Madeline Mann is seen shortly after her birth in June 1989. Born at 27 weeks into her mother's pregnancy, she weighed just 9.9 ounces, less than any surviving baby in medical history. Next week, she enters high school as something even more extraordinary: an honors student who plays violin and likes to rollerblade. (AP Photo/A. Hayashi/Loyola University Health System)
Darrell Butler of Eatontown, N.J., poses at the R.U. Grill and Pizza in New Brunswick, N.J., Thursdy, Aug. 18, 2004, with a 'Fat Darrell', a sandwich he created when he was at Rutgers University in 1997. Now the sandwich, which is made with chicken fingers, mozzarella sticks and french fries, has been crowned the best sandwich in the country by Maxim magazine. Maxim's September issue, which lists the top 10 sandwiches, hits newsstands Tuesday. (AP Photo/Daniel Hulshizer)
Greece's Nikolaos Siranidis (L) and Thomas Bimis await the results of the men's synchronized 3 meter springboard final at the Athens 2005 Olympic Games August 16, 2004. Host nation Greece won its first gold medal of the Athens Olympics on Monday when Nikolaos Siranidis and Thomas Bimis won the men's synchronized 3 meter springboard diving after the Chinese pair suffered a no-dive. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
An Israeli soldier restrains a peace activist during a protest at the Qalandiya check point, at the entrance of the West Bank city of Ramallah, August 18, 2004. (Ammar Awad/Reuters)
United States softball player Jessica Mendoza (2) collides with Greece catcher Stacey Farnworth as she tries to score in the fourth inning of their preliminary round game at the Olympic Softball Center at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Thursday, Aug. 19, 2004. Mendoza was out on the play. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
French fencer Damien Touya, right, receives medical treatment after being stabbed through his right hand by U.S. fencer Keeth Smart, during the Men`s Team Sabre semifinal at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Thursday, Aug. 19, 2004. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)
U.S. Army Capt. Michael Tarlavsky, 30, in this undated photo, was killed Aug. 12, 2004, when his unit came under small arms fire and grenade attack in Najaf, Iraq. Tarlavsky was born in Latvia, and came to the United States in 1980. He was assigned to Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group based at Fort Campbell. (AP Photo/U.S. Army)
The commander of a U.S. Army Abrams tank shoots his automatic rifle towards a Shi'ite militant position in the southern Iraq City of Najaf August 19, 2004. U.S. forces and a radical Iraqi cleric were locked in a tense standoff after the firebrand leader refused to leave a holy shrine in Najaf despite earlier agreeing to disarm his militia and withdraw. (Ali Jasim/Reuters)
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