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  • On April 22, 1971, Vietnam veteran Lt. John Kerry became the first Vietnam veteran to testify before Congress about the war, when he appeared before a Senate committee hearing on proposals relating to ending the war.<br />
Kerry , the following day -April 23, 1971 -  participated in a demonstration with thousands of other veterans in which he and other veterans threw their medals and ribbons over a fence erected at the front steps of the United States Capitol building to dramatize their opposition to the war.<br />
Here, observers examine and catalogue the disgarded military medals at the base of the U.S. Capitol steps. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkins_kerry012.jpg
  • On April 22, 1971, Vietnam veteran Lt. John Kerry became the first Vietnam veteran to testify before Congress about the war, when he appeared before a Senate committee hearing on proposals relating to ending the war.<br />
Kerry , the following day -April 23, 1971 -  participated in a demonstration with thousands of other veterans in which he and other veterans threw their medals and ribbons over a fence erected at the front steps of the United States Capitol building to dramatize their opposition to the war.<br />
Here, observers examine and catalogue the disgarded military medals at the base of the U.S. Capitol steps. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkins_kerry007.jpg
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27060.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27011.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27066.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27064.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27063.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27062.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27058.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27059.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27017.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27014.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27009.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27010.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27061.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27022.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27019.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27018.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia - Senate Armed Services Committee - and Senator John Warner of Virginia - of the Senate Armed Services Committee announce the military's Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy at the US Capitol in Washington D.C.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27015.psd
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians - the My Lai Massacre - former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (sunglasses) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. Wm. Calley_Ken Hawkins 03.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians -the My Lai Massacre - former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (sunglasses) is escorted by U.S. Marshals from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. William Calley_Ken Hawkins19.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians  - the My Lai Massacre -  former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (sunglasses) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. William Calley_Ken Hawkins 10.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians  - the My Lai Massacre -  former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (sunglasses) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. Wm. Calley_Ken Hawkins 06.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians  -the My Lai Massacre - former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (sunglasses) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. William Calley_Ken Hawkins 15.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians  -the My Lai Massacre - former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (sunglasses) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. Wm. Calley_Ken Hawkins 08.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians  - the My Lai Massacre - former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (sunglasses) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. William Calley_Ken Hawkins 13.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians -the My Lai Massacre - former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. Wm. Calley_Ken Hawkins 07.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians - the My Lai Massacre - former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (with briefcase) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. Wm. Calley_Ken Hawkins 01.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians  -the My Lai Massacre - former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (center) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. Wm. Calley_Ken Hawkins 18.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians  - the My Lai Massacre -  former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (sunglasses) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. Wm. Calley_Ken Hawkins 16.tif
  • Convicted of the murder of 102 VietNamese civilians  -the My Lai Massacre -  former U.S. Army Lieutenant William Calley (sunglasses) is escorted from the Fort Benning, Georgia confinement facility to a federal appeals court in nearby Columbus, Ga. At a later date, Calley's original sentence of life in prison was turned into an order of house arrest, but after three years, President Richard Nixon reduced his sentence with a presidential pardon -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    Lt. Wm. Calley_Ken Hawkins 02.tif
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27075.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27056-2.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27049.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27047.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn and Rolling Stones keyboard player and fellow tree farmer Chuck Leavell at a meeting of tree farmers in Atlanta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27042.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn a democrat from Georgia talks with Senator Paul Tsongas (right) and Atlanta businessman and insurance executive Jesse Hill (left) at a Georgia Democratic Party dinner
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27035.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27028.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn - a Democrat from Georgia - on his tree farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27005.psd
  • Antiwar protestors on the U.S. Capitol grounds and the Mall during massive demonstrations against the Vietnam war on April 23, 1971 as Lt. John Kerry prepares to speak. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkns_kerry023.jpg
  • Antiwar protestors on the U.S. Capitol grounds and the Mall during massive demonstrations against the Vietnam war on April 23, 1971 as Lt. John Kerry prepares to speak. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkins_kerry027.jpg
  • On April 22, 1971, Vietnam veteran Lt. John Kerry became the first Vietnam veteran to testify before Congress about the war, when he appeared before a Senate committee hearing on proposals relating to ending the war.<br />
Kerry is shown here as he prepares to speak on the U.S. Capitol steps the day after his testimony - April 23, 1971 - as he participated in a demonstration with thousands of other veterans in which he and other veterans threw their medals and ribbons over a fence erected at the front steps of the United States Capitol building to dramatize their opposition to the war. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkins_kerry017.jpg
  • Antiwar protestors on the U.S. Capitol grounds during massive demonstrations against the Vietnam war on April 23, 1971 as Lt. John Kerry prepares to speak. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkins_kerry015.jpg
  • US Senator Sam Nunn on his farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins _KH13806-18.tif
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27016.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn - a Democrat from Georgia - on his tree farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27020-2.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn - a Democrat from Georgia - on his tree farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27021-2.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27076.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27073.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27074.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27072.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27071.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27070.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn - a Democrat from Georgia - on his tree farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27068.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27067.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn - a Democrat from Georgia - on his tree farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27065.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27057.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27057-2.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27055.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27055-2.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27054.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27053.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27053-2.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27052.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27051.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27052-2.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27050.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27048.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27046.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27045.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27044.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27043.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27039.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27041.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27040.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27038.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn a democrat from Georgia talks with Senator Paul Tsongas (right) and Atlanta businessman and insurance executive Jesse Hill (left) at a Georgia Democratic Party dinner
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27036.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27034.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27033.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27032.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27031.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27030.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27029.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27027.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27026.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27025.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27013.psd
  • © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27012.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn - a Democrat from Georgia - on his tree farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27007.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn - a Democrat from Georgia - on his tree farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27006.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn - a Democrat from Georgia - on his tree farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27003.psd
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn - a Democrat from Georgia - on his tree farm in Perry, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn -27000.psd
  • A silhouetted President Bill Clinton (left) talks with US Senator Sam Nunn (D-GA). Nunn is chairman of the powerful senate Armed Services Committee. A large American flag hangs in the background.
    © Ken Hawkins © Ken Hawkins Clinton_...tif
  • U.S. Senator Sam Nunn a democrat from Georgia talks with Senator Paul Tsongas (right) and Atlanta businessman and insurance executive Jesse Hill (left) at a Georgia Democratic Party dinner
    © Ken Hawkins Sam Nunn_KenHawkins372.tif
  • A B-1 bomber takes on fuel from an airborne KC-130 tanker over Eastern Colorado.
    B-1_Ken Hawkins 149.jpg
  • A B-1 bomber takes on fuel from an airborne KC-130 tanker over Eastern Colorado. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below - -- Determine pricing and license this image, simply by clicking "Add To Cart" below --
    JKH007.jpg
  • A demonstrator raises a clenched fist toward antiwar protestors on the U.S. Capitol grounds and the Mall during massive demonstrations against the Vietnam war on April 23, 1971 as Lt. John Kerry prepares to speak. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkins_kerry022.jpg
  • Antiwar protestors on the U.S. Capitol grounds and the Mall during massive demonstrations against the Vietnam war on April 23, 1971 as Lt. John Kerry prepares to speak. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkins_kerry020.jpg
  • A demonstrator raises a clenched fist toward antiwar protestors on the U.S. Capitol grounds and the Mall during massive demonstrations against the Vietnam war on April 23, 1971 as Lt. John Kerry prepares to speak. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkins_kerry021.jpg
  • On April 22, 1971, Vietnam veteran Lt. John Kerry became the first Vietnam veteran to testify before Congress about the war, when he appeared before a Senate committee hearing on proposals relating to ending the war.<br />
Kerry is shown here speaking on the U.S. Capitol steps the day after his testimony - April 23, 1971 - as he participated in a demonstration with thousands of other veterans in which he and other veterans threw their medals and ribbons over a fence erected at the front steps of the United States Capitol building to dramatize their opposition to the war. - To license this image, click on the shopping cart below -
    © Ken Hawkins hawkins_kerry019.jpg
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