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DUKAS_132603824_EYE
U.S. Assange Extradition Appeal
US Assange Extradition Appeal.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside the Royal; Courts of Justice for ruling on the United States' appeal against blocking the extradition of the Wikileaks' founder. © Martin Wheatley / Parsons Media / eyevine
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© Parsons Media / eyevine. -
DUKAS_128920629_EYE
Wim Wenders photography exhibition at Imperial War Museum (IWM) London.
Wim Wenders photography exhibition at Imperial War Museum (IWM) London.
10th September 2021
Wim Wenders: Photographing Ground Zero
Wim Wenders
Imperial War Museums will mark 20 years since the 9/11 terror attacks on the United States and explore its complex global legacy through 9/11: Twenty Years On. Central to the anniversary programme is the exhibition Wim Wenders: Photographing Ground Zero, running from 10 September 2021 ñ 9 January 2022 at IWM London.
© Elliott Franks / eyevine
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Elliott Franks / eyevine. -
DUKAS_128923523_EYE
Wim Wenders photography exhibition at Imperial War Museum (IWM) London.
Wim Wenders photography exhibition at Imperial War Museum (IWM) London.
10th September 2021
Wim Wenders: Photographing Ground Zero
Wim Wenders
Imperial War Museums will mark 20 years since the 9/11 terror attacks on the United States and explore its complex global legacy through 9/11: Twenty Years On. Central to the anniversary programme is the exhibition Wim Wenders: Photographing Ground Zero, running from 10 September 2021 – 9 January 2022 at IWM London.
© Elliott Franks / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Elliott Franks / eyevine. -
DUKAS_128922700_EYE
Wim Wenders photography exhibition at Imperial War Museum (IWM) London.
Wim Wenders photography exhibition at Imperial War Museum (IWM) London.
10th September 2021
Wim Wenders: Photographing Ground Zero
Wim Wenders
Imperial War Museums will mark 20 years since the 9/11 terror attacks on the United States and explore its complex global legacy through 9/11: Twenty Years On. Central to the anniversary programme is the exhibition Wim Wenders: Photographing Ground Zero, running from 10 September 2021 – 9 January 2022 at IWM London.
© Elliott Franks / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Elliott Franks / eyevine. -
DUKAS_129422668_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422688_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422575_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422670_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422743_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422676_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422720_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422705_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422775_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422722_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422667_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422600_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422731_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422626_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422665_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422721_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422671_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_129422677_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
© Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_129422666_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
ÒI remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
ÒWe jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the peopleÕs faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, youÕd see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
ÔI looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.Õ
ÔThings that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell Ð especially a smell.Õ
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DUKAS_129422776_EYE
Hugh Caulfield: the people whose images came to define 9/11 reflect on the day. Their faces were on front pages across the world in the days after the World Trade Center collapsed. Here’s how they, and their families, look back on those terrifying hours
9/11: 20 years later.
Hugh Caulfield was a police officer stationed in Union Square, New York City. He retired from the police in 2013 and works as a property manager. Now 53, he lives with his wife, Eileen, in Sag Harbor, New York, and has four children.
“I remember going to work and it was a picture perfect day. So I go to the locker room and I get changed and I hear on the police radio that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center.
“We jumped on the subway and were on the train with our radios screaming. It was a rush-hour train and you could see the looks on the people’s faces. They would listen to our radios and then, as we pulled into the train station and the doors opened up, you’d see the fear of people running away. It was chaos the moment we stepped off the train.
‘I looked up and saw the top 30 floors over my head, as it was peeling like a banana peel, and I thought I was dead.’
‘Things that happen in my day sometimes remind me: hearing a noise, or a smell – especially a smell.’
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DUKAS_128738971_EYE
World Trade Centre New York
FILE PHOTO: World Trade Centre New York USA 1988
View from the top floor looking North East in 1988 looking down on the financial centre and Manhatten Bridge with Brooklyn Bridge in the foreground.
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DUKAS_128738970_EYE
World Trade Centre New York
FILE PHOTO: Copyright owned photograph the Independent Newspaper© 1988.
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DUKAS_128738969_EYE
World Trade Centre New York
FILE PHOTO: World Trade Centre New York USA 1988
View from the top floor in 1988.
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DUKAS_126866632_EYE
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London. Assange, who is 50, is been held in HM Prison Belmarsh.
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DUKAS_126866627_EYE
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London. Assange, who is 50, is been held in HM Prison Belmarsh.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_126866629_EYE
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London. Assange, who is 50, is been held in HM Prison Belmarsh.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_126866665_EYE
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London. Assange, who is 50, is been held in HM Prison Belmarsh.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_126866628_EYE
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London. Assange, who is 50, is been held in HM Prison Belmarsh.
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DUKAS_126866666_EYE
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London. Assange, who is 50, is been held in HM Prison Belmarsh.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_126866625_EYE
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London
A boat with Julian Assange supporters on board in central London. Assange, who is 50, is been held in HM Prison Belmarsh.
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DUKAS_126383695_ABA
Donald Rumsfeld Dies Aged 88
File photo dated March 23, 2006 of Three days after Bush rejected calls for Rumsfeld's resignation, the defense secretary said during a press briefing at the Pentagon that he remains 'hard at the job, working hard, getting up every day and thinking what can we do for the troops...' Donald Rumsfeld, the acerbic architect of the Iraq war and a master Washington power player who served as US secretary of defense for two presidents, has died at the age of 88. Photo by Olivier Douliery/ABACAPRESS.COM (FOTO: DUKAS/ABACA)
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DUKAS_126383693_ABA
Donald Rumsfeld Dies Aged 88
File photo dated November 11, 2006 of Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld and Gen. George Casey, commander of Multi-National Force-Iraq, conduct a news conference on the current situation in Iraq at the Pentagon. Donald Rumsfeld, the acerbic architect of the Iraq war and a master Washington power player who served as US secretary of defense for two presidents, has died at the age of 88. Photo by Olivier Douliery/ABACAPRESS.COM (FOTO: DUKAS/ABACA)
Douliery Olivier/ABACA -
DUKAS_126383692_ABA
Donald Rumsfeld Dies Aged 88
File photo dated February 21, 2006 of Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld and Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Peter Pace conduct a DoD news briefing in the DoD Briefing Room, at the Pentagon in Virginia. Donald Rumsfeld, the acerbic architect of the Iraq war and a master Washington power player who served as US secretary of defense for two presidents, has died at the age of 88. Photo by Olivier Douliery/ABACAPPRESS.COM (FOTO: DUKAS/ABACA)
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DUKAS_118003936_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003935_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003937_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003934_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003966_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003970_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003975_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003967_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003969_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003971_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118003965_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118004180_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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DUKAS_118004508_EYE
Julian Assange extradition hearing
07/09/2020. London, United Kingdom. Julian Assange extradition hearing.
Julian Assange supporters gather outside The Old Bailey in Central London, to protest against his extradition in the US.
WikiLeaks editor and publisher Julian Assange, is facing a 175 year sentence for publishing information in the public interest.
Picture by Gustavo Valiente / Parsons Media / eyevine
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