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DUK10071887_010
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Georgia bereitet sich vor
Local residents Thomas Lairsey, 71, and his wife Ann, 67, move into the Red Cross shelter at the Albany Civic Center to ride out Hurricane Irma on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2017, in Albany, Ga. (Photo by Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21030343
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DUK10071887_008
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Georgia bereitet sich vor
Clarence and Virginia Robinson move into the Red Cross shelter at the Albany Civic Center to ride out Hurricane Irma on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2017, in Albany, Ga. The couple survived Tropical Storm Alberto in 1994, a storm that killed five people in Dougherty County, and more recently two tornado strikes in January of this year that killed four. Virginia Robinson said, "I feel more safe here and our street is already flooding." (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21030342
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DUK10071887_007
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Georgia bereitet sich vor
Clarence and Virginia Robinson move into the Red Cross shelter at the Albany Civic Center to ride out Hurricane Irma on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2017, in Albany, Ga. The couple survived Tropical Storm Alberto in 1994, a storm that killed five people in Dougherty County, and more recently two tornado strikes in January of this year that killed four. Virginia Robinson said, "I feel more safe here and our street is already flooding." (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21030337
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DUK10071892_056
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Der Süden von Florida
Adam Todd, 43, and Martina Van Dyken, 26 ride skateboards down Ocean Drive on Miami Beach as Hurricane Irma approaches on Saturday, Sept. 9, 2017. (Photo by Mike Stocker/Sun Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21018166
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DUK10071892_052
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Der Süden von Florida
Ivelisse Soto prepares carying crates for her dogs, Tinzy and Looney, outside Lakeside Elementary School hurricane shelter, which allows pets, in Pembroke Pines, Fla., as powerful Hurricane Irma heads toward Florida on Saturday, Sept. 9, 2017. (Photo by Taimy Alvarez/Sun Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21017743
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DUK10071892_051
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Der Süden von Florida
Laureen Cikora evacuates her RV in Davie, Fla., with her dog, Spice, to a hurricane shelter that allows pets as powerful Hurricane Irma heads toward Florida on Saturday, Sept. 9, 2017. (Photo by Taimy Alvarez/Sun Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21017742
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DUK10071892_050
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Der Süden von Florida
People seek shelter from Hurricane Irma with their pets at the West Boynton Park and Recreation Center in Boynton Beach, Fla., on Saturday, Sept. 9, 2017. (Photo by Jim Rassol/Sun Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21017807
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DUK10071892_049
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Der Süden von Florida
Fort Lauderdale Beach as Hurricane Irma pushes into South Florida on Saturday, Sept. 9, 2017, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (Photo by Amy Beth Bennett/Sun Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21018441
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DUK10071887_014
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Georgia bereitet sich vor
Traffic on I-75 North fleeing Hurricane Irma backs up moving at a crawl toward Atlanta while power trucks head south toward the Georgia coast in preparation for the storm on Friday, September 8, 2017, in Griffin. (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21008294
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DUK10071887_013
NEWS - Hurrikan Irma: Georgia bereitet sich vor
A line of power trucks head south on I-75 toward the Georgia coast in preparation for Hurricane Irma on Friday, September 8, 2017, in Griffin. (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 21008302
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DUK10071625_003
NEWS - Florida: Die Bevölkerung bereitet sich auf Hurrikan Irma vor
Ed Fluker arranges the last remaining gas containers on otherwise empty shelves at The Home Depot in Lady Lake on Tuesday afternoon, Sept. 5, 2017. The empty shelves beside him are where the generators are typically displayed. The store was out of generators and water early Tuesday. Buyers at the store are preparing for Hurricane Irma. (Photo by Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 20982500
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DUK10071625_001
NEWS - Florida: Die Bevölkerung bereitet sich auf Hurrikan Irma vor
Tom Kepner, left, stocks gas containers as shoppers buy hurricane items at The Home Depot in Lady Lake on Tuesday afternoon, Sept. 5, 2017. Buyers are preparing for Hurricane Irma. The store was out of generators and water early Tuesday. (Photo by Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 20982506
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DUK10071265_011
NEWS - Hurrikan Harvey: Aufräumarbeiten
Chelsea Slaughter looks for items to help a friend to help clean up her home at a donation site on Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2017, in Rockport, Texas. Aransas Pass had catastrophic damage from Hurricane Harvey. (Photo by Rachel Denny Clow/Corpus Christi Caller-Times/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 20931800
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DUK10071265_016
NEWS - Hurrikan Harvey: Aufräumarbeiten
Charles Prothro volunteers to clean up a property off FM 1781 in Aransas County, Texas on Monday, Aug. 28, 2017 damaged by Hurricane Harvey. The group of volunteers came together on social media and call themselves the "big truck crew" because they all have big trucks, including decommissioned military trucks.
(Rachel Denny Clow/Corpus Christi Caller-Times/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 20924650
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DUK10071265_014
NEWS - Hurrikan Harvey: Aufräumarbeiten
Scott Matthews, a McAllen resident, helps clean up brush in a trailer park on FM 3036 on Monday, Aug. 28, 2017 in Rockport, Texas. He came to help his daughter's finance clean up following Hurricane Harvey.
(Rachel Denny Clow/Corpus Christi Caller-Times/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 20924674
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DUK10070386_053
NEWS - Hurrikan Harvey: Grosse Schäden nach dem Unwetter
This area off FM 1781 in Aransas County, Texas was damaged by Hurricane Harvey. A group of volunteers came together on social media and call themselves the "big truck crew" because they all have big trucks, including decommissioned military trucks. They were in the area on Monday, Aug. 28, 2017 cleaning up.
(Rachel Denny Clow/Corpus Christi Caller-Times/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 20924651
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DUK10070386_052
NEWS - Hurrikan Harvey: Grosse Schäden nach dem Unwetter
Homes in the Key Allegro subdivision on Monday, Aug. 28, 2017 in Rockport, Texas. Property managers were checking Monday to make sure residents were the only ones going into the heavily damaged subdivision.
(Rachel Denny Clow/Corpus Christi Caller-Times/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 20924658
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DUK10070386_045
NEWS - Hurrikan Harvey: Grosse Schäden nach dem Unwetter
Homes in the Key Allegro subdivision on Monday, Aug. 28, 2017 in Rockport, Texas. Property managers were checking Monday to make sure residents were the only ones going into the heavily damaged subdivision.
(Rachel Denny Clow/Corpus Christi Caller-Times/TNS/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 20924658
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DUK10066838_024
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area, Vanette Joseph, 91, a farmer in Lan Gommier, Haiti's Grand'Anse region walks through her destroyed property. She's determined to plant, she says, after losing 100 coconut trees. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687425
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DUK10066838_023
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, nearly nine months after hurricane Matthew struck the area, Vanette Joseph, 91, a farmer in Lan Gommier, Haiti's Grand'Anse region holds a calabash from her destroyed plant. She's determined to plant, she says, after losing 100 coconut trees. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687435
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DUK10066838_022
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
Women in Impasse Beauzile in Jeremie, Haiti spend the morning cooking rice and beans at a "community restaurant," that the Haitian government has launched to help curb hunger. The cooks, all unpaid, say often there isn't enough food to feed the 1,200 to 1,300 people who come daily for a plate. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687421
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DUK10066838_021
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
Katy Baptiste, owner of Ilan Ilan restaurant in Jeremie, says if for locals, her business would have closed down months ago. Since Matthew, she's removed several things from her menu because the products are not available locally. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687449
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DUK10066838_020
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area, Vanette Joseph, 91, a farmer in Lan Gommier, Haiti's Grand'Anse region walks through her destroyed property. She's determined to plant, she says, after losing 100 coconut trees. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687433
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DUK10066838_019
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
Farmers in the Grand'Anse region of Haiti say nine months after Hurricane Matthew barreled through they are struggling to rebuild their lives. They feel abandoned by foreign donors and Haitian government officials. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687443
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DUK10066838_018
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area, Vanette Joseph, 91, a farmer in Lan Gommier, Haiti's Grand'Anse region walks through her destroyed property. She's determined to plant, she says, after losing 100 coconut trees. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687431
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DUK10066838_017
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area, Vanette Joseph, 91, a farmer in Lan Gommier, Haiti's Grand'Anse region walks through her destroyed property. She's determined to plant, she says, after losing 100 coconut trees. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687434
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DUK10066838_016
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
Katy Baptiste, owner of Ilan Ilan restaurant in Jeremie, says if for locals, her business would have closed down months ago. Since Matthew, she's removed several things from her menu because the products are not available locally. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687449
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DUK10066838_015
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
"We can spend 30 years and we'll never bounce back," said Duvanel Francois, 42, who was trying to earn school fees one morning in a tiny village outside of Jeremie, the Grand'Anse capital, by helping another farmer rebuild his home. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687448
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DUK10066838_014
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area, Vanette Joseph, 91, a farmer in Lan Gommier, Haiti's Grand'Anse region walks through her destroyed property. She's determined to plant, she says, after losing 100 coconut trees. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687447
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DUK10066838_013
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area, Vanette Joseph, 91, a farmer in Lan Gommier, Haiti's Grand'Anse region walks through her destroyed property. She's determined to plant, she says, after losing 100 coconut trees. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687441
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DUK10066838_012
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, nearly nine months after hurricane Matthew struck the area, Vanette Joseph, 91, a farmer in Lan Gommier, Haiti's Grand'Anse region holds a calabash from her destroyed plant. She's determined to plant, she says, after losing 100 coconut trees. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687435
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DUK10066838_011
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
Rodley Charles, 16, rides his bicycle along Pointe-Sable Beach in Port Salut, Haiti. Nine months after Hurricane Matthew, the long-stretch of Pointe Sable remains littered with downed almond, poinciana and palm trees and tourists have yet to return to the coastal city of Port Salut, which lost most of its hotels after the storm made landfall in the region. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687436
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DUK10066838_010
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
Marie Dinette Clona prepares a meal for a customer seated in the background. After losing her home in Hurricane Matthew, Marie Dinette Clona, 67, and her son Sterlin Brega, 23, moved into a shack in the market in Jeremie's Carrefour Bac, where residents in June blocked the road, protesting the lack of assistance. Clona, who sells food, says there is a lot of hunger still in the region and many can't even afford to buy food. She is running her business, she said on credit and often ends up throwing away unsold food. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687437
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DUK10066838_009
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
One of several men working on a site just off the desolated highway leading into the Grand'Anse. With its cement blocks and clay-colored mud, the construction site was an oddity in a region, where despite shiny new aluminum roofs dotting the once more green landscape, most homes remain in disrepair, their inhabitants living with family and friends. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687444
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DUK10066838_008
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
A young boy keeps his pig nearby along the shore in Port Salut, Haiti in late June, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687451
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DUK10066838_007
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
After losing her home in Hurricane Matthew, Marie Dinette Clona, 67, and her son Sterlin Brega, 23, moved into a shack in the market in Jeremie's Carrefour Bac, where residents in June blocked the road, protesting the lack of assistance. Clona, who sells food, says there is a lot of hunger still in the region and many can't even afford to buy food. She is running her business, she said on credit and often ends up throwing away unsold food. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687452
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DUK10066838_006
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
Women in Impasse Beauzile in Jeremie, Haiti spend the morning cooking rice and beans at a "community restaurant," that the Haitian government has launched to help curb hunger. The cooks, all unpaid, say often there isn't enough food to feed the 1,200 to 1,300 people who come daily for a plate. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687803
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DUK10066838_005
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
After Hurricane Matthew in October destroyed her breadfruit and coconut trees, Marie-Lucienne Duvert said she was forced to take out four different loans totaling $1,100 to mount a business and repair her storm damage home in Morne La Source, Haiti on the outskirts of Les Cayes. Instead of selling wholesale, she now heads to market three times a week to sell rice and wheat retail to make ends meet, and make the more than $200 monthly loan payment. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687424
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DUK10066838_004
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
A group of men reconstruct a large house in late June near Port Salut, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687427
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DUK10066838_003
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
A fisherman prepares to head out on the water along the shore in Port Salut, Haiti in late June, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687423
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DUK10066838_002
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, nearly nine months after Hurricane Matthew struck the area, Vanette Joseph, 91, a farmer in Lan Gommier, Haiti's Grand'Anse region walks through her destroyed property. She's determined to plant, she says, after losing 100 coconut trees. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687420
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DUK10066838_001
REPORTAGE - Haiti: Alltag zwei Jahre nach dem Hurrikan "Matthew"
In late June, Elmidieu Seriate, a father of three, says he journeys to the shorelines on the outskirts of Les Cayes in southern Haiti everyday from his mountain home in hopes of finding enough fish to sell so he could feed his family for the day. (Photo by Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20687801
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DUK10063449_020
NEWS - Tropensturm Cindy trifft auf USA
A large section of an oak tree lies on the ground near the main house at Beauvoir in Biloxi on Wednesday, June 21, 2017 after a waterspout from Tropical Storm Cindy came ashore. (Photo by John Fitzhugh/Biloxi Sun Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20505173
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DUK10063449_019
NEWS - Tropensturm Cindy trifft auf USA
Crews gather cut limbs from a downed tree in Bay Vista subdivision in Biloxi, Miss. on Wednesday, June 21, 2017. (Photo by Tim Isbell/Biloxi Sun Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20505194
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DUK10063449_018
NEWS - Tropensturm Cindy trifft auf USA
Kathy Majors and her granddaughter, Chloe Schlunaker, 2, and her parents, Justin and Heather Schlunaker of D'Iberville, watch as waves crash against the shore at Moses Pier in Gulfport on Wednesday, June 21, 2017 as Tropical Storm Cindy moved through the area. The family recently moved to the coast from Laurel and wanted to see the storm up close. (Photo by John Fitzhugh/Biloxi Sun Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20505175
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DUK10063449_017
NEWS - Tropensturm Cindy trifft auf USA
A truck pushes through water at the East Pier of the state port in Gulfport on Wednesday, June 21, 2017 as Tropical Storm Cindy moves through the area. (Photo by John Fitzhugh/Biloxi Sun Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20505178
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DUK10063449_016
NEWS - Tropensturm Cindy trifft auf USA
Biloxi crews work to clear a down tree from power lines on Rich Avenue on Wednesday, June 21, 2017. The Mississippi Gulf Coast felt the effect of Tropical Storm Cindy for most of the day. (Photo by Tim Isbell/Biloxi Sun Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20505196
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DUK10063449_015
NEWS - Tropensturm Cindy trifft auf USA
Kenny Kuluz wades through flood waters at the Ocean Springs harbor as Tropical Storm Cindy dumped rain on the Mississippi Gulf Coast on Wednesday, June 21, 2017. (Photo by Tim Isbell/Biloxi Sun Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20505193
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DUK10063449_014
NEWS - Tropensturm Cindy trifft auf USA
The No Wake sign is almost submerged at the flooded Ocean Springs Harbor on Wednesday, June 21, 2017. Since Tuesday evening, Tropical Storm Cindy has dumped a deluge of rain on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. (Photo by Tim Isbell/Biloxi Sun Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20505185
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DUK10063449_013
NEWS - Tropensturm Cindy trifft auf USA
Crews gather cut limbs from a downed tree in Bay Vista subdivision in Biloxi, Miss. on Wednesday, June 21, 2017. (Photo by Tim Isbell/Biloxi Sun Herald/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 20505194
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