Anne Chadwick Williams

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  • A homeless man in Sacramento is going to have to move his camp after police decided that a tent city had gotten too big.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 15.JPG
  • Sacramento's largest homeless encampment is in an area called the Wasteland behind the Blue Diamond Almond Factory. The land is owned by SMUD and has easy access to Loaves & Fishes where they can shower and eat. Photographed on March 17, 2009.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 3.JPG
  • Shopping carts and clothes remain after Sacramento homeless are forced to move from a tent city.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 20.JPG
  • Homeless woman Renee, who lives in this tent, is being forced to move by the Sacramento police.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 2.JPG
  • Renee, a homeless woman, lives in this Tent City in Sacramento. The city is moving them off this property, which is privately owned.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 10.JPG
  • Sacramento police officer Mike Cooper wakes up Maynard Philips who was sleeping in a field near the Union Gospel Mission in Sacramento, CA on August 4, 2005.  Cooper and Mark Zoulas, back left, acknowledge that their goal is "to get everyone out of here," but it takes longer with some people.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 8.JPG
  • A homeless man drinks a beer at daybreak before having to move camp in Sacramento, CA.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 7.JPG
  • Chris Bockover, 18, foreground, who has been homeless for five days, sleeps with other homeless in front of the Union Gospel Mission in Sacramento, CA on August 10, 2005. Police say that the Bannon Street mission has become a hotspot for the homeless to sleep outside on the sidewalk and nearby fields.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 5.JPG
  • Sacramento police officer Mike Cooper watches as city crews clean up the left behind belongings of the homeless after they were moved from a tent city in Sacramento, CA.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 19.JPG
  • Sacramento police officer Mike Cooper lifts a blanket on the tent of a homeless woman Sophia as Garren Bratcher of Loaves & Fishes watches. They were reminding her that everyone had to leave Tent City. Bratcher is co-director of Friendship Park.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 9.JPG
  • Homeless woman Eve carries on old bike wheel at her camp in Sacramento, CA on November 17, 2008.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 6.JPG
  • Tina Lawrence, 39, cries as she talks about not knowing where she is going to move. She was living in an area called tent city in Sacramento, CA and the police were moving everyone out.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 18.JPG
  • Homeless have lived in Sacramento for decades.  As the population has grown, so has the police's lack of tolerance and the homeless are consistently forced to move.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 1.JPG
  • A homeless woman pushes her belongs to a new location after police moved everyone out of a tent city in Sacramento, CA.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 17.JPG
  • A mentally ill homeless woman packs her belongs at a Sacramento tent city as police move everyone off the private property.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 16.JPG
  • A homeless man hugs his dog as he is evicted from tent city in Sacramento, CA.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 13.JPG
  • Homeless Colin Reid rests at the safe ground camp after Sacramento police arrested 15 homeless campers and confiscated all their property on Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009. This is the second misdemeanor camping arrest for some of the homeless as attorney Mark Merin battle out the rights of the homeless to camp on private property.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS MAN.jpg
  • A man looks at a crushed car after a heavy rainstorm in Sacramento, CA.
    STORM DAMAGECRUSHES CAR.jpg
  • Jake hosts Make a Date at The Depot. The Sacramento Bee/ Anne Chadwick Williams/ June 26, 2007
    DRAG QUEENS 15.jpg
  • Community children eat free USDA lunches at Noralto Elementary School on Tuesday, June 23, 2009. The number of Sacramento County students on free or reduced lunch jumped faster last year than during any of the last 20 years.
    MELISSA 10.jpg
  • Melissa Kinley gives her disabled son, Kevin, a hug after they played a game adaptive baseball with his mother, Melissa, at Independence Field in Sacramento on June 13, 2009. Kevin's favorite sport is baseball and he really lights up when on the field.
    MELISSA 12.jpg
  • A sign posted by a homeless man is all that is left at the safe ground campground after Sacramento police arrested 15 homeless campers on September 12, 2009. This is the second misdemeanor camping arrest for some of the homeless as attorney Mark Merin battle out the rights of the homeless to camp on private property.
    HOMELESS WORK SIGN.jpg
  • John Kraintz, 55, a homeless leader looks over a "safe ground" location on C St. that about 30 homeless moved to on August 21, 2009.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 14.JPG
  • Homeless woman Eve at her camp on Nov. 17, 2008. Eve is addicted to meth and doesn't have any desire to live inside.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 12.JPG
  • A homeless woman named Eve finds treasures in trash at her camp on Nov. 17, 2008.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 11.JPG
  • Homeless Tony Sims, 51, shakes out a blanket on Bannon St. on November 23, 2008 where he has been camping since August along with about a hundred others. On November 24, police moved all the homeless off Bannon St. in the constant chess game that is played with this population.
    SACRAMENTO HOMELESS 4.JPG
  • Jake uses a glue gun to stick rhinestones to his drag queen wig.
    DRAG QUEENS 1.jpg
  • Severely disabled seventeen-year-old Kevin Kinley is carried by his mother, Melissa, who is also paid to be his caregiver..She receives $10.40 an hour for 9 hours of work each day although her son receives round-the-clock to care. The governor's proposed budget-saving recommendation who cut her pay leaving the widow financially strapped.
    MELISSA 2.jpg
  • Melissa Kinley is the caregiver for her disabled son, Kevin, 17, and receives $10.40 for 9 hours of day. In reality her son receives round the clock to care. She could be cut back to minimum wage if a budget-saving recommendation by the governor goes through.
    MELISSA 8.jpg
  • Melissa Kinley gestures to her disabled son, Kevin, 17, while she runs a ventilator on him to clear up his breathing. She does this several times a day to keep is airway clear.
    MELISSA 6.jpg
  • Melissa Kinley is the caregiver for her disabled son, Kevin, 17, and receives $10.40 for 9 hours of day. In reality her son receives round the clock to care. She could be cut back to minimum wage if a budget-saving recommendation by the governor goes through.
    MELISSA 5.jpg
  • Melissa Kinley is the caregiver for her disabled son, Kevin, 17, and receives $10.40 for 9 hours of care a day. In reality, her son receives round the clock to care. She could be cut back to minimum wage if a budget-saving recommendation by the governor goes through...Melissa Kinley is a remarkable mother although she can't imagine not doing what she does. When her son, Kevin, was born, doctors said he wouldn't make it out of the hospital. Then they said he wouldn't make it to be two years old, then four years old. Melissa stopped listening to them. Now Kevin is 18, and although he can't walk, talk, or eat, he knows a few communication signs, is an avid baseball fan, and goes to school. For 18 years, Melissa has risen every two hours during the night to suction and rotate Kevin to make sure he can breathe freely and lie comfortably. Melissa says she's just a mother doing what anyone would do for the child they love..
    MELISSA 3.jpg
  • Kevin Kinley gets a trophy after playing in an adaptive baseball game with his mother, Melissa, and her boyfriend at Independence Field on Saturday, June 13, 2009.
    MELISSA 11.jpg
  • Melissa Kinley is the caregiver for her disabled son, Kevin, 17, and receives $10.40 for 9 hours of day. In reality her son receives round the clock to care. She could be cut back to minimum wage if a budget-saving recommendation by the governor goes through.
    MELISSA 1.jpg
  • Melissa Kinley is the caregiver for her disabled son, Kevin, 17, and receives $10.40 for 9 hours of day. In reality her son receives round the clock to care. She could be cut back to minimum wage if a budget-saving recommendation by the governor goes through.
    MELISSA 7.jpg
  • Melissa Kinley is the caregiver for her disabled son, Kevin, 17, and receives $10.40 for 9 hours of day. In reality her son receives round the clock to care. She could be cut back to minimum wage if a budget-saving recommendation by the governor goes through.
    MELISSA 9.jpg
  • Melissa Kinley feeds Kevin through a tube, which is the way he's had to be fed his whole life.
    MELISSA 4.jpg
  • Homeless Eve Deutsch washes her hair at a faucet at Loaves & Fishes. Every several months she says she is rousted by the police to move to another location.
    HOMELESS WOMAN.jpg
  • Irene Pinole, 76, one of the oldest living people with Down Syndrome, kisses her roommate, Terry Gordon's hand, as they get ready for bed in their Sacramento group home. Anne Chadwick Williams /May  2004/ Sacramento Bee/
    IRENE PINOLE HAND KISS.JPG
  • Homeless and their pets photographed at Loaves & Fishes, a Sacramento charity that helps the homeless.
    HOMELESS KAT & HER CAT, TAZ.jpg
  • Homeless and their pets at Loaves & Fishes, a Sacramento charity to help the homeless.
    HOMELESS JEFF & HIS DOG, NUDGE.jpg
  • Irene Pinole is one of the oldest people with Down Syndrome. Irene, 76, sinks into the arms of her sister, Olga Johnson, who she hasn't seen in 65 years. Irene, who has Down syndrome, was taken from her Calistoga home as a child and put in a state mental hospital. After reading an article in the Bee last week, Johnson discover that her sister was still alive. Anne Chadwick Williams / June 5, 2004 /Sacramento Bee/
    IRENE PINOLE MEETS SISTER.JPG
  • Homeless and their pets at Loaves & Fishes, a Sacramento charity to help the homeless.
    HOMELESS PEGGY SUE PETERSON & HER DO...jpg
  • Homeless and their pets photographed at Loaves & Fishes, a Sacramento charity that helps the homeless.
    HOMELESS JOANNE BUSH & HER DOG, DANN...jpg
  • Sacramento homeless and their pets photographed at Loaves & Fishes, a charity to help the homeless.
    HOMELESS WESLEY MURRAY & HIS DOG, AF...jpg
  • Hayward drag ball - step down/step up of Alameda/Contra Costa County. The Sacramento Bee/ Anne Chadwick Williams/ Sept. 8, 2007
    DRAG QUEENS 7.jpg
  • Hayward drag ball - step down/step up of Alameda/Contra Costa County. The Sacramento Bee/ Anne Chadwick Williams/ Sept. 8, 2007
    DRAG QUEENS 6.jpg
  • Hayward drag ball - step down/step up of Alameda/Contra Costa County. The Sacramento Bee/ Anne Chadwick Williams/ Sept. 8, 2007
    DRAG QUEENS 8.jpg
  • Hayward drag ball - step down/step up of Alameda/Contra Costa County. The Sacramento Bee/ Anne Chadwick Williams/ Sept. 8, 2007
    DRAG QUEENS 10.jpg
  • Hayward drag ball - step down/step up of Alameda/Contra Costa County. The Sacramento Bee/ Anne Chadwick Williams/ Sept. 8, 2007
    DRAG QUEENS 5.jpg
  • All three of John and Alicia Bennett's children have been diagnosed with Sanfilippo Syndrome, a rare and fatal illness. From l-r are Hunter, 4, Tommy, 2, and Ciara. The family hopes to get experimental therapy for two of the three children at Duke University; the third child's illness is to far along to benefit from the therapy.  Bennett family. May 23, 2002
    ACW BENNETT FAMILY(3).JPG
  • John Bennett says goodbye to his son, Tommy, 4, at the mausoleum at Sunset View Cemetery in Jackson, CA Tuesday. Tommy died at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina while undergoing a year of treatment for Sanfilippo syndrome, a rare genetic disease.  His siblings also share the fatal disease. December 2, 2003..
    ACW BENNETT FUNERAL WEB.jpg
  • John Bennett scratches the family dog, Smore, as Alicia Bennett comforts son, Hunter. February  23, 2004
    ACW BENNETT FAMILY.JPG
  • Tommy Bennett, 3, pushes a syringe of medicine into the central lines attached in his body to help him combat his disease. Bennett and his two older siblings have Sanfilippo syndrome, a rare genetic disease. The family will be heading back to North Carolina soon for a third attempt at a procedure to help Tommy. June 19, 2003..
    ACW TOMMY BENNETT SYRINGE.JPG
  • Tommy Bennett is the youngest of the Alicia and John Bennett's three children, all of whom have a rare disease called Sanfilippo syndrome. Only Tommy can be saved by a procedure known as umbilical cord blood transplant.  Chemotherapy caused Tommy to start losing his hair and so a nurse shaved it. November 26, 2002
    ACW TOMMY BENNETT MUG 1.JPG
  • Alicia Bennett of Ione, CA comforts her son, Tommy, in his hospital room at Duke University Medical Center four days after his umbilical cord blood transplant. November 26, 2002
    ACW TOMMY BENNETT HUG 7.JPG
  • Ciara Bennett. February  23, 2004
    ACW CIARA BENNETT(2).JPG
  • John Bennett waits for his daughter, Ciara, to be unloaded from the school bus in Ione. February  23, 2004
    ACW CIARA BENNETT BUS.JPG
  • Hunter and Ciara Bennett lounge in the living room of the family's rented apartment in Durham, NC where  John Bennett is taking primary care of his two older children, both of whom suffer from Sanfilippo syndrome, while his wife, Alicia Bennett lives in the hospital with their youngest child, Tommy, as he undergoes treatment for the rare disease. November 26, 2002
    ACW BENNETT'S 5.JPG
  • A tired John Bennett shuts his eyes briefly after starting work at 4 a.m. Hunter keeps an eye on his mom, Alicia, while Ciara rests on the couch. February  23, 2004
    ACW BENNETT NAP WEB.jpg
  • John and Alicia Bennett release balloons with inscriptions written on them to their son, Tommy, 4, at the Sunset View Cemetery in Jackson, CA Tuesday. Tommy died last week while undergoing treatment for Sanfilippo syndrome at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. About 120 people attended the service at Ione community United Methodist Church in Ione, CA. Tommy's two siblings also have the rare genetic disease. December 2, 2003.
    ACW BENNETT FUNERAL BALLOON.JPG
  • Tommy and Alicia Bennett have been living on the fifth floor of Duke University Medical Center since late October as Tommy receives treatment for Sanfilippo syndrome. November 25, 2002
    ACW BENNETT 10.JPG
  • Alicia Bennett gives her son, Tommy, 3, a kiss during a three-week trip back home to Ione before having to return to North Carolina for a third transplant attempt for Tommy to help combat his Sanfilippo syndrome. June 19, 2003.
    ACW ALYSSA BENNETT KISS.JPG
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    ACW ALICIA & HUNTER BENNETT.JPG
  • Alicia Bennett snuggles with Tommy in his Duke University Medical Center hospital bed three days after his umbilical cord blood transplant, which doctors hope will cure his Sanfilippo syndrome.  Alicia is living in Tommy's hospital room during his stay, which could be three months. November 25, 2002
    ACW TOMMY BENNETT WMOM 2.JPG
  • Tommy Bennett, 3, endures the cleaning of his intravenous lines to avoid infection by nurse Amanda Lescher at Duke University Medical Center, where he is living in an isolation ward for children with life-threatening diseases.  November 26, 2002
    ACW TOMMY BENNETT 9.JPG
  • Ciara Bennett, 7, rests on a motel bed at the Jackson Rancheria during a three-week family trip home to Ione. Ciara and her two siblings suffer from Sanfilippo syndrome. Her youngest brother, Tommy, 3, has been being treated at Duke Hospital in Durham, N.C. for the disease. The first two attempts at donor cell transplants failed with Tommy and the family will soon be returning to North Carolina for a third attempt.  June 19, 2003.
    ACW CIARA BENNETT.JPG
  • Ciara Bennett rests on the couch at home with her mom, Alicia, nearby. February  23, 2004
    ACW BENNETT TEASER.JPG
  • John and Alicia Bennett are hugged by friends who attended the funeral of their son, Tommy, 4, Tuesday. Tommy died last week while undergoing treatment for Sanfilippo syndrome at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. About 120 people attended the service at Ione community United Methodist Church in Ione, CA. Tommy's two siblings also have the rare genetic disease. December 2, 2003..
    ACW BENNETT FUNERAL HUG.JPG
  • The Bennett children of Ione, l-r Tommy, 3, Ciara, 7, and Tommy, 5, have a rare genetic disease named Sanfilippo syndrome. Only Tommy was eligible for a donor cell transplant to help fight the disease. The family will be returning to North Carolina soon for Tommy's third attempt at the donor cell transplant. The first two attempts were unsuccessful. June 19, 2003.
    ACW ALL BENNETT KIDS.JPG
  • Alicia Bennett says she has often felt lost with Tommy, her son who died in November from complications to Sanfilippo syndrome. February  13, 2004
    ACW ALICIA BENNETT CRY.JPG
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  • Two Cambodian monks watch the sunset at Angkor Wat, Siem Reap, Cambodia.
    ANGKOR WAT MONKS.jpg
  • Angkor Wat, Siem Reap, Cambodia at sunset
    ANGKOR WAT SUNSET.jpg
  • Phil Williams, a homeless man, spends time in detox in Sacramento, CA after being found on the street drunk.
    HOMELESS MAN IN DETOX.jpg
  • In Ban Mai, Laos rices hulls blow away from the kernel when shaken by this Hmong girl in December 2000. Rice is the staple of the Hmong diet and the main crop they grow.
    LAOS HMONG RICE.jpg
  • Hmong women from the mountaintop village of Ban Mai, Laos, head home with their baskets full of firewood, a daily chore, for cooking and heating their homes. Tsong Tong Vang was born in this remote Hmong village in northern Laos.
    LAOS HMONG FIREWOOD.jpg
  • A fisherman arrives home to Kep, Cambodia after a day of fishing on the Gulf of Thailand.
    VIETNAM BOATER & SUNSET.jpg
  • Sellers and tourists make their way through Damnoen Saduak floating market near Bangkok, Thailand. The small canals are filled with flat boats of locals selling fresh vegetables and fruits and tourist items, like hats.
    THAILAND FLOATING MARKET.jpg
  • Sandstone wall with carvings in Angkor Wat at sunrise, Siem Reap, Cambodia.
    ANGKOR WAT WALL.jpg
  • Monks head to a Buddhist temple in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
    PHNOM PENH MONKS.jpg
  • A Cambodian man stops to light a cigarette while biking around the riverfront of Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
    PHNOM PENH STREET SCENE.jpg
  • Brick kilns near Hanoi, Vietnam. Vietnamese brick kilns are heavy polluters. The kilns emit sulphur dioxide and hydrogen sulphide at levels much higher than permitted levels. Some kilns have been shut down. Brick kiln owners can be fines for running their kiln without being equipped with the proper fume-processing system.
    VIETNAM BRICK KILNS 6.JPG
  • A Buddha decorates a temple in Chaing Mai, Thailand.
    THAILAND TEMPLE BUDDHA.jpg
  • Vietnamese women clean fish in a Hoi An market before selling them.
    VIETNAM FISH MARKET.jpg
  • Vietnamese farmers head to a floated market on the Mekong River in the early morning.
    BOATERS ON MEKONG RIVER VIETNAM.jpg
  • A lotus flower offering at a temple in Bangkok, Thailand.
    THAILAND LOTUS FLOWERS.jpg
  • A woman stretches noodles in her noodle making shop in northern Vietnam.
    VIETNAM NOODLE MAKING.jpg
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