Columns and second ratings below are my predictions; rows and first ratings below are predictions of volunteers.
| Indoor | Likely Indoor | Ambiguous | Likely Outdoor | Outdoor | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indoor | 401 | 15 | 7 | 4 | 4 |
| Likely Indoor | 47 | 12 | 3 | 5 | 3 |
| Ambiguous | 21 | 9 | 14 | 9 | 7 |
| Likely Outdoor | 13 | 10 | 2 | 12 | 10 |
| Outdoor | 35 | 14 | 14 | 66 | 938 |
Image #15920
A courtroom artist's rendering of alleged Saudi terrorist Hani Abdel Rahim Sayegh as he sits in Canada's Supreme Court in Ottawa, May 5. Sayegh came to Canada August 1 on a tourist visa and was arrested in March after American and Saudi authorities linked him to the 1996 terrorist blast at an American army barracks that killed 19 soldiers. The Supreme Court ruled today that Sayegh can be deported.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #15944
Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo pats US President Bill Clinton on the back after Zedillo made his speech welcoming Clinton to Mexico at the Campo Marte military base in Mexico City May 6. Clinton is on the second day of his three day state visit to Mexico, the first by a US leader to the capital in over 18 years.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #15947
US President Bill Clinton shakes hands with Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo after Zedillo made his speech welcoming Clinton to Mexico at the Campo Marte military base in Mexico City May 6. Clinton is on the second day of his three day state visit to Mexico, the first by a US leader to the capital in over 18 years.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #15950
US President Bill Clinton shakes hands with Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo as Hillary Clinton applauds, after Zedillo made his speech welcoming Clinton to Mexico at the Campo Marte military base in Mexico City May 6. Clinton is on the second day of his three day state visit to Mexico, the first by a US leader to the capital in over 18 years.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #16140
A father weeps, May 11, next to the body of his child killed during a massive earthquake that struck northeast Iran May 9. Aid agencies report up to 2,400 dead in 200 ruined villages after the disaster.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #16147
U.S. envoy to Middle East Dennis Ross (L) is welcomed by Jordan's King Hussein, Crown Prince Hassan (C), Prime Minister al-Majali, Foreign Minister Tarawnah and other officials on his arrival at Raghdan Palace, May 12. Ross briefed Jordan's King Hussein on Monday on his efforts to restart stalled talks between Israel and the Palestinians.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #16164
Ahn Sun-kook, 48, carries his 68-year-old mother on his back on May 12 at the port of Inchon in South Korea. A group of 14 people, from two families, escaped by boat in what could be the first defection of its kind from North Korea.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #16393
Mother Teresa of Calcutta (R) talks with Pope John Paul II, May 20 at the Vatican, where she introduced her successor, Sister Nirmala, as the head of her worldwide missionary order. Mother Teresa, who needed oxygen at Rome airport when she arrived on Friday, appeared in good condition during her 30-minute meeting with the Pope.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #16406
Rebel leader Laurent Kabila (C) arrives May 20 at Kinshasa International Airport. He was swept away by body guards before giving declarations to the press. Kabila has declared himself to be the President of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #16424
Rebel troops wave as they arrive in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo May 21. Laurent Kabila, self-proclaimed president of the new Democratic Republic of Congo, was expected to unveil a new transitional government after his Number Two held consultations with politicians in Kinshasa.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #16449
(FILE PHOTO, 16-DEC-96) President Boris Yeltsin appointed Russian General Igor Sergeyev, commander of the Strategic Forces, as acting Defence Minister, May 22. Yeltsin sacked current Defense Minister Igor Rodionov after accusing him of doing nothing to reform Russia's armed forces, Defense Council sources said.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #16487
The coffin of Herve Rigaud, one of two French nationals killed in their factory in Kinshasa earlier this week, is carried May 23 during a memorial service in the capital. The circumstances surrounding their murder one day after the AFDL rebels took the capital remain unclear.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #16575
Filipino rescue workers unearth a dead baby from a landslide in Manila on May 26. The baby and his father were crushed to death by tons of mud which rolled down from a hill just above their shanty.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #16682
Oklahoma City bombing victim Marsha Kight wipes tears from her eyes May 28 in Denver after the defense rested its case on behalf of bombing suspect Timothy McVeigh. McVeigh's defense lasted only three and half days in the case in which McVeigh is charged for the murder of 168 people in the federal building bombing in Oklahoma City over two years ago.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #16726
An elderly Bosnian woman stands on the balcony in her destroyed building in Sarajevo's suburb of Nedjarici, May 30. NATO ministers angrily accused Bosnian leaders of failing to comply with the terms of the 1995 Dayton peace accord and warned that the allies' patience was wearing thin.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #16874
(FILE PHOTO, 22-APR-95) A jury reached the verdict of guilty in the Oklahoma City bombing case of Timothy McVeigh June 2.. McVeigh was found guilty on all eleven counts against him. McVeigh shown in this April 22, 1995 file photo as he is escorted from the Noble County Courthouse in Perry, Oklahoma, by FBI agents and local police officers as he is transported to Oklahoma City for arraignment on charges he was involved in the bombing.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #16893
Christine and Ron Raciot, friends of victims, react to the news June 2 at the Oklahoma City bomb site that Timothy McVeigh was found guilty by a Denver jury in all 11 counts he was charged with in connection with bombing. The penalty phase of the trial begins June 4 in Denver.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #16925
A man in a wheel chair burns a candle in front of a portrait of the Goddess of Democracy June 4 in Hong Kong's Victoria Park to commemorate the eighth anniversary of the bloody military crackdown in Beijing's Tiananmen Square.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #16929
Clint Seidl, 9, who will testify June 5 in the Oklahoma City bombing trial penalty phase about the loss of his mother, who was killed in the bombing, walks past the federal courthouse June 4 in Denver. Timothy McVeigh was found guilty of the bombing that killed 168 people and the trial is currently in the penalty phase.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #17114
Pope John Paul II holds his head at an open air mass in Krosno on June 10. The Pope is on the last day of his 11-day visit to his homeland.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #17252
An Israeli soldier ducks behind a barrier as another fires at Palestinians throwing stones in the West Bank town of Hebron, June 14. Palestinian hospital officials said 30 Palestinians were wounded by rubber bullets during the clashes. Tension has been high between the sides since Israel began a new Jewish settlement in Arab East Jerusalem in March.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #17283
Croatian President Franjo Tudjman, a candidate in the Croatian presidential election, votes in Zagreb June 15. Tudjman, 75-years-old, is widely expected to secure his second term in office despite rumours that he has terminal cancer.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #17394
Saudi dissident Hani al-Sayegh sits in the back of the car (R) after leaving the U.S. Federal District Courthouse June 18, where he was charged with conspiracy to commit murder and "international terrorism" in connection with the deadly truck bombing against U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia. Sayegh was deported from Canada and has agreed to cooperate with the U.S. investigation of last June's bombing that killed 19 U.S. airmen. An unidentified driver is at left.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #17448
Israeli Border Policemen take cover as a petrol bomb bursts into flames in front of them, June 20. Scores of petrol bombs were hurled at Israeli troops by Palestinians during clashes for the seventh consecutive day which left at least 20 Palestinians wounded from Israeli-fired rubber bullets.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #17453
Two Palestinians use slingshots to fire marbles and small stones at Israeli troops guarding the Jewish settlement in the heart of the town June 20. Scores of petrol bombs were also hurled at Israeli troops by Palestinians during clashes for the seventh consecutive day which left at least 40 Palestinians wounded.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #17476
President Clinton (C) gestures for photographers with Russian President Boris Yeltsin (L) and French President Jacques Chirac standing by his side prior to the Denver Summit of Eight dinner hosted by Clinton June 20 at the Phipps House. The dinner kicked off the beginning of the summit.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #17527
An unidentified American tourist gives a donation to help preserve the Choeung Ek "Killing Fields," 15 km southwest of Phnom Penh, June 22. Choeng Ek, the site of 129 mass graves containing an estimated 40,000 victims killed by the 1975-79 Khmer Rouge regime, was discovered in 1980. Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot is said to be held by members of a rebel splinter faction, but there are conflicting rumours over his fate.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #17530
Children, wearing traditional Chinese clothes, participate in a parade to celebrate the British colony's return to China in this New Territories town, June 22. The boy is suspended on a stilt which is hidden by his clothing. More than a thousand New Territory residents participated in the parade despite the wet weather. Hong Kong will return to Chinese sovereignty on July 1.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #17582
French President Jacques Chirac makes a point during his address to the United Nations Earth Summit Plus Five at the U.N. June 23, to review and appraise the implementation of policies adopted at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992. Leaders and envoys from 173 nations are attending this special session of the U.N. general assembly.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #17999
Russian divers perform underwater tests on a replica of the damaged Mir space station July 4. Risky and difficult repairs to Mir were postponed as the Russian-American crew and mission control struggled to fight a navigational problem before the arrival of a vital supply craft.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #18000
Russian test instructor Oleg Pushkar is assisted by divers during underwater tests on a replica of the damaged Mir space station July 4. Risky and difficult repairs to Mir were postponed July 4 as the Russian-American crew and mission control struggled to fight a navigational problem before the arrival of a vital supply craft.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #18002
An artist paints a mural protesting the Orange March on a gable end in the Garvaghy Estate, July 4. Garvaghy road will be a focal point for the contentious Orange March due on July 5 when the Protestant Orange lodge members plan to march through the Catholic estate. Last year the march led to widespread violence and rioting throughout Northern Ireland.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #18026
Rob Manning, flight systems chief engineer for the Mars Pathfinder spacecraft mission, at console (R), and team members Matthew Golombek (L), project scientist, and Guy Beutflschies (with arms raised) celebrate the landing of the Pathfinder spacecraft on the surface of Mars, July 4. The team is shown at the mission control area at the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena. The Pathfinder spacecraft is expected to send photographs from the surface of Mars later in the evening of July 4.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #18240
University students destroy a poster of President Daniel Arap Moi that they had ripped off a wall within the campus, July 9. Kenyan police closed the University of Nairobi today after three straight days of clashes with students.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #18326
Rescuers tend a victim severely burned in a fire that raged through the 16-story Royal Jomtien Resort Hotel in the Thai resort town of Pattaya, July 11. The worst-ever hotel fire in thailand has killed at least 78 people including five Westerners, and the death toll could rise as high as 100, police said.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #18349
Hotel Capri workers remove a large glass pane from the facade of the building following one of two explosions at hotels in Havana, July 12. Three people were injured by the explosions which officials believe were caused by bombs.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #18354
Miguel Angel Blanco is moved on a stretcher to receive treatment after being kidnapped and found shot in the head, July 12. Basque ETA guerillas kidnapped Blanco July 10 and threatened to kill him if the government did not change its prison policy. Hospital officials said that Blanco was in a coma with a bullet lodged in his brain; other reports said he had died of his wounds.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #18423
A member of the Australian team performs mouth-to-mouth resucitation on a teammate after a bridge collapsed at an Israeli sports stadium, July 14. One person was killed and at least 45 were injured when the bridge gave way minutes before the opening parade of an international Jewish sporting event, the Maccabiah games.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #18424
Australian team members gesture in reaction to the collapse of a bridge at an Israeli sports stadium minutes before the opening parade of an international Jewish sporting event, killing one person and injuring 34. Members of the Australian delegation to the games were on the bridge when it collapsed.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #18459
British model Naomi Campbell (R), who worked with world-renowned fashion designer Gianni Versace, who was shot and killed July 15 outside his Miami Beach mansion, looks down as she leaves a Rome hotel July 15. Models preparing in a Rome hotel for a gala scheduled for July 16 to mark the end of Rome's fashion week and to include a Versace show, said the show should be called off as they could not bring themselves to sashay down the runways as if nothing had happened.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #18504
(UNDATED FILE PHOTO) India's Vice President Kocheril Raman Narayanan, seen in this undated file photo, has been elected as the country's 10th president. Narayanan is the first member of a low Hindu caste to be voted president of the world's biggest democracy.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #18536
Sandinista Front General Secretary Daniel Ortega addresses reporters about the conflict between the government and his opposition party July 18. Tensions are high as political stability continues to erode in the run-up to Saturday's anniversary of the 1979 Sandinista revolution.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #18578
A Liberian election official carries a ballot box into a warehouse at the Roberts Field Air Field where they are being guarded by Nigerian troops, July 20. Results from yesterday's Presidential elections are expected to be announced tomorrow.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #21904
Rescue workers evacuate an earthquake victim from a damaged house in Ancona, central Italy, early September 26. At least eight people were killed and many others injured in the quake, measuring 5.5 on the Richter scale. Damage across the Umbria region ranged from collapsed houses to cracks in roads and falling masonry. The initial quake was followed by a number of aftershocks.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #22717
An Israeli soldier bows in prayer as he stops on his way home for holiday leave at the Wailing Wall on the eve of the Jewish high holy day of Yom Kippur October 10, where ultra-Orthodox Jews pray for forgiveness for their sins closer to the ancient wall, Judaism's holiest site. Yom Kippur, or Day of Atonement, is a 25-hour day of fast and prayer which begins at sundown and which is the last opportunity observant Jews have to repent for their sins of the past year.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #22886
Two of the injured victims of a tornado are taken from a truck at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital 12 October shortly after the storm hit part of the suburban industrial town of Tongi. The official BSS news agency reported 14 deaths and more than 100 injured in the tornado.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #22932
Maurice Papon leaves the hotel "La Reserve" in Pessac, southern France, October 13, to go to the Bordeaux courthouse where he is standing trial for crimes against humanity. Papon is accused of having deported more than 1,500 Jews during WWII when he was secretary-general of "Jewish questions" at the Bordeaux prefecture. The prosecutors' office appealed October 13 against a decision to free the 87-year-old former cabinet minister for the duration of his trial.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #22964
Bertil Naslund (L), secretary of the Swedish Nobel Prize committee, sits with Professor Torsten Persson (R) as they announce the awarding of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Economy to Americans Robert Merton of Stanford University and Myron Scholes of Harvard University, for their research in stock option markets.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #23002
Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh walk without shoes after laying a wreath October 14 at Jallianwallah Bagh in the Sikh holy city of Amritsar, India, where a 1919 massacre by British soldiers killed 378 people, most of whom were Sikhs.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #23041
An undientified woman is helped into the Colombo General Hospital 15 October after she was injured in a truck bombing, allegedly by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam(LITE) guerrillas, in the Sri Lankan capital of Colombo. The blast damaged the Central Business district of Colombo, leaving at least 17 dead and 100 wounded.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #23109
Pope John Paul II waves to the crowd October 15 in Vatican City. The Pope will celebrate, at the age of 77, his twentieth year as the head of the Catholic Church.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #23141
U.S. President Bill Clinton (R) looks on as U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright (L) is greeted by Argentine President Carlos Menem (C) October 16 at Plaza San Martin in Buenos Aires. Clinton, who is on the last leg of his three-country Latin American tour, layed a wreath at the San Martin's tomb, and met later with Menem for bilateral talks.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #23142
U.S. President Bill Clinton (L) shows the key of the city after it was given to him by Buenos Aires Mayor Fernando De La Rua (R) October 16 during a ceremony at Plaza San Martin in Buenos Aires. Clinton is on a four-day state visit to Argentina to conclude a week-long Latin American tour.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #23168
The Queen tours part of the MGR film city studios, with Kamal Hassan, the Actor-Director of the complex, on the outskirts of Chennai, (formerly Madras), India, October 16. The tour saw many extras in costume turn out for the event.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #23182
A South Korean army soldier looks toward the North Korea side of the DMZ through a telescope at an observation tower on the border inside the DMZ amid the tense situation after news that North Korean forces kidnapped South Korean farmers at DMZ near Panmunjom 17 October. Several North Korean troops entered a village in the Demilitarized Zone and held two South Korean farmers at gunpoint and kidnapped them.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #23207
Cuban President Fidel Castro (R) and "Commander of the Revolution" Ramiro Valdes salute while legendary leftist guerrilla Ernesto "Che" Guevara's remains are paraded past them in central Santa Clara, October 17. Castro said Guevara had been a "true communist" and a "moral giant" whose reputation and example continued to reverberate around the world. The remains of Guevara and six comrades-in-arms killed by Bolivian troops October 8, 1967 were interred in a specially built mausoleum in Santa Clara, the city Guevara took during the 1959 Cuban Revolution that ousted dictator Fulgencio Batista.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #24105
Pope John Paul II blesses the crowd gathered at St. Peter's Square on All Souls' Day, November 2, as he celebrates the Angelus prayers from the window of his office in Vatican City.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #24173
Lead Prosecutor Larry Mackey (R) arrives at the federal courthouse in Denver, CO, November 3, for opening statements in the trial of Terry Nichols. Nichols is being being tried on eleven counts of murder and conspiracy in the Oklahoma City bombing.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #24229
Iraqi children hold portraits of President Saddam Hussein and chant "Down with America" at al-Sha'ab football stadium in Baghdad November 4. The rally, the biggest in Baghdad since the start of the current standoff over the United Nations arms inspections, was organized by Iraq's National Olympic committee chaired by President Hussein's eldest son Udday.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #24333
Palestinian chief negotiator Abu Mazen speaks to reporters November 6 outside of the US State Department in Washington, DC. Envoys from Israel and Palestine met with US Secretary of the State Madeleine Albright just hours ahead of the scheduled end to their talks.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #24362
United Nations Algerian team leader Lakhdar Brahimi (C) talks to reporters upon arrival in Kuwait with fellow envoys Jan Eliasson (L) of Sweden and Argentinian Emilio Cardenas (R), November 7. Brahimi told reporters that Iraq stood by its ban on American weapons inspectors, but wanted further discussions with the Security Council.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #24429
Yitzhak Rabin's widow Leah addresses more than 100,000 Israelis at a rally in Tel Aviv November 8, on the second anniversary of here husband's murder. Thousands of police and soldiers closed off several city blocks and formed a tight ring around the stage where speakers addressed the crowd under the slogan, "No Forgetting."
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #24525
First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton sits in the limousine, as she leaves Andrews Air Force base early November 10 on her way back to the White House. The first lady will postone her departure for an eight-day tour of the former Soviet Union until Monday afternoon because of engine problems on her Boeing 707 aircraft, U.S. officials said. Mrs. Clinton's jet had to return to Andrews Air Force Base late on Sunday less than an hour after taking off because of a frayed wire in one of the engines, delaying her departure for Almaty, Kazakhstan, the first stop of her tour.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #24705
U.S. Attorney Mary Joe White (C) speaks to reporters with New York FBI Director James Kalstrom (L) and New York Police Department Commissioner Howard Safir (R) outside Manhattan Federal Court, November 12 after a jury convicted Ramziz Yousef of masterminding the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Yousef was convicted along with Eyad Ismoil, accussed of being the driver of the van used in the February 26 1993 blast that killed six and injured more than 1,000. Jurors handed down their verdict on the third day of deliberations and the jury convicted the defendants of all 10 counts against each of them.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #24706
Unabomber suspect Theodore Kaczynski sits in court as jury selection in his trial began November 12. Jury selection is expected to take several weeks. [Sketch by Vikkie Beringer, Reuters]
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #24905
(FILE PHOTO, 20-SEP-93) Chinese dissident Wei Jingsheng smiles as he fields reporters' questions in Beijing on September 20, 1993. Wei, among China's longest-serving and best-known political prisioners, was on his way to the United States on November 16 after being released from a 14-year jail term, his brother said.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #24997
Egyptian Tourism Minister Mamduh el-Beltagui speaks to newsmen, November 17, in London. Beltagui said that Egypt would consider what increased security measures would have to be taken after the November 17 attack in Luxor, Egypt, in which more than 70 people, mostly tourists, were killed. Speaking in London where he was attending a tourism fair, el-Beltagui expressed his "shock and sorrow."
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #25050
(FILE PHOTO, 6-APR-93) Egypt's biggest Islamic militant group said November 18 it had carried out the Luxor attack in which nearly 60 tourists were shot or hacked to death. Al-Gama'a al-Islamiya (Islamic Group) said in a statement received by Reuters that it had planned to take hostage as many tourists as it could to force the release of its leader, blind cleric Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman, from a U.S. jail. Rahman, shown in 1993 file photo taken in New York, is serving a life sentence for conspiring to blow up the World Trade Centre and other New York landmarks in 1993. [Evy Mages, Reuters]
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #25114
Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov (C) boards a car after his arrival in Geneva for talks on the crisis between Iraq and the United Nations, November 19. Foreign Ministers of Russia, the United States, Britain and France will meet in the middle of the night to try to end the crisis over U.N. arms monitoring in Iraq.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #25125
US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright talks to an American official at the airport before leaving New Delhi November 19. Albright cut short her tour of South Asia to fly to Geneva for a top-level UN meeting on the Iraqi crisis.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #25258
Wei Jingsheng, recently released leader of China's democracy movement, waves his hands to quiet down the crowd November 21st before beginning his first US press conference at the New York Public Library. Jingsheng arrived in the United States from China November 16th and has spent much of the time in Detroit undergoing medical tests.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #25728
An Iraqi national monitor (R) is listening to one of the UNSCOM inspectors outside the United Nations headquarters, November 30, prior to an inspection of a site. Iraq has placed scores of sensitive sites, including presidential property, off-limits to the weapons inspectors. Iraqi leaders, following a meeting November 29 chaired by President Saddam Hussein, issued a statement in which they said such sites should not be approached by the U.N. Special commission overseeing the scrapping of its weapons of mass destruction.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #25814
Residents of the Honduran capital read the local dailies announcing the victory of the ruling Liberal Party's candidate Carlos Flores in the country's November 30 presidential elections. The latest results give Flores a 12.73 percent lead in the presidential poll over his closest rival, Nora Melgar of the National Party.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #26065
A bomb-destroyed coach of a train stands at Thottipalayam Station, December 6, in southern Kerala state, India, where two people were killed and five others injured. At least 10 people have died and 82 were injured when three bombs exploded, December 6, in southern India on the fifth anniversary of the razing of a mosque by Hindu zealots.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #26171
Rescue workers search for victims inside of a destroyed and ice-covered house in the Siberian city of Irkutsk, Russia, 08 December after a military cargo aircraft crashed onto homes 06 December, killing up to 80 people. Forty-nine bodies, including 23 occupants of the giant Antonov An-124, have been pulled from the ruins.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #26173
Iranian President Mohammed Khatami (R) stands with his Turkish counterpart Suleyman Demirel 08 December at Mehabad airport near Tehran. Demirel is attending the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) summit which will start 09 December.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #26285
Jody Williams, who shares the 7.5 million Swedish crown (U.S. $958,000) Nobel Peace Prize with the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL), greets a torchlit procession from the balcony of Oslo's Grand Hotel December 10. Wiliams, a major driving force behind the recently signed anti-landmine treaty, pledged to keep up the work to eradicate tens of millions of mines worldwide. Photo by Rolf Jarle Oedegaard
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #26328
Iranian President Mohammad Khatami (with black headband) is congratulated by delegates at the closing session on the last day of the 8th Islamic Conference Summit in Tehran's new conference building on December 11. The conference closed after last-minute differences delayed adoption of a final declaration by more than five hours.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #26386
Pilgrims cross a rope line meant to contain the crowds outside the Basilica of Guadalupe in Mexico City December 12 as they try to enter the church to pray to the Virgin of Guadalupe as tens of thousands of the faithful gather to mark the 466th anniversary of the first appearance of the Virgin.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #26463
Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan speaks to reporters on December 14 as an aide gestures above Farrakhan's head soon after the black leader arrived in the West Bank after crossing the Allenby Bridge from Jordan. Farrakhan declared he was not an anti-Semite, but stood by his criticism of Jewish behavior towards black people. Israel refused to grant Farrakhan an official invitation during his recent Middle East tour but will later meet Palestinian President Yasser Arafat in the Gaza Strip. Farrakhan told journalists, "I do not hate the Jewish people nor do I hate Arabs nor do I hate people for the color of their skin or for their faith and traditions."
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #26557
This courtroom drawing shows international terrorist Illich Ramirez Sanchez (L) as his lawyer Isabelle Coutant-Peyre (R) speaks during his trial for the 1975 murder of two French secret policemen and a Lebanese informer, at the Paris Assize Court in Paris, December 15. Coutant-Peyre withdrew from the trial in protest against the court's refusal to hand down a ruling on her request that the prosecution call extra witnesses.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #26655
This photo shows two stills, released December 17 by Tokyo's Channel 12, from the popular cartoon featuring the Pocket Monster, or "Pokemon," shown in Japan. The hero of the animated program is Pikachu, shown at top glowing with electricity. Nearly 600 people, mostly children, were rushed to the hospital across Japan December 17 after feeling sick while watching the animated cyberspace adventure.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #26754
South Korean president elect Kim Dae-jung (R) raises his arms in victory with his campaign manager Kim Jong-pil on the steps of the National Assembly in Seoul December 19. In his first public comments since winning Thursday's election, the veteran opposition leader asked Koreans to prepare to endure hardships together with him.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #26855
Jacob Zuma deputy president of the African National Congress (ANC) congratulates Winnie Madikizela-Mandela (L) after she was elected into additional members of the ANC National Executive Committee (NEC) at the 50th National Conference in Mmabato, South Africa December 20. Earlier in the week Madikizela-Mandela turned-down the nomination for the deputy presidency in favour of Jacob Zuma who later won unopposed.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #26977
Viktor Ivancic, journalist and editor-in-chief of the satirical Croatian newspaper Feral Tribune, speaks to the press outside court in Zagreb December 22 in Croatia after the start of his trial and his colleague Marinko Culic's on charges of insulting President Franjo Tudjman. At a previous trial last year they were acquitted, but the state prosecutor successfully appealed the decision.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #27000
Israel's Defence Minister Yitzhak Mordechai (C), outlines his security concerns for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L), Health Minister Joshua Matza (R), and other cabinet ministers who peer through binoculars, during a tour of the West Bank on December 23. The cabinet is expected to decide soon on the handover of more occupied land to Palestinians.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #27079
This file picture dated 1970 is of Venezuelan Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, alias "Carlos the Jackal." Now 48, Ramirez Sanchez was sentenced to life imprisonment December 24 in Paris, for a triple murder in the French capital in 1975.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #27085
Lead defense attorney Michael Tigar (R) makes a statement to reporters as fellow defense attorney Ron Woods (L) looks on after the verdict in the Terry Nichols trial was announced December 23 at the federal courthouse in Denver, Colorado. The jury found Nichols guilty of conspiracy and involuntary manslaughter in the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #27185
Pope John Paul blesses the crowd of faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square for his annual "Urbi et Orbi" Christmas message, December 25. The 77-year-old Polish Pontiff issued a ringing appeal to the well-off not to forget the growing multitude of new poor and people still yearning for freedom around the world.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #27214
Relatives of some of the 45 indigenous Tzotzil Maya people who were massacred 22 December in the Acteal district of Chenalho, southern Chiapas, Mexico, hold a candlelight vigil near some fifteen coffins of the victims in Polho, a nearby village, 25 December. Twenty-one women, nine men,14 children and an infant were slaughtered. Non-governmental organizations and Roman Catholic church officials have blamed paramilitary supporters of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) for the bloodbath.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #27356
Crates of chickens are seen at a temporary wholesale poultry market at Cheung Sha Wan in Kowloon, Hong Kong 28 December after inspectors declared half the site to be infected with the deadly bird flu virus. Health officials today began a mass cull of more than 1.2 million chickens and other poultry in a bid to stamp out the deadly virus which has claimed the lives of four people in Hong Kong.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #27481
Muhammad Rafiq Tarar, Pakistani premier Nawaz Sharif's party nominee for president, casts his vote in the presidential elections December 31. Tarar was elected president of Pakistan, securing 245 out of 298 votes. His main challenger, Aftab Shabaan Mirani of the opposition Pakistan People's Party of former premier Benazir Bhutto, polled just 39 votes.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #28086
A Chinese doctor treats an injured man after an earthquake measuring 6.2 on the Richter scale struck Shangyi and Zhangbei counties about 220 kilometres (135 miles) northwest of Beijing early January 10. Over forty people were killed and hundreds seriously injured when the earthquake struck one day after seismologists predicted a quake would hit the region.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #28157
Family members of one 23 Shiite Moslem who were gunned down Januray 11 mourn over his body in Lahore, Pakistan. Unidentified attackers sprayed bullets at Shiites who had gathered at a graveyard in the heart of the Punjab provincial capital to mark the anniversary of the death of a community leader. The killings were the first in the current Moslem month of Ramadan which left more then 30 injured as well.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #28244
Hashi Omar Hassan(R), a member of a group of Somalis who arrived in Rome over the past weekend to testify before a commission probing allegations that Italian soldiers tortured civilians during a UN mission in Somalia, is escorted after he was arrested on a murder charge early January 13. Hassan is suspected of being involved in the March 1994 killing of Italian television journalist Ilaria Alpi in Mogadishu.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #28360
A security guard loads a van with stacks of rupiah notes at the Bank of Indonesia in downtown Jakarta January 15. Indonesia faced up to the realities of economic crisis on January 15 with President Suharto predicting zero economic growth and 20 percent inflation in the coming financial year. He also announced a series of reform measures which included ending monopolies enjoyed by members of his own family who have made fortunes during the boom years.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #28586
US Ambassador to Algeria Cameron R. Hume (L) visits 17 January the site of a massacre in Sidi Hammed, a suburb of the capital Algiers. Hume spoke with residents of the area where at least 100 people were killed 11 January by alleged Islamic militants. He was reportedly able to ask the residents about their assailants, how they were dressed and what kinds of weapons they used.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #28610
Pedro Xotoiy Ramirez (R) and his cousin Pablo Xotoiy Calem are detained by Guatemala's police in the capital January 19 for alleged ties to a group of bandits that operate along the south coast where 16 American tourists were attacked, January 16. Guatemala's government is under fire for its handling of the assault and rapes of the students, with critics accusing it of playing down the attack in a bid to protect the lucrative tourist trade.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #28648
Croatian Serb Slavko Dokmanovic (L) is escorted by a UN security guard January 19 as he stands trial before the United Nations War Crimes Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague for his alleged role in the massacre of 261 civilians in the eastern Slavonian city of Vukovar in 1991. Dokmanovic, who was mayor of Vukovar until fighting erupted in 1991 between Croats and Serbs, faces charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity. His lawyers said he would plead not guilty.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #28660
Friends and relatives comfort the wife (2ndL) of a miner who is still underground in the mine of Vorkuta January 19. At least four miners were killed and 23 remained unaccounted for after a blast ripped through a coal mine in the Russian town of Vorkuta, north of the Arctic circle, Interfax quoted the mine's management as saying.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #28683
Exiled Cuban Bishop Eduardo Boza Masvidal (82 years old) blesses one of his ex-parishioners, 103 year old Julia Fernandez, January 20, as he enters his old parish church in central Havana to give mass there for the first time since he was expelled 37 years ago. Boza once gave Julia a medal of Cuba's patron, the Virgin of the Caridad del Cobre, which she wore again for the emotional mass.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #28778
Pope John Paul II greets a filled stadium in the city of Santa Clara January 22. The Pope is on a five-day historic visit to the Communist island.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #28805
Pope John Paul II is greeted by Cuban President Fidel Castro at Palace of the Revolution just prior to their private talks January 22. The Pope is on a five-day visit to Cuba.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #28831
Pope John Paul II blesses the crowd after arriving to give mass at Camaguey's Ignacio Agramonte Square January 23. The mass, dedicated to youth, included a condemnation of the economic embargo.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #29328
A group of Iraqi volunteers flashes the "Victory sign" February 1 on their way to the first day of a three-month training course in Baghdad. Iraqi authorities estimated some 1,000 men and women would enroll as volunteers to help defend Iraq in the case of US military action.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #29397
French President Jacques Chirac's special envoy Bertrand Dufourcy waves from a plane before the takeoff of a UN sanctioned flight from Amman miltary airport February 3. Dufourcy is on a mission to persuade Iraq to cooperate with United Nations weapons inspectors.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #29512
Sri Lankan army band leader marches in the country's 50th anniversary of independence celebrations February 4 under tight security in the capital of Colombo. Security was tightened after Tamil Tiger guerrillas bombed a venue where the celebrations were originally due to take place.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #30362
Supporters of Cypriot President Glafcos Clerides wave banners and Greek national flags during victory celebrations in Nicosia's Elytheria (Freedom) stadium 15 February. Clerides won 50.8 percent of the vote in the presidential runoff to serve a second five-year term while challenger George Iacovou, a former foreign minister, received 49.2 percent, election officials said.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #30383
Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams (R) answers questions from reporters flanked by chief negotaitor Martin McGuinness (L), February 16. Sinn Fein may face expulsion from the talks after the IRA were blamed for two of the recent deaths in Northern Ireland.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #31366
Trinamool Congress party founder and leader Mamata Bannerji (C) is congratulated by her supporters for winning the South Calcutta parliamentary constituency, at her residence March 4 in Calcutta, India. Her 54-day-old party won all five seats in Calcutta as she pledged outside support to a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) led government.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #31368
(FILES This May 21 1997 file photo shows US Space Shuttle Atlantis Pilot Eileen Collins gathering film magazines May 21 in the SpaceHab aboard the space shuttle Atlantis during a docking mission with the Russian space station Mir. US astronaut Collins has been named to be the world's first female shuttle commander, a White House official said March 4.
First Rating: INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #31621
A UN security officer adjusts the headphones of Bosnian Serb Dragoljub Kunarac at the United Nations War Crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague March 9. In the first case in which a war crimes court has treated sexual offences as crimes against humanity, Kunarac, 37, pleaded guilty to raping Moslem women but not to charges of torture. Kunarac is the first defendant from the 1992-1995 Bosnian War to appear before the tribunal indicted entirely on sexual offences.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #31627
Police examine the wrecked train compartment where a bomb detonated March 9 in Patoi, Pakistan, 95 kilometres south of Lahore. The blast left seven people dead and 31 injured.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #31695
Immigration officers in the Malaysian southwestern state of Malacca keep watch on a group of 173 Indonesian illegal immigrants on board a ferry before they are deported back to Dumai, on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, March 10. Malaysia, alarmed at a surge in the influx of Indonesian illegal workers fleeing their economic crisis-ridden country, has stepped up patrols at the borders and moved to expedite the repatriation of workers.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #31709
A police officer checks the baggage of passengers aboard a train at the Lahore Railway Station March 11 in Pakistan. All trains leaving Lahore are thoroughly checked by security agencies since two train explosions killed 16 people in two days.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #31714
Local Serbs patrol a forest near the western Kosovo town of Pec March 11. Kosovo Serbs fear for their safety in Serbia's troubled province, which has a 90 percent Albanian population, after at least 80 men, women and children, mainly ethnic Albanians, were killed there last week in what Serb authorities called a push against "terrorists" of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA).
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #31928
A seriously wonded Israeli man is wheeled into the emergency room of a hospital after a bomb he discovered in a bus station exploded March 14 in Afula. The device, hidden under a box near the Afula central bus station, may have been a politically-motivated attack, according to police.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #31940
One of 16 tourists who returned from Thailand with cholera is lead away to the hospital, March 15 in Hong Kong. All those taken to the hospital were believed to have caught the disease in Thailand while on holiday earlier this month. Hong Kong health officials will board all inbound flights from Thailand after a suspected outbreak of cholera, health Secretary Katherine Fok said Sunday, March 15.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #32121
Worried relatives wait for information March 18 from the Formosa Airline in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. A plane crashed into the sea carrying 13 passengers on board while flying a newly-opened domestic air route outside northwestern Taiwan.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #32153
Bharatiya Janata Party's(BJP) Atal Behari Vajpayee(R) takes the oath as he is sworn-in by Indian President K.R. Narayanan(L) to become India's prime minister, in the forecourt of the presidential palace March 19. Vajpayee was sworn-in at the head of India's new Hindu nationalist coalition government.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #32155
Jordan's King Hussein shakes hands with children while walking through the rotunda in the US Capitol building March 18 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. Hussein met earlier with Speaker of the House, Newt Gingrich and the US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to discuss how to move forward with the Middle East peace process.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #32162
Family members and relatives mourn March 19 over the body of 52-year-old Albanian Qerim Muriqi, who was killed March 18 by Serbian police at a demonstration in Pec, located 80 kms west of Pristina, the provincial capital of Kosovo, Yugoslovia. At least five others were injured in clashes between riot police and ethnic Albanians, and tensions remain high after Serbian police launched a bloody crackdown against Ethnic Albanians in the Kosovo region earlier this month.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #32656
U.S. President Bill Clinton loses his footing while helping South African President Nelson Mandela down a red carpet as they arrive for a press conference in Cape Town, March 27. Clinton is the first sitting U.S. President to visit the nation of South Africa.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #32671
An ethnic Albanian woman wipes tears during a funeral ceremony for two ethnic Albanians in Glodjani village, 115 km west of Pristina, March 27. The two Albanians died during clashes three days ago between the Kosovo Liberation Army and Serbian police forces.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: OUTDOOR
Image #33044
French President Jacques Chirac (L) and British Prime Minister Tony Blair (R) leave the Houses of Parliament in London, England April 3, to resume the Asia-Europe meeting. The three days of meetings are likely to be dominated on how the Asian economic crisis is being handled.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #33120
UNDATED PUBLICITY PHOTO - Pop-singers Rob Pilatus (L) and Fabrice Morvan are shown in an undated photo. Pilatus, half of the pop duo "Milli Vanilli," was found dead in a Frankfurt hotel room, Germany's Bild am Sonntag newspaper said on April 5, quoting the artist's ex-manager. Pilatus was found dead in his bed April 3. Pilatus, together with U.S. partner Morvan, had sold 30 million singles and 14 million albums since hitting the charts in 1988 with songs like "Girl You Know It's True" and "Girl I'm Gonna Miss You." But fans were outraged when it emerged that the dreadlocked duo had not sung on their own records and had mimed onstage to playback tapes.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #33297
A sacred tooth relic of The Buddha sits in its ceremonial casing in a Bangkok park April 8. A 220-member Taiwanese delegation arrived here on a chartered plane to receive the tooth after it was flown to the Thai capital on transit from India. The relic had reportedly been in the possession of an Indian monk, who said he feared for its safety in India and decided to send it to Taiwan.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #33396
Ulster Unionist leader David Trimble returns to the Northern Ireland peace talks April 9 from party headquarters in Belfast city center after crucial talks with party members about the agreement to the draft document. Trimble faced some 50 hardline loyalist protesters as he left party headquarters.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #33430
Acting Russian Prime Minister Sergei Kiriyenko closes his bag following his keynote speech at the Russian parliament April 10 in Moscow. The Russian State Duma will vote in a first round on Kiriyenko's nomination as prime minister by President Boris Yeltsin.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #33483
Pope John Paul II holds a wooden cross at the start of the traditional Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) procession around Rome's ancient Colosseum on Good Friday, April 10.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #33584
Ana Lopez Castillejos of Spain smiles as she is welcomed by a relative April 13 upon her arrival at Madrid's Barajas airport from Mexico. Ana Lopez Castillejos, another three Spanish citizens and eight from Canada, United States, Belgium and Germany were expelled by the Mexican Government after being arrested late April 11 in a raid on a ranch in Chiapas, where rebel supporters had set up an autonomous town.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #33773
(FILE PHOTO, 23-JUN-96) A tourist stands June 23, 1996 before a map of Cambodia made from the skulls and bones of victims of the Khmer Rouge's brutal 1975-79 "killing fields" regime. The grisly map is displayed at Tuol Sleng, a former high school and torture center during the Khmer Rouge reign of terror, when about 20,000 people died there. Pol Pot, former leader of the Khmer Rouge regime who died April 17 aged 73, is to be cremated April 18.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #33825
Russian President Boris Yeltsin and Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto (R) wave upon arrival at Kawana Hotel, venue of a summit April 18. Yeltsin flew into Japan for a summit meeting with Hashimoto this weekend.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #34125
(FILE PHOTO, 4-APR-96) Ethnic Hutu prisoners within the Gitarama Prison, which holds some 6,500 inmates, look out from behind the bars of a dormitory on April 4, 1996. The Rwandan government, brushing aside international appeals for clemency led by Pope John Paul II, went ahead on April 24 with the execution of 22 prisoners, the first convicts found guilty in the killing of 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus in a three-month period in 1994.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #34197
A Ukrainian man lights a candle April 26 in front of a memorial to firemen who died during the Chernobyl nuclear plant accident. Only about 200 Ukrainians turned up early on Sunday morning to light candles in rememberance of those killed when the Chernobyl nuclear power station exploded 12 years ago.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #34282
Two workers sweep debris at the headquarters of Colombian presidential candidate Horacio Serpa April 27 following a bomb attack in Bogota. Police report that there were two other similar attacks on campaign offices overnight in the Colombian capital, causing considerable damage and killing one person. Colombians are scheduled to to the polls to elect a new president May 31.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: INDOOR
Image #34501
(FILES): This May 27 1994 file photo shows Rwandan interim prime minister Jean Kambanda speaking at his headquarters in Girama, Rwanda. The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda convicted Jean Kambanda May 1 on six counts of genocide and crimes against humanity. Kambanda, head of the hard-line "Hutu Power" government during Rwanda's 1994 civil war, had pleaded guilty, with each plea causing a stir in the packed public gallery on the other side of bullet-proof glass. He now awaits sentencing.
First Rating: OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Number of trouble cases = 137.