delta's low-cost subsidary; now the airline is being absorbed into its parent.<br />
    061106_delta_usair_009.jpg
  • A young Mayan girl sits with a police officer in the children's court in Guatemala City. The officer said he found her alone, begging for money in the central park. The girl said her closest relatives are her parents in Quiche, hundreds of miles from the capitol.
    delacalle025.dng
  • Connie Broom (cq) speaks to people gathered at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Broom, 1 year old at the time, was staying at the hotel on the night of the fire with her parents, Margaret and Warren E. Foster (both cq). They all survived. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_077.jpg
  • Kevin, 11 years old, shines shoes in Chimaltenango, far from his parents and home in Quetzaltenango. Poor Guatemalan children are often sent off to bring in money for families that cannot afford to feed them. Kevin said he has never been to school.
    delacalle007.dng
  • Diego Elias Mendoza Santos, 12, also known as Rambo, looks for the spot of his former home in an area of Panabaj, Guatemala on Tuesday, March 20, 2007. A deadly mudslide here was spawned by rains associated with Hurricane Stan in October 2005. Initially, up to 500 Tzujutil Maya villagers were believed to have been killed by the mudslide, which essentially  wiped away the town. Rambo lost his parents and a sister and brother. Forensic anthropologists from the Fundación de Antropología Forense de Guatemala have been working to unearth the bodies of the missing and have recovered more than 100. They have also found the number of missing to be lower than originally thought, after many people were located in shelters or living in other towns after the disaster.
    070320 panabaj 109.dng
  • Connie Broom (cq) speaks to people gathered at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Broom, 1 year old at the time, was staying at the hotel on the night of the fire with her parents, Margaret and Warren E. Foster (both cq). They all survived. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_076.jpg
  • Kevin, 11 years old, shines shoes in Chimaltenango, far from his parents and home in Quetzaltenango. Poor Guatemalan children are often sent off to bring in money for families that cannot afford to feed them. Kevin said he has never been to school.
    062105 guate strt kids014.dng
  • Kevin, 11 years old, shines shoes in Chimaltenango, far from his parents and home in Quetzaltenango. Poor Guatemalan children are often sent off to bring in money for families that cannot afford to feed them. Kevin said he has never been to school.
    062105 guate strt kids010.dng
  • Ubelia, a four-year-old Guatemalan girl, drinks soda offered by representatives of the NGO "Nuestros Derechos" on a sidewalk that borders the upscale Zona Viva in Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005. Ubelia is one of seven children that live with their parents, including mother Claudia Leticia Roque Jolón (cq), next to the giant trash dump in Zone 3. Claudia, 35, said she has lived in El Basurero for 7 years, and has spent 12 years living in the street. The family lives now in a two-room shanty with dirt floors, a garbage- and filth-strewn back yard and scores of flies.
    delacalle026.dng
  • Diego Elias Mendoza Santos (left), 12, also known as Rambo, and Jorge Mario Gerónimo Lopez sit at the spot of Rambo's former home in an area of Panabaj, Guatemala on Tuesday, March 20, 2007. A deadly mudslide here was spawned by rains associated with Hurricane Stan in October 2005. Initially, up to 500 Tzujutil Maya villagers were believed to have been killed by the mudslide, which essentially  wiped away the town. Rambo lost his parents and a sister and brother. Mario escaped with his family. Forensic anthropologists from the Fundación de Antropología Forense de Guatemala have been working to unearth the bodies of the missing and have recovered more than 100. They have also found the number of missing to be lower than originally thought, after many people were located in shelters or living in other towns after the disaster.
    070320 panabaj 153.dng
  • Diego Elias Mendoza Santos, 12, also known as Rambo, stands at the spot of his former home in an area of Panabaj, Guatemala on Tuesday, March 20, 2007. A deadly mudslide here was spawned by rains associated with Hurricane Stan in October 2005. Initially, up to 500 Tzujutil Maya villagers were believed to have been killed by the mudslide, which essentially  wiped away the town. Rambo lost his parents and a sister and brother. Forensic anthropologists from the Fundación de Antropología Forense de Guatemala have been working to unearth the bodies of the missing and have recovered more than 100. They have also found the number of missing to be lower than originally thought, after many people were located in shelters or living in other towns after the disaster.
    070320 panabaj 117.dng
  • Rick Roberts (cq) (left) and Connie Broom (cq) hug  at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Roberts, a firefighter at the time who went on to become battalion chief, is credited with helping to save several of the survivors. Broom, 1 year old at the time, survived the blaze with her parents. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their  safety codes.
    metfire1204_082.jpg