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Posted: 10/30/2012 2:08:23 PM EST
Children fill drinking and cooking water from a public water hose on open ground in Baghdad's eastern suburb of Fadaliayah, Iraq, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. The neighborhood has no municipal water supply. The US allocated billions of dollars to rebuild Iraq's water infrastructure shattered by war, sanctions and neglect, but security issues, corruption and inefficiency have left millions of Iraqis still without basic sanitation or piped water.(AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)
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Posted: 10/30/2012 2:08:23 PM EST
Iraqis fill drinking and cooking water from a public water hose on open ground in Baghdad's eastern suburb of Fadaliayah, Iraq, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. The neighborhood has no municipal water supply. The US allocated billions of dollars to rebuild Iraq's water infrastructure shattered by war, sanctions and neglect, but security issues, corruption and inefficiency have left millions of Iraqis still without basic sanitation or piped water. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)
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Posted: 10/30/2012 2:08:23 PM EST
Saad Abdullah helps his sister carry a pan of water for drinking and cooking filled from a public water hose on open ground in Baghdad's eastern suburb of Fadaliayah, Iraq, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. The neighborhood has no municipal water supply. The US allocated billions of dollars to rebuild Iraq's water infrastructure shattered by war, sanctions and neglect, but security issues, corruption and inefficiency have left millions of Iraqis still without basic sanitation or piped water.(AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)
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Posted: 10/23/2012 10:55:11 PM EST
This undated promotional handout picture shows holocaust survivors Bella Katz (L) and Regina Karolinski (Oma) shopping for ingredients in Berlin, where they share an apartment that is the setting for "Oma & Bella", a documentary about their cooking and its connection to their past. Scenes from the new documentary "Oma & Bella" about two octogenarian friends living together in Berlin are warm, but the hunger to learn more about their past as Holocaust survivors creates a suspenseful undercurrent throughout the film, which is being released on iTunes and Amazon in the United States on Tuesday. The sometimes jarring shifts from cozy kitchen scenes of chopping and sauteing to starkly lit interviews in which they reluctantly reveal some of the horrors they survived as Jewish girls in World War Two are purposeful, filmmaker Alexa Karolinski said. To match Story FILM-OMA&BELLA/ REUTERS/Bella Lieberberg/Handout
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Posted: 10/23/2012 10:55:11 PM EST
This undated promotional handout picture shows holocaust survivors Bella Katz (R) and Regina Karolinski (Oma) riding on a boat through Berlin, where they share an apartment that is the setting for "Oma & Bella", a documentary about their cooking and its connection to their past. Scenes from the new documentary "Oma & Bella" about two octogenarian friends living together in Berlin are warm, but the hunger to learn more about their past as Holocaust survivors creates a suspenseful undercurrent throughout the film, which is being released on iTunes and Amazon in the United States on Tuesday. The sometimes jarring shifts from cozy kitchen scenes of chopping and sauteing to starkly lit interviews in which they reluctantly reveal some of the horrors they survived as Jewish girls in World War Two are purposeful, filmmaker Alexa Karolinski said. To match Story FILM-OMA&BELLA/ REUTERS/Bella Lieberberg/Handout
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Posted: 10/23/2012 10:55:11 PM EST
This undated promotional handout picture shows holocaust survivors Bella Katz (R) and Regina Karolinski (Oma) holding a container of herring in the kitchen of the Berlin apartment they share, the setting for "Oma & Bella", a documentary about their cooking and its connection to their past. Scenes from the new documentary "Oma & Bella" about two octogenarian friends living together in Berlin are warm, but the hunger to learn more about their past as Holocaust survivors creates a suspenseful undercurrent throughout the film, which is being released on iTunes and Amazon in the United States on Tuesday. The sometimes jarring shifts from cozy kitchen scenes of chopping and sauteing to starkly lit interviews in which they reluctantly reveal some of the horrors they survived as Jewish girls in World War Two are purposeful, filmmaker Alexa Karolinski said. To match Story FILM-OMA&BELLA/ REUTERS/Bella Lieberberg/Handout
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Posted: 10/16/2012 4:02:00 PM EST
A vendor selling eggs, herbs and cooking oils serves a customer at a small food market in central Beijing October 16, 2012. REUTERS/David Gray
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Posted: 10/10/2012 11:48:30 AM EST
This image released by ABC shows Ann Romney, wife of Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney during a cooking segment on "Good Morning America," Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2012 in New York. Romney served as a guest co-host on the popular morning show. (AP Photo/ABC, Ida Mae Astute)