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  • Navy veteran Rodney Herring is ready to hit the road on an 8 day ride with actor Bill Shatner and The American Legion on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_20.jpg
  • Bill Shatner poses for a portrait with Aurora Police Officer and veteran Ron Hinterlong before kicking off an 8-day American Legion Riders ride from Aurora, Ill. to Los Angeles on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_17a.jpg
  • Scott Miller, at center, and Kevin Sirotek, a designer and owner of American Wrench, join in a prayer with Bill Shatner, at right, moments before kicking off an 8-day American Legion Riders ride from Aurora, Ill. to Los Angeles on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_16a.jpg
  • Army veteran Debbie Vickel, who is a two Blue Star mother, and Navy veteran Rodney Herring enjoy the morning before the Rivet bike is unveiled. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_13.jpg
  • Abbey Sirotek, the daughter of American Wrench designer and owner Kevin Sirotek, pictured at center left, touches the Rivet bike. Also pictured are Bill Shatner, at center right, and his wife Elizabeth Shatner. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_03.jpg
  • Bill Shatner talks with other riders, including Debbie Vickel, at left, and Bill Sloan, at right, at the American Wrench shop outside of Chicago. Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 9, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062215_Shatner_15.jpg
  • At left, Army veteran Debbie Vickel, who is a two Blue Star mother, helps lead a crew of motorcyclists, including actor Bill Shatner, at center, as they make their way on an 8-day ride with The American Legion from a Chicago suburb to Los Angeles on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_18.jpg
  • Vietnam veteran Rodney Herring prepares for the long ride to Los Angeles. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_10.jpg
  • A local American Legion Rider supports his post. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_06.jpg
  • Rider Rodney Herring poses for a portrait. American Legion Riders kics off an 8-day ride with The American Legion and Bill Shatner on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 9, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062215_Shatner_18.jpg
  • Bill Shatner speaks to the crowd alongside Kevin Sirotek, a designer and owner of American Wrench, shortly after Shatner hopped into the Rivet bike. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_24.jpg
  • Navy veteran Rodney Herring hands actor Bill Shatner a cloth for his glasses before they and The American Legion take off on an 8-day road trip from Chicago to Los Angeles on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_23.jpg
  • Actor Bill Shatner and The American Legion take off on an 8-day motorcycle ride from Chicago to Los Angeles on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_22.jpg
  • Actor Bill Shatner talks with a documentary film crew as they make their way on an 8-day ride with The American Legion from a Chicago suburb to Los Angeles on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_19.jpg
  • Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_14.jpg
  • Vietnam veteran Rodney Herring is the tailgunner for Bill Shatner's ride to Los Angeles. He's responsible for bringing up the end of the caravan. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_09.jpg
  • Vietnam veteran Rodney Herring prepares for the long ride to Los Angeles. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_08.jpg
  • Army veteran Debbie Vickel, who is a two Blue Star mother, enjoys the morning before the Rivet bike is unveiled. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_07.jpg
  • Bill Shatner speaks with Vietnam veteran Rodney Herring, at left, before the Rivet bike was unveiled. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_05.jpg
  • Bill Shatner speaks to the crowd alongside Kevin Sirotek, a designer and owner of American Wrench, shortly after Shatner hopped into the Rivet bike. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 9, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_01.jpg
  • Rider and veteran Debbie Vickel poses for a portrait. American Legion Riders kics off an 8-day ride with The American Legion and Bill Shatner on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 9, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062215_Shatner_17.jpg
  • Bill Shatner talks with other riders, including Debbie Vickel at center, at the American Wrench shop outside of Chicago. Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 9, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    060915_Shatner_14.jpg
  • Army veteran Debbie Vickel, who is a two Blue Star mother, and Navy veteran Rodney Herring hug before kicking off an 8 day ride with actor Bill Shatner and The American Legion on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_21.jpg
  • Scott Miller, at left, and Bill Sloan enjoy a light moment before kicking off an 8-day American Legion Riders ride with Bill Shatner in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Army veteran Debbie Vickel is at center in back. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_15a.jpg
  • Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_11.jpg
  • Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_12.jpg
  • Bill Shatner speaks to media before unveiling the Rivet bike. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_04.jpg
  • Bill Shatner speaks to the crowd alongside Kevin Sirotek, a designer and owner of American Wrench, shortly after Shatner hopped into the Rivet bike. Bill Shatner kicks off an 8 day ride with The American Legion on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062315_Shatner_02.jpg
  • American Legion Riders kics off an 8-day ride with The American Legion and Bill Shatner on the Rivet bike, built by American Wrench in Aurora, Ill. on Tuesday, June 9, 2015. Photo by Alyssa Schukar.
    062215_Shatner_16.jpg
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
People with visual impairments who don’t read Braille or don’t feel confident about their vote being counted correctly have no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. <br />
<br />
Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee, a Democratic stronghold.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws, a shortened early voting period, and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election particip
    20200817-NYTMKE-0195.JPG
  • Washington, D.C. -- Tuesday, June 16, 2020<br />
<br />
Sara Polon, the owner of Soupergirl, scans delivery person Sean McLain for an elevated temperature during a weekly Covid-19 testing at her store in the Takoma neighborhood of Washington, D.C.<br />
<br />
From the story:<br />
Small businesses across the country are testing workers for Covid-19 as they reopen, but are struggling with the costs of doing so, wary employees and a lack of clarity from public health officials on how frequently to test.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The Wall Street Journal<br />
Slug: “SBTEST”<br />
57068
    20200616-WSJSBTEST-0206.JPG
  • Washington, D.C. -- Tuesday, June 16, 2020<br />
<br />
A health care provider, who asked not to be identified, swabs delivery person Sean McLain during a weekly Covid-19 testing at Soupergirl in the Takoma neighborhood of Washington, D.C.<br />
<br />
From the story:<br />
Small businesses across the country are testing workers for Covid-19 as they reopen, but are struggling with the costs of doing so, wary employees and a lack of clarity from public health officials on how frequently to test.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The Wall Street Journal<br />
Slug: “SBTEST”<br />
57068
    20200616-WSJSBTEST-0210.JPG
  • Washington, D.C. -- Tuesday, June 16, 2020<br />
<br />
A health care provider, who asked not to be identified, swabs delivery person Luis Sanchez during a weekly Covid-19 testing at Soupergirl in the Takoma neighborhood of Washington, D.C.<br />
<br />
From the story:<br />
Small businesses across the country are testing workers for Covid-19 as they reopen, but are struggling with the costs of doing so, wary employees and a lack of clarity from public health officials on how frequently to test.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The Wall Street Journal<br />
Slug: “SBTEST”<br />
57068
    20200616-WSJSBTEST-0183.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, checks for South Carolina primary results as he spends time with his family, including his 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas and his girlfriend Alyssa Scharich at his parents’ home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-315-2.jpg
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, spends time with his family, including his 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas and his mother Margie Lamas at her home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-1429A-2.jpg
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas drives by the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant on his day off. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-0781A-2.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, spends time with his family, including his 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas and his mother Margie Lamas at her home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-1267A-2.JPG
  • 1/29/15 4:42:27 PM -- Chicago, Illinois, IL  -- Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III poses for a portrait at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago on Thursday, January 29, 2015.<br />
<br />
Interview with Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III at Trinity Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. This interview is part of USA TODAY coverage of Black History Month.<br />
Videographer should go to Trinity Church at <br />
400 W. 95th street <br />
Chicago, IL 60628 <br />
<br />
Shots:<br />
Shots: <br />
•	Tight, intimate shots of the person being interviewed<br />
•	Want the subject to look directly at the camera <br />
•	The subject should speak in complete sentence that repeat the question asked<br />
•	Do not want the reporter in the shots <br />
•	Light background or background that is not in focus. The focus should be on the subjects face <br />
INTRO: Have Rev. Moss look into the camera at the beginning of the interview and say "Nice to meet you."<br />
<br />
Lori Grisham or Mary Bowerman will ask questions over the speaker phone.<br />
<br />
Sample Questions:<br />
·      Tell us a story your parents told you when you were a child  and a story that you will tell your children.<br />
·      What is a moment in your life when you realized we need to make a difference or things need to change?<br />
·      What does today’s civil rights leader look like?<br />
·      How do millennials see color ?<br />
  What does today’s  civil rights leader look like ?  --    Photo by Alyssa L Schukar, Freelance
    132489 05.jpg
  • 1/29/15 4:43:45 PM -- Chicago, Illinois, IL  -- Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III poses for a portrait at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago on Thursday, January 29, 2015.<br />
<br />
Interview with Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III at Trinity Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. This interview is part of USA TODAY coverage of Black History Month.<br />
Videographer should go to Trinity Church at <br />
400 W. 95th street <br />
Chicago, IL 60628 <br />
<br />
Shots:<br />
Shots: <br />
•	Tight, intimate shots of the person being interviewed<br />
•	Want the subject to look directly at the camera <br />
•	The subject should speak in complete sentence that repeat the question asked<br />
•	Do not want the reporter in the shots <br />
•	Light background or background that is not in focus. The focus should be on the subjects face <br />
INTRO: Have Rev. Moss look into the camera at the beginning of the interview and say "Nice to meet you."<br />
<br />
Lori Grisham or Mary Bowerman will ask questions over the speaker phone.<br />
<br />
Sample Questions:<br />
·      Tell us a story your parents told you when you were a child  and a story that you will tell your children.<br />
·      What is a moment in your life when you realized we need to make a difference or things need to change?<br />
·      What does today’s civil rights leader look like?<br />
·      How do millennials see color ?<br />
  What does today’s  civil rights leader look like ?  --    Photo by Alyssa L Schukar, Freelance
    132489 03.jpg
  • Colette Duck usually spends her holidays with her extended family in North Carolina. “I’m from the country. That’s how we do it,” she said. “We share and eat together.”<br />
<br />
While the coronavirus pandemic will keep her family apart this year, she’s going to keep the tradition going in her Richmond, Virginia community. <br />
<br />
She picked up all the fixings for a Thanksgiving meal from Ephesus Food Pantry. She plans to share plates with elderly people in her neighborhood that can’t get out due to mobility issues or Covid-19 vulnerabilities. <br />
<br />
“There’s no need for nobody in Richmond to say they’re hungry,” she said.<br />
<br />
She experienced sustained hunger before she learned about Ephesus 13 years ago, so she understands how important it is to care for others. <br />
<br />
“You might not know what another person is going through, she said. “If I can help you, I’ll help you.”<br />
<br />
<br />
The Ephesus Food Pantry holds a holiday distribution for its community in Richmond, Virginia on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020.<br />
<br />
(Alyssa Schukar for Feeding America)
    20201123-FArichmond-0275.jpg
  • Colette Duck usually spends her holidays with her extended family in North Carolina. “I’m from the country. That’s how we do it,” she said. “We share and eat together.”<br />
<br />
While the coronavirus pandemic will keep her family apart this year, she’s going to keep the tradition going in her Richmond, Virginia community. <br />
<br />
She picked up all the fixings for a Thanksgiving meal from Ephesus Food Pantry. She plans to share plates with elderly people in her neighborhood that can’t get out due to mobility issues or Covid-19 vulnerabilities. <br />
<br />
“There’s no need for nobody in Richmond to say they’re hungry,” she said.<br />
<br />
She experienced sustained hunger before she learned about Ephesus 13 years ago, so she understands how important it is to care for others. <br />
<br />
“You might not know what another person is going through, she said. “If I can help you, I’ll help you.”<br />
<br />
<br />
The Ephesus Food Pantry holds a holiday distribution for its community in Richmond, Virginia on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020.<br />
<br />
(Alyssa Schukar for Feeding America)
    20201123-FArichmond-0261.jpg
  • Colette Duck usually spends her holidays with her extended family in North Carolina. “I’m from the country. That’s how we do it,” she said. “We share and eat together.”<br />
<br />
While the coronavirus pandemic will keep her family apart this year, she’s going to keep the tradition going in her Richmond, Virginia community. <br />
<br />
She picked up all the fixings for a Thanksgiving meal from Ephesus Food Pantry. She plans to share plates with elderly people in her neighborhood that can’t get out due to mobility issues or Covid-19 vulnerabilities. <br />
<br />
“There’s no need for nobody in Richmond to say they’re hungry,” she said.<br />
<br />
She experienced sustained hunger before she learned about Ephesus 13 years ago, so she understands how important it is to care for others. <br />
<br />
“You might not know what another person is going through, she said. “If I can help you, I’ll help you.”<br />
<br />
<br />
The Ephesus Food Pantry holds a holiday distribution for its community in Richmond, Virginia on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020.<br />
<br />
(Alyssa Schukar for Feeding America)
    20201123-FArichmond-0224.jpg
  • Colette Duck usually spends her holidays with her extended family in North Carolina. “I’m from the country. That’s how we do it,” she said. “We share and eat together.”<br />
<br />
While the coronavirus pandemic will keep her family apart this year, she’s going to keep the tradition going in her Richmond, Virginia community. <br />
<br />
She picked up all the fixings for a Thanksgiving meal from Ephesus Food Pantry. She plans to share plates with elderly people in her neighborhood that can’t get out due to mobility issues or Covid-19 vulnerabilities. <br />
<br />
“There’s no need for nobody in Richmond to say they’re hungry,” she said.<br />
<br />
She experienced sustained hunger before she learned about Ephesus 13 years ago, so she understands how important it is to care for others. <br />
<br />
“You might not know what another person is going through, she said. “If I can help you, I’ll help you.”<br />
<br />
<br />
The Ephesus Food Pantry holds a holiday distribution for its community in Richmond, Virginia on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020.<br />
<br />
(Alyssa Schukar for Feeding America)
    20201123-FArichmond-0221.jpg
  • Colette Duck usually spends her holidays with her extended family in North Carolina. “I’m from the country. That’s how we do it,” she said. “We share and eat together.”<br />
<br />
While the coronavirus pandemic will keep her family apart this year, she’s going to keep the tradition going in her Richmond, Virginia community. <br />
<br />
She picked up all the fixings for a Thanksgiving meal from Ephesus Food Pantry. She plans to share plates with elderly people in her neighborhood that can’t get out due to mobility issues or Covid-19 vulnerabilities. <br />
<br />
“There’s no need for nobody in Richmond to say they’re hungry,” she said.<br />
<br />
She experienced sustained hunger before she learned about Ephesus 13 years ago, so she understands how important it is to care for others. <br />
<br />
“You might not know what another person is going through, she said. “If I can help you, I’ll help you.”<br />
<br />
<br />
The Ephesus Food Pantry holds a holiday distribution for its community in Richmond, Virginia on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020.<br />
<br />
(Alyssa Schukar for Feeding America)
    20201123-FArichmond-0210.jpg
  • Colette Duck usually spends her holidays with her extended family in North Carolina. “I’m from the country. That’s how we do it,” she said. “We share and eat together.”<br />
<br />
While the coronavirus pandemic will keep her family apart this year, she’s going to keep the tradition going in her Richmond, Virginia community. <br />
<br />
She picked up all the fixings for a Thanksgiving meal from Ephesus Food Pantry. She plans to share plates with elderly people in her neighborhood that can’t get out due to mobility issues or Covid-19 vulnerabilities. <br />
<br />
“There’s no need for nobody in Richmond to say they’re hungry,” she said.<br />
<br />
She experienced sustained hunger before she learned about Ephesus 13 years ago, so she understands how important it is to care for others. <br />
<br />
“You might not know what another person is going through, she said. “If I can help you, I’ll help you.”<br />
<br />
<br />
The Ephesus Food Pantry holds a holiday distribution for its community in Richmond, Virginia on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020.<br />
<br />
(Alyssa Schukar for Feeding America)
    20201123-FArichmond-0205.jpg
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0534.JPG
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0491.JPG
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0354.JPG
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0333.JPG
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0290.JPG
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0245.JPG
  • NYTELX20<br />
<br />
Great Falls, Virginia  -- Tuesday, November 3, 2020<br />
<br />
At the Great Falls Library, Vij Kumar votes for the first time in Great Falls, Virginia on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Despite the pandemic, Kumar said he wanted his first voting experience to be in person.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30250575A
    20201103-NYTvaVote-1055.jpg
  • Washington, D.C. -- Tuesday, June 16, 2020<br />
<br />
A health care provider, who asked not to be identified, swabs delivery person Sean McLain during a weekly Covid-19 testing at Soupergirl in the Takoma neighborhood of Washington, D.C.<br />
<br />
From the story:<br />
Small businesses across the country are testing workers for Covid-19 as they reopen, but are struggling with the costs of doing so, wary employees and a lack of clarity from public health officials on how frequently to test.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The Wall Street Journal<br />
Slug: “SBTEST”<br />
57068
    20200616-WSJ SBTEST-0210.JPG
  • Washington, D.C. -- Tuesday, June 16, 2020<br />
<br />
Sara Polon, the owner of Soupergirl, scans delivery person Sean McLain for an elevated temperature during a weekly Covid-19 testing at her store in the Takoma neighborhood of Washington, D.C.<br />
<br />
From the story:<br />
Small businesses across the country are testing workers for Covid-19 as they reopen, but are struggling with the costs of doing so, wary employees and a lack of clarity from public health officials on how frequently to test.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The Wall Street Journal<br />
Slug: “SBTEST”<br />
57068
    20200616-WSJ SBTEST-0206.JPG
  • Washington, D.C. -- Tuesday, June 16, 2020<br />
<br />
A health care provider, who asked not to be identified, swabs delivery person Luis Sanchez during a weekly Covid-19 testing at Soupergirl in the Takoma neighborhood of Washington, D.C.<br />
<br />
From the story:<br />
Small businesses across the country are testing workers for Covid-19 as they reopen, but are struggling with the costs of doing so, wary employees and a lack of clarity from public health officials on how frequently to test.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The Wall Street Journal<br />
Slug: “SBTEST”<br />
57068
    20200616-WSJ SBTEST-0183.JPG
  • Taneytown, Maryland -- Friday, March 27, 2020<br />
<br />
A United States Post Office delivery person crosses Taneytown’s main street, which is a mix of housing alongside closed, nonessential stores and restaurants operating in a limited capacity. <br />
<br />
Carroll County, which includes the nearly 7,000 citizens of Taneytown, had a confirmed 83 cases of Covid-19 as of Sunday, March 29, 2020.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The Wall Street Journal<br />
Slug: “SMALLTOWN”<br />
56718
    2020-CovidTaneytown-2928.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, spends time with his family, including, from left, his brother Cruz Lamas with Larissa Wilson and their 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas and his mother Margie Lamas at her home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-3267.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, spends time with his family, including his 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas at his parents’ home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-3043.JPG
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Monday, March 2, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, poses for a portrait in the early morning after finishing his shift. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-2387.JPG
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Monday, March 2, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, poses for a portrait in the early morning after finishing his shift. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-2381.JPG
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Monday, March 2, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, poses for a portrait in the early morning after finishing his shift. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-2356.JPG
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Monday, March 2, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, poses for a portrait in the early morning after finishing his shift. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-2310A.JPG
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Monday, March 2, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, poses for a portrait in the early morning after finishing his shift. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-2310.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, spends time with his family, including his 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas and his mother Margie Lamas at her home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-1429A.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
A 2016 Bernie Sanders bumper sticker hangs on the fridge alongside a picture of Robby Lamas with his mother Margie Lamas at a GM Powertrain open house event.<br />
<br />
GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-1317A.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, spends time with his family, including his 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas and his mother Margie Lamas at her home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-1267A.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
A 2016 Bernie Sanders bumper sticker hangs on the fridge alongside a picture of Robby Lamas with his mother Margie Lamas at a GM Powertrain open house event.<br />
<br />
GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-1249AA.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
A 2016 Bernie Sanders bumper sticker hangs on the fridge alongside a picture of Robby Lamas with his mother Margie Lamas at a GM Powertrain open house event.<br />
<br />
GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-1249A.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, spends time with his family, including his 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas and his girlfriend Alyssa Scharich at his parents’ home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-1214-2.JPG
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Interviewed by Rebecca Blumentstein<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, poses for a portrait in his Chevrolet Equinox. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-0928.JPG
  • Charleston, South Carolina -- Friday, May 3, 2019<br />
<br />
Cadet Col. Sarah Zorn speaks with retired Navy Chief Warrant Officer Gary Seim, who encouraged her as a high school student to apply for the Army ROTC scholarship at the Citadel. Zorn invited Seim to her Army commissioning ceremony where she officially became a second lieutenant in the Army. She asked him to be the first person she saluted as an officer.<br />
<br />
--<br />
<br />
In May of 2018, Cadet Col. Sarah Zorn became the Regimental Commander at the Citadel, the military college of South Carolina. Zorn is the first woman to hold the position of top cadet at the 175-year-old institution, which, up until 1995, didn't allow women to enroll. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30233530A
    2019-05Zorn-6331.JPG
  • Charleston, South Carolina -- Friday, May 3, 2019<br />
<br />
Cadet Col. Sarah Zorn speaks with retired Navy Chief Warrant Officer Gary Seim, who encouraged her as a high school student to apply for the Army ROTC scholarship at the Citadel. Zorn invited Seim to her Army commissioning ceremony where she officially became a second lieutenant in the Army. She asked him to be the first person she saluted as an officer.<br />
<br />
--<br />
<br />
In May of 2018, Cadet Col. Sarah Zorn became the Regimental Commander at the Citadel, the military college of South Carolina. Zorn is the first woman to hold the position of top cadet at the 175-year-old institution, which, up until 1995, didn't allow women to enroll. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30233530A
    2019-05Zorn-6170.JPG
  • Charleston, South Carolina -- Friday, May 3, 2019<br />
<br />
Cadet Col. Sarah Zorn salutes retired Navy Chief Warrant Officer Gary Seim, who encouraged her as a high school student to apply for the Army ROTC scholarship at the Citadel. Zorn invited Seim to her Army commissioning ceremony where she officially became a second lieutenant in the Army. She asked him to be the first person she saluted as an officer.<br />
<br />
--<br />
<br />
In May of 2018, Cadet Col. Sarah Zorn became the Regimental Commander at the Citadel, the military college of South Carolina. Zorn is the first woman to hold the position of top cadet at the 175-year-old institution, which, up until 1995, didn't allow women to enroll. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30233530A
    2019-05Zorn-5475.JPG
  • Cedar Rapids, Iowa -- Sunday, July 14, 2019<br />
<br />
Paul Reeves boosts his son Foster Reeves, 6, to see South Bend Mayor and presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg. Reeves, who is a Master Sergeant at Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska, and his family will be moving to Osan Air Base in South Korea this year, so they drove the four hours to see some of the candidates in person. "I like Pete’s message of generational change. I really think that he’s a perfect contrast to what we have right now, and I really think it’s time to turn the page in history. We’re very excited, and I just wanted my kids to see history," Reeves said.<br />
<br />
Democratic presidential hopeful Rep. Seth Moulton campaigns in Iowa. The U.S. House of Representatives member from Massachusetts's 6th district has yet to break 1% in almost any poll. He didn't qualify for the first debate and won't qualify for the second most likely.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30235732A
    2019-Moulton-1154.jpg
  • When asked how she felt that the role would return to a white man, she said: “I have complete faith, trust and confidence that he was picked because he is the right person for the job.”<br />
<br />
>><br />
<br />
In 2018, Sarah Zorn became the Citadel's first female regimental commander. The New York Times followed her through her senior year as she sought to change the culture of an institution that long denied entry to women.<br />
<br />
The First Woman to Lead 2400 Citadel Cadets: 'I Serve as a Stepping Stone' https://nyti.ms/2W292BR
    Zorn29.jpg
  • Lasalle Street Church executive pastor Randall K. Blakey baptizes 14-year-old Eli Lauger in the cool waters of Lake Michigan one early Sunday morning in late August with senior pastor Laura Truax, at left. "It was breathtaking," Lauger said. "I felt like a different person when I came back up." Every late summer, the church celebrates Affirmation Sunday with several public proclamations of faith through baptism.
    RoP-10-Baptism-401.JPG
  • Decades after the Ford Motor Company tried to tackle sexual misconduct at two Chicago plants, continued abuse raises questions about the possibility of change. The jobs were the best they would ever have: collecting union wages while working at one of America’s most storied companies. But inside two Chicago plants, the women were harassed and abused.<br />
<br />
Miyoshi Morris was pressured into having sex with a supervisor while working at Ford. “No person should have to endure that,” she said of the inappropriate behavior at the plant. “You have to force yourself into a place of not feeling anything, of not having any emotion, to exist.”<br />
<br />
Some women still remain at the job, but many have quit. Here, Morris poses for a portrait.
    On Assignment: Culture of Abuse for ..es10
  • Fort Wayne, Indiana - September 5, 2016<br />
<br />
Jose Luis Ojeda has been involved with United Way for 25 years as a union representative. "I'm a union person. Union people volunteer. That's what we're here for: help the members and help the community," Ojeda said. <br />
<br />
The Workers Project, which created one of the U.S.'s biggest and longest-standing celebrations of labor, is focused on creating solidarity between union members and unemployed and undocumented workers. It provides a possible path forward against the gutting of the traditional labor movement. <br />
<br />
The Project's Labor Day picnic is a huge, free potluck and party that highlights the Projects' efforts to create community among groups who are expected to distrust and dislike each other.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar
    LaborDay-1235.JPG
  • Fort Wayne, Indiana - September 5, 2016<br />
<br />
Jose Luis Ojeda has been involved with United Way for 25 years as a union representative. "I'm a union person. Union people volunteer. That's what we're here for: help the members and help the community," Ojeda said. <br />
<br />
The Workers Project, which created one of the U.S.'s biggest and longest-standing celebrations of labor, is focused on creating solidarity between union members and unemployed and undocumented workers. It provides a possible path forward against the gutting of the traditional labor movement. <br />
<br />
The Project's Labor Day picnic is a huge, free potluck and party that highlights the Projects' efforts to create community among groups who are expected to distrust and dislike each other.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar
    LaborDay-1217.JPG
  • Bismarck, North Dakota<br />
<br />
Joseph Marshall and his 9-year-old daughter Kinehsche' Marshall traveled from the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation in Northern California, which has sent close to 150 people to the Sacred Stone camp in the last month. Marshall said he hoped his daughter would absorb the experience of the camp. "I've been telling her since she was a little person that she's the storyteller. When we're all gone, she's going to be the one telling the story. So it was really important that as soon as I found out I was going, I was like Kinehsche', you're going with me," he said.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
-- <br />
<br />
When visitors turn off a narrow North Dakota highway and drive into the Sacred Stone camp where thousands have come to protest an oil pipeline, they thread through an arcade of flags whipping in the North Dakota wind. Each represent one of 280 Native American tribes that have flocked here in what activists are calling the largest, most diverse tribal action in at least a century, perhaps since Little Bighorn.<br />
 <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30195251A
    Friday-3936.jpg
  • Colette Duck usually spends her holidays with her extended family in North Carolina. “I’m from the country. That’s how we do it,” she said. “We share and eat together.”<br />
<br />
While the coronavirus pandemic will keep her family apart this year, she’s going to keep the tradition going in her Richmond, Virginia community. <br />
<br />
She picked up all the fixings for a Thanksgiving meal from Ephesus Food Pantry. She plans to share plates with elderly people in her neighborhood that can’t get out due to mobility issues or Covid-19 vulnerabilities. <br />
<br />
“There’s no need for nobody in Richmond to say they’re hungry,” she said.<br />
<br />
She experienced sustained hunger before she learned about Ephesus 13 years ago, so she understands how important it is to care for others. <br />
<br />
“You might not know what another person is going through, she said. “If I can help you, I’ll help you.”<br />
<br />
<br />
The Ephesus Food Pantry holds a holiday distribution for its community in Richmond, Virginia on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020.<br />
<br />
(Alyssa Schukar for Feeding America)
    20201123-FArichmond-0254.jpg
  • Colette Duck usually spends her holidays with her extended family in North Carolina. “I’m from the country. That’s how we do it,” she said. “We share and eat together.”<br />
<br />
While the coronavirus pandemic will keep her family apart this year, she’s going to keep the tradition going in her Richmond, Virginia community. <br />
<br />
She picked up all the fixings for a Thanksgiving meal from Ephesus Food Pantry. She plans to share plates with elderly people in her neighborhood that can’t get out due to mobility issues or Covid-19 vulnerabilities. <br />
<br />
“There’s no need for nobody in Richmond to say they’re hungry,” she said.<br />
<br />
She experienced sustained hunger before she learned about Ephesus 13 years ago, so she understands how important it is to care for others. <br />
<br />
“You might not know what another person is going through, she said. “If I can help you, I’ll help you.”<br />
<br />
<br />
The Ephesus Food Pantry holds a holiday distribution for its community in Richmond, Virginia on Monday, Nov. 23, 2020.<br />
<br />
(Alyssa Schukar for Feeding America)
    20201123-FArichmond-0213.jpg
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0517.JPG
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0446.JPG
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0424.JPG
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0369.JPG
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin — August 2020<br />
<br />
North side Milwaukee<br />
<br />
The first time Danita Jackson asked her son Jafari Jackson to help her vote, he was only 9. They didn’t have accessible voting machines at the time, so Jafari would make sure his mother, who is blind, filled out her ballot according to her wishes.<br />
<br />
“I wanted to show him by example the importance of voting,” Jackson said. <br />
<br />
Today, she said she views every election as an opportunity to make sure that accessibility laws are being followed. “If people don’t use the accessible machines, it’s not going to seem like there’s much of a need for it,” she said.<br />
<br />
During the state’s local primary in August, she had to share a pair of unsanitized headphones with another voter, which she said felt like an unnecessary risk during a pandemic. <br />
<br />
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four Americans has some form of disability. Through her job at the nonprofit Disability Rights Wisconsin, Jackson advocates for other people with disabilities, many of whom are qualified to vote but are not registered.<br />
<br />
Jackson has no choice but to vote in person in November because Wisconsin does not provide an alternative to printed mail-in ballots. Her son is grown and lives in Phoenix, so “I have to ask someone to risk their lives to go vote with me,” she said. “My best friend is being very nice, but I’d have to understand if she didn’t want to do it.”<br />
<br />
—<br />
<br />
The coronavirus pandemic will worsen several pre-existing barriers to voting for people of color, the disabled, and low-income communities in Milwaukee.<br />
<br />
Voting rights organizers are working to sign up new voters and help others navigate policies -- like strict voter ID laws and witness requirements for absentee ballots -- that discourage election participation.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30248434A
    20200817-NYTMKE-0237.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, spends time with his family, including his 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas and his mother Margie Lamas at her home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-3259.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, spends time with his family, including his 5-year-old twin nephews Miguel Canales and Richard Canales, at left, at his parents’ home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-3173.JPG
  • Midland, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, checks for South Carolina primary results as he spends time with his family, including his 8-month-old niece Waylynn Lamas and his girlfriend Alyssa Scharich at his parents’ home in Midland, Michigan. GM was once a major employer in the region. While Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and maternal grandfather, he considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-3151.JPG
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Monday, March 2, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, poses for a portrait in the early morning after finishing his shift. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-2380-2.JPG
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Monday, March 2, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas, who works at the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant, poses for a portrait in the early morning after finishing his shift. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-2305.JPG
  • Bay City, Michigan -- Friday, February 28, 2020<br />
<br />
Robby Lamas drives by the GM Powertrain Bay City Plant on his day off. By working or GM, Lamas followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather but considers himself lucky to have the job. He’s the youngest person at the Bay City plant by ten years.<br />
<br />
In the 2016 election, the long Democratic-leaning and union-supporting Bay County voted to elected Donald Trump. <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30243282A
    2020-BayCity-0781A.JPG
  • Lasalle Street Church executive pastor Randall K. Blakey baptizes 14-year-old Eli Lauger in the cool waters of Lake Michigan one early Sunday morning in late August with senior pastor Laura Truax, at left. "It was breathtaking," Lauger said. "I felt like a different person when I came back up." Every late summer, the church celebrates Affirmation Sunday with several public proclamations of faith through baptism. |||| Rites of Passage define our lives. They signify the progress of time as well as our citizenship in a tribe, in a culture — in life itself. Chicago commemorates these moments in ways that reflect its diversity, but through difference, we find commonality. We are all connected through these formal and informal ceremonies that remind us how much family, love and time shape us.
    zRoP-10-Baptism-401.JPG
  • 1/29/15 4:43:16 PM -- Chicago, Illinois, IL  -- Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III poses for a portrait at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago on Thursday, January 29, 2015.<br />
<br />
Interview with Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III at Trinity Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. This interview is part of USA TODAY coverage of Black History Month.<br />
Videographer should go to Trinity Church at <br />
400 W. 95th street <br />
Chicago, IL 60628 <br />
<br />
Shots:<br />
Shots: <br />
•	Tight, intimate shots of the person being interviewed<br />
•	Want the subject to look directly at the camera <br />
•	The subject should speak in complete sentence that repeat the question asked<br />
•	Do not want the reporter in the shots <br />
•	Light background or background that is not in focus. The focus should be on the subjects face <br />
INTRO: Have Rev. Moss look into the camera at the beginning of the interview and say "Nice to meet you."<br />
<br />
Lori Grisham or Mary Bowerman will ask questions over the speaker phone.<br />
<br />
Sample Questions:<br />
·      Tell us a story your parents told you when you were a child  and a story that you will tell your children.<br />
·      What is a moment in your life when you realized we need to make a difference or things need to change?<br />
·      What does today’s civil rights leader look like?<br />
·      How do millennials see color ?<br />
  What does today’s  civil rights leader look like ?  --    Photo by Alyssa L Schukar, Freelance
    132489 04.jpg
  • 1/29/15 4:42:29 PM -- Chicago, Illinois, IL  -- Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III poses for a portrait at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago on Thursday, January 29, 2015.<br />
<br />
Interview with Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III at Trinity Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. This interview is part of USA TODAY coverage of Black History Month.<br />
Videographer should go to Trinity Church at <br />
400 W. 95th street <br />
Chicago, IL 60628 <br />
<br />
Shots:<br />
Shots: <br />
•	Tight, intimate shots of the person being interviewed<br />
•	Want the subject to look directly at the camera <br />
•	The subject should speak in complete sentence that repeat the question asked<br />
•	Do not want the reporter in the shots <br />
•	Light background or background that is not in focus. The focus should be on the subjects face <br />
INTRO: Have Rev. Moss look into the camera at the beginning of the interview and say "Nice to meet you."<br />
<br />
Lori Grisham or Mary Bowerman will ask questions over the speaker phone.<br />
<br />
Sample Questions:<br />
·      Tell us a story your parents told you when you were a child  and a story that you will tell your children.<br />
·      What is a moment in your life when you realized we need to make a difference or things need to change?<br />
·      What does today’s civil rights leader look like?<br />
·      How do millennials see color ?<br />
  What does today’s  civil rights leader look like ?  --    Photo by Alyssa L Schukar, Freelance
    132489 01.jpg
  • 1/29/15 4:42:48 PM -- Chicago, Illinois, IL  -- Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III poses for a portrait at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago on Thursday, January 29, 2015.<br />
<br />
Interview with Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III at Trinity Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. This interview is part of USA TODAY coverage of Black History Month.<br />
Videographer should go to Trinity Church at <br />
400 W. 95th street <br />
Chicago, IL 60628 <br />
<br />
Shots:<br />
Shots: <br />
•	Tight, intimate shots of the person being interviewed<br />
•	Want the subject to look directly at the camera <br />
•	The subject should speak in complete sentence that repeat the question asked<br />
•	Do not want the reporter in the shots <br />
•	Light background or background that is not in focus. The focus should be on the subjects face <br />
INTRO: Have Rev. Moss look into the camera at the beginning of the interview and say "Nice to meet you."<br />
<br />
Lori Grisham or Mary Bowerman will ask questions over the speaker phone.<br />
<br />
Sample Questions:<br />
·      Tell us a story your parents told you when you were a child  and a story that you will tell your children.<br />
·      What is a moment in your life when you realized we need to make a difference or things need to change?<br />
·      What does today’s civil rights leader look like?<br />
·      How do millennials see color ?<br />
  What does today’s  civil rights leader look like ?  --    Photo by Alyssa L Schukar, Freelance
    132489 02.jpg
  • Bismarck, North Dakota<br />
<br />
Joseph Marshall and his 9-year-old daughter Kinehsche' Marshall traveled from the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation in Northern California, which has sent close to 150 people to the Sacred Stone camp in the last month. Marshall said he hoped his daughter would absorb the experience of the camp. "I've been telling her since she was a little person that she's the storyteller. When we're all gone, she's going to be the one telling the story. So it was really important that as soon as I found out I was going, I was like Kinehsche', you're going with me," he said.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
-- <br />
<br />
When visitors turn off a narrow North Dakota highway and drive into the Sacred Stone camp where thousands have come to protest an oil pipeline, they thread through an arcade of flags whipping in the North Dakota wind. Each represent one of 280 Native American tribes that have flocked here in what activists are calling the largest, most diverse tribal action in at least a century, perhaps since Little Bighorn.<br />
 <br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30195251A
    16-.JPG
  • Joseph and Kinehsche’ Marshall<br />
Hoopa Valley tribe of Northern California<br />
<br />
“I’ve been telling her since she was a little person that she’s the storyteller,” Mr. Marshall said of Kinehsche’, his 9-year-old daughter. “When we’re all gone, she’s going to be the one telling the story. So it was really important that as soon as I found out I was going, I was like, ‘Kinehsche’, you’re going with me.’ ”
    Friday-3936.jpg
  • McLean, Virginia — Friday, July 17, 2020<br />
<br />
General manager Scott Hamilton shows a Five Feet to Fitness guest room, which has personal workout equipment available to its guests at the Hilton McLean Tysons Corner in McLean, Virginia on Friday, July 17, 2020. The system allows guests to forgo obtaining keys from the front desk.<br />
<br />
From the story: “Hilton has partnered with Lysol, Four Seasons with Johns Hopkins Medicine. Cleaning staff is everywhere — except guest rooms. New research shows hotels can be easily contaminated by the coronavirus.”<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times  <br />
30247519A<br />
<br />
NYTVIRUS
    20200717-NYThotel-0377.JPG
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