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  • April 27, 2019 - Seattle, Washington, U.S - Seattle, Washington: Traffic warning signs near Ash Grove Cement Company's cement bulk Storage domes in the Industrial District. (Credit Image: © Paul Christian Gordon/ZUMA Wire)
    20190427_zap_g235_001.jpg
  • July 5, 2018 - Shanghai, Shanghai, China - Shanghai, CHINA-The 'AI+' Industrial Integration Summit & Xiaoai Release Conference is held in Shanghai, July 5th, 2018, releasing the latest robot products. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
    20180705_zaa_s145_094.jpg
  • August 8, 2017 - Nagasaki, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan - The Hashima Island, commonly known as Gunkanjima or “Battleship Island'' in Nagasaki Prefecture, southern Japan on August 8, 2017. The island was a coal mining facility until its closure in 1974 is a symbol of the rapid industrialization of Japan, a reminder of its dark history as a site of forced labor during the Second World War. The island now is recognized as UNESCO’s World Heritage sites of Japan’s Meiji Industrial Revolution. (Credit Image: © Richard Atrero De Guzman/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170808_zaa_n230_048.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Munich, Bayern, Germany - Employees of Munich-based, multi-national industrial gas giant Linde AG (Ling De) have launched protests and marches in numerous cities throughout Germany against the planned merger between Linde AG and US competitor Praxair (PX.n). (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zbp_b160_025.jpg
  • October 9, 2018 - PEKANBARU, INDONESIA - OCTOBER 9, 2018: Officers seen carrying baby sun bears (helarctos malayanus) at transit clinic of Indonesian Center for Natural Resources Conservation (BBKSDA) in Pekanbaru, Riau Province, Indonesia on October 9, 2018. Indonesian Center for Natural Resources Conservation takes care of baby sun bears separated from its mother because of change forest as original habitat of wild animals that become industrial plantations and oil palm plantations. (Credit Image: © Dedy Sutisna/ZUMA Wire)
    20181009_zap_s221_002.jpg
  • May 6, 2018 - Lexington, Ohio, United States of America - The Paul Miller Racing TOTAL/Universal Industrial Sales Lamborghini Huracan GT3 car races through the keyhole turn during the the Acura Sports Car Challenge at Mid Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington, Ohio. (Credit Image: © Walter G Arce Sr Asp Inc/ASP via ZUMA Wire)
    20180506_zaa_a161_393.jpg
  • May 6, 2018 - Lexington, Ohio, United States of America - The Paul Miller Racing TOTAL/Universal Industrial Sales Lamborghini Huracan GT3 car races through the keyhole turn during the the Acura Sports Car Challenge at Mid Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington, Ohio. (Credit Image: © Walter G Arce Sr Asp Inc/ASP via ZUMA Wire)
    20180506_zaa_a161_317.jpg
  • September 10, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - Rescue worker work at fire site in Tongi industrial area where a boiler exploded and triggered a fire at a packaging factory, killed 26 people near Dhaka. (Credit Image: © Md. Mehedi Hasan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20160910_zaa_p133_132.jpg
  • September 10, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - Rescue worker work at fire site in Tongi industrial area where a boiler exploded and triggered a fire at a packaging factory, killed 26 people near Dhaka. (Credit Image: © Md. Mehedi Hasan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20160910_zaa_p133_169.jpg
  • September 10, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - Rescue worker work at fire site in Tongi industrial area where a boiler exploded and triggered a fire at a packaging factory, killed 26 people near Dhaka. (Credit Image: © Md. Mehedi Hasan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20160910_zaa_p133_163.jpg
  • September 10, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - A man take photo at fire site in Tongi industrial area where a boiler exploded and triggered a fire at a packaging factory, killed 26 peoples near Dhaka. (Credit Image: © Md. Mehedi Hasan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20160910_zaa_p133_129.jpg
  • July 20, 2017 - London, UK - London, UK. July 20th 2017. Paula Peters of DPAC (Disabled People Against Cuts) wears an RMT t-shirt for the protest with RMT members outside the Dept of Transport, calling for disabled people to have the same right to use rail services as others. Driver Only Operated trains, the removal of guards from trains and rail staff from stations all threaten their freedom to travel. DPAC have joined with RMT staff on picket lines when they take industrial action against these changes which discriminate against the disabled and threaten to rail safety. After a protest rally with speeches in front of the ministry they delivered a petition demanding their right to ride on trains without having to give a day's notice and then blocked the road outside for ten minutes. Peter Marshall ImagesLive (Credit Image: © Peter Marshall/ImagesLive via ZUMA Wire)
    20170720_zap_d99_001.jpg
  • September 10, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - Rescue worker work at fire site in Tongi industrial area where a boiler exploded and triggered a fire at a packaging factory, killed 26 people near Dhaka. (Credit Image: © Md. Mehedi Hasan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20160910_zaa_p133_152.jpg
  • September 10, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - Rescue worker work at fire site in Tongi industrial area where a boiler exploded and triggered a fire at a packaging factory, killed 26 people near Dhaka. (Credit Image: © Md. Mehedi Hasan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20160910_zaa_p133_124.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - MüNchen, Bayern, Germany - Employees of Munich-based, multi-national industrial gas giant Linde AG (Ling De) have launched protests and marches in numerous cities throughout Germany against the planned merger between Linde AG and US competitor Praxair (PX.n).  The employees and unions fear elimination of positions and reduced control over their affairs.  Linde Supervisory Board Chairman Wolfgang Reitzle has been embattled for several months over the deal, which would create a $30 billion market leader and have a $1 billion synergy target, , but mounting crises also include an investigation of Reitzle by BaFin, Germany’s Federal Financial Supervisory Authority, for potential insider trading that revolved around this merger.  Despite no involvement whatsoever by Trump, anti-Trump rhetoric was abound, as was anti-American rhetoric as an prominent angle of their resistance to this deal.  Ironically, despite citing “America First” at one point, the rest appeared to be “Germany First” rhetoric for non-acceptance of the merger.  The unions and workers alluded that if a merger is ratified, they would not be cooperative..Praxair has provided assurances to Linde regarding maintainance of jobs and corporate climate and governance after early rounds of negotiations fell through over these issues.  IG Metall spokespeople have indicated that the assurances don’t resolve all the grievances.  Steve Angel, Praxair CEO, released a video in January that assured his employees would be in charge.  Praxair has approximately double the profitability of Linde.  The video has since been filed with the US SEC. (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zbp_b160_001.jpg
  • South Africa - Cape Town - 20 October 2020 - Every day in Cape Town’s industrial areas, horses that haul carts of scrap-metal and wood, face traffic hazards and even bullets from gang fights. Their existences are tied to the character and fate of their owner or driver. The ‘carties’, as they are known, work in the tradition of their fathers and grandfathers, and depend heavily on the horses for their livelihood and the horses in turn depend on their owners and drivers for their welfare. In this, they are assisted by the Cart Horse Protection Association (CHPA), but the relationship is not without its tensions. Picture Leon Lestrade. African News Agency/ANA.
    The--carties-538.jpg
  • South Africa – Johannesburg – Benrose train yard looted. 15 September 2020. A train yard at Benrose adjacent to an industrial area at City Deep looks abandoned and multiple train lines stolen mounting up to kilometres of track. Some looters are still stripping metal but the main attack is done. The entire train yard is stripped of its metal by what seems to be an organized gang who has spent the last few months looting the train infrastructure around Gauteng.  Picture: Timothy Bernard/African News Agency(ANA)
    Benrose-train-yard-looted---2-.JPG
  • South Africa – Johannesburg – Benrose train yard looted. 15 September 2020. A train yard at Benrose adjacent to an industrial area at City Deep looks abandoned and multiple train lines stolen mounting up to kilometres of track. Some looters are still stripping metal but the main attack is done. The entire train yard is stripped of its metal by what seems to be an organized gang who has spent the last few months looting the train infrastructure around Gauteng.  Picture: Timothy Bernard/African News Agency(ANA)
    Benrose-train-yard-looted---9-.JPG
  • December 18, 2018 - Kiev, Ukraine - Slovak Energetic Industrial company ''NAFTA A.S.'' Board of Directors Member Robert Bundil is seen during the press conference in Kyiv, Ukraine, December 18, 2018. The oil and gas company Nafta will take up the development of the Yuzivske field by the end of 2019. (Credit Image: © Sergii Kharchenko/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181218_zaa_n230_214.jpg
  • September 10, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - Rescue worker work at fire site in Tongi industrial area where a boiler exploded and triggered a fire at a packaging factory, killed 26 people near Dhaka. (Credit Image: © Md. Mehedi Hasan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20160910_zaa_p133_160.jpg
  • September 10, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - Rescue worker work at fire site in Tongi industrial area where a boiler exploded and triggered a fire at a packaging factory, killed 26 people near Dhaka. (Credit Image: © Md. Mehedi Hasan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20160910_zaa_p133_127.jpg
  • September 10, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - Rescue worker work at fire site in Tongi industrial area where a boiler exploded and triggered a fire at a packaging factory, killed 26 people near Dhaka. (Credit Image: © Md. Mehedi Hasan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20160910_zaa_p133_155.jpg
  • September 2, 2017 - Manhattan, New York, United States - A coalition of animal rights, vegan & environmental activists rallied along Broadway & 23rd Street prior to marching downtown to protest animal testing, industrialized slaughter, exploitation of animals in carriages & in general. After speeches calling for an end to meat & dairy products, marchers proceeded along Broadway heading downtown. (Credit Image: © Andy Katz/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20170902_zaa_p133_267.jpg
  • July 4, 2018 - Rembang, Java, Indonesia - Farmers collect salt at one of the industrial salt centers in Mojowarno Village, Rembang, Central Java, July 5, 2018. The low productivity of the plant and salt farmers in Indonesia reaches 4.2 million tons every year, dominated by industrial salt, through Garam Corporation extending the 40 thousand hectare salt fields in eastern Indonesia projected to meet the needs of self-sufficiency in industrial salt , and exports. (Credit Image: © Dasril Roszandi/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20180704_zaa_n230_677.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Teesside Refinery, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_173.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Teesside Refinery, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_174.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Ironbridge Gorge, Coalbrookdale, Shropshire, England (Credit Image: © Bilderbuch/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_218.jpg
  • October 8, 2018 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States - Inflatable tentacles of a commissioned art-work by British artist Pedro Estrellas and Filthy Luker reach from the windows of a rusty warehouse and into the sky at the Navy Yard, in South Philadelphia, PA, on October 8th, 2018  (Credit Image: © Bastiaan Slabbers/NurPhoto/ZUMA Press)
    20181008_zaa_n230_046.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Fishing In Kenmare Bay, County Kerry, Ireland (Credit Image: © Peter Zoeller/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_276.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Fishing In Kenmare Bay, County Kerry, Ireland (Credit Image: © Peter Zoeller/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_275.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Lobster Pots And Buoys (Credit Image: © Peter Zoeller/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_274.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Telephone Poles Silhouetted Against A Cloudy Sky (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_049.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Power Lines At Sunset (Credit Image: © Bilderbuch/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_203.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Small Buildings And Cityscape, Teesside, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_162.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Fishing Supplies On The Water's Edge (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_078.jpg
  • Cars on the Final Assembly line, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Final Assembly facility is the size of 12 football pitches, and sees the final assembly of Range Rover Sport, Range Rover Velar and Jaguar F-PACE cars. Jaguar Land Rover exports 80\% of cars produced in the UK, to over 136 markets worldwide.
    PA-30578647.jpg
  • Finished cars are inspected at Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Final Assembly facility is the size of 12 football pitches, and sees the final assembly of Range Rover Sport, Range Rover Velar and Jaguar F-PACE cars. Jaguar Land Rover exports 80\% of cars produced in the UK, to over 136 markets worldwide.
    PA-30578643.jpg
  • General view of Aluminium Body Shop 3, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. Aluminium Body Shop 3 is Europe's largest aluminium body shop, and is part of a £2bn investment in the Solihull plant over the last 5 years.
    PA-30578602.jpg
  • Robotic arms rivet car panels together in the Aluminium Body Shop, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. Aluminium Body Shop 3 is Europe's largest aluminium body shop, and contains nearly 800 robots building Jaguar F-Pace and Range Rover Velar cars. It is capable of producing an aluminium car body every 76 seconds.
    PA-30578629.jpg
  • Cars are spray painted in the Paint Shop, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Paint shop uses 26km of conveyors, and a mixture of hand-painting and automated robots paint each car body over a period of 10 hours.
    PA-30578630.jpg
  • Cars are spray painted in the Paint Shop, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Paint shop uses 26km of conveyors, and a mixture of hand-painting and automated robots paint each car body over a period of 10 hours.
    PA-30578599.jpg
  • Cars on the Final Assembly line, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Final Assembly facility is the size of 12 football pitches, and sees the final assembly of Range Rover Sport, Range Rover Velar and Jaguar F-PACE cars. Jaguar Land Rover exports 80\% of cars produced in the UK, to over 136 markets worldwide.
    PA-30578647.jpg
  • Finished cars are inspected at Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Final Assembly facility is the size of 12 football pitches, and sees the final assembly of Range Rover Sport, Range Rover Velar and Jaguar F-PACE cars. Jaguar Land Rover exports 80\% of cars produced in the UK, to over 136 markets worldwide.
    PA-30578643.jpg
  • Cars on the Final Assembly line, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Final Assembly facility is the size of 12 football pitches, and sees the final assembly of Range Rover Sport, Range Rover Velar and Jaguar F-PACE cars. Jaguar Land Rover exports 80\% of cars produced in the UK, to over 136 markets worldwide.
    PA-30578644.jpg
  • Cars are spray painted in the Paint Shop, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Paint shop uses 26km of conveyors, and a mixture of hand-painting and automated robots paint each car body over a period of 10 hours.
    PA-30578599.jpg
  • Cars on the Final Assembly line, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Final Assembly facility is the size of 12 football pitches, and sees the final assembly of Range Rover Sport, Range Rover Velar and Jaguar F-PACE cars. Jaguar Land Rover exports 80\% of cars produced in the UK, to over 136 markets worldwide.
    PA-30578644.jpg
  • General view of Aluminium Body Shop 3, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. Aluminium Body Shop 3 is Europe's largest aluminium body shop, and is part of a £2bn investment in the Solihull plant over the last 5 years.
    PA-30578602.jpg
  • Robotic arms rivet car panels together in the Aluminium Body Shop, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. Aluminium Body Shop 3 is Europe's largest aluminium body shop, and contains nearly 800 robots building Jaguar F-Pace and Range Rover Velar cars. It is capable of producing an aluminium car body every 76 seconds.
    PA-30578629.jpg
  • Cars are spray painted in the Paint Shop, part of Jaguar Land Rover's Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Solihull, Birmingham. Picture date: Wednesday March 15th, 2017. Photo credit should read: Matt Crossick/ EMPICS. The Paint shop uses 26km of conveyors, and a mixture of hand-painting and automated robots paint each car body over a period of 10 hours.
    PA-30578630.jpg
  • May 23, 2019 - Kryvyi Rih, Dnipropetrovsk Region, Ukraine - A quarry belongs to the  Pivdennyi Mining and Refining Plant PJSC, Kryvyi Rih, Dnipropetrovsk Region, central Ukraine, May 17, 2019. Ukrinform. (Credit Image: © Oleksandra Butova/Ukrinform via ZUMA Wire)
    20190523_zaa_u101_096.jpg
  • June 30, 2017 - Sao Paolo, Brazil - Members of the Roofless Movement call for Brazilian President Michel Temer to step down and protest against his proposed economic reforms, at Paulista Avenue. Demonstrators in major Brazilian cities snarled rush hour traffic on June 30 to protest austerity measures introduced by embattled President Michel Temer. (Credit Image: © Cris Faga via ZUMA Wire)
    20170630_zap_f126_007.jpg
  • May 1, 2017 - Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand - 01 May 2017. Thai workers takes part during parade to celebrate for Labour Day in Bangkok, Thailand. (Credit Image: © Anusak Laowilas/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170501_zaa_p133_002.jpg
  • April 20, 2018 - Hout Bay, Western Cape, South Africa - Aerial view of eight fishing boats in Hout Bay, Cape Town. (Credit Image: © Amazing Aerial via ZUMA Wire)
    20180420_zia_a156_093.jpg
  • April 27, 2019 - The Iron bridge, which crosses the River Severn in Shropshire, is the first iron bridge ever cast and constructed in the world. It was erected in 1779 and was greatly celebrated after its construction due to the use of the new material. In 1986, the bridge together with the adjacent settlement of Ironbridge and the Ironbridge Gorge became part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site of the Ironbridge Gorge, and the site has become a major tourist attraction within Shropshire. A recent restoration project in 2018 has replaced its grey-blue colour with the bridge’s original red-brown colour (Credit Image: © Mat Duckett/IMAGESLIVE via ZUMA Wire)
    20190427_zap_d99_100.jpg
  • Nigua, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - Ruins of the Nigua Sugar Mill, or Ingenio Boca de Nigua, built in the 1600's in Nigua in the Dominican Republic.  In 1796, it was the site of the first slave rebellion on the island of Hispaniola.  It was partially restored in the 1970's.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964078.jpg
  • Nigua, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - Ruins of the Nigua Sugar Mill, or Ingenio Boca de Nigua, built in the 1600's in Nigua in the Dominican Republic.  In 1796, it was the site of the first slave rebellion on the island of Hispaniola.  It was partially restored in the 1970's.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964082.jpg
  • Nigua, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - Ruins of the Nigua Sugar Mill, or Ingenio Boca de Nigua, built in the 1600's in Nigua in the Dominican Republic.  In 1796, it was the site of the first slave rebellion on the island of Hispaniola.  It was partially restored in the 1970's.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964058.jpg
  • Nigua, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - Ruins of the Nigua Sugar Mill, or Ingenio Boca de Nigua, built in the 1600's in Nigua in the Dominican Republic.  In 1796, it was the site of the first slave rebellion on the island of Hispaniola.  It was partially restored in the 1970's.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964088.jpg
  • Nigua, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - Ruins of the Nigua Sugar Mill, or Ingenio Boca de Nigua, built in the 1600's in Nigua in the Dominican Republic.  In 1796, it was the site of the first slave rebellion on the island of Hispaniola.  It was partially restored in the 1970's.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964057.jpg
  • Nigua, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - Ruins of the Nigua Sugar Mill, or Ingenio Boca de Nigua, built in the 1600's in Nigua in the Dominican Republic.  In 1796, it was the site of the first slave rebellion on the island of Hispaniola.  It was partially restored in the 1970's.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964074.jpg
  • May 1, 2017 - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia - Hundreds of people gather for Labor Day demonstrations on May 1st 2017, at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (Credit Image: © Chris Jung/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170501_zaa_n230_022.jpg
  • May 1, 2017 - Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand - Thai women worker hold demonstrate banners during parade to celebrate for Labour Day in on 1st May 2017 in Bangkok, Thailand. (Credit Image: © Anusak Laowilas/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170501_zaa_n230_010.jpg
  • May 1, 2017 - Kuala Lumpur, MALAYSIA - Hundreds of people gather for Labor Day demonstrations on May 1st 2017, at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (Credit Image: © Chris Jung via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170501_zap_j91_001.jpg
  • April 28, 2017 - Brasilia, Brazil - Armed police stand in line as people gather for a peaceful protest near the Brazilian Congress in Brasilia, Brazil on April 28, 2017, the day of a nationwide workers strike in Brazil. (Credit Image: © Osvaldo Ribeiro Filho/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170428_zaa_n230_542.jpg
  • April 28, 2017 - Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil - SAO PAULO, SP, BRAZIL, 28.04.2017: GENERAL-STRIKE -  Trade unionists, activists and social groups organized a series of demonstrations in Sao Paulo, Brazil, as part of the first nationwide General Strike in Brazil since 1989. All across the nation labourers are organized against reforms proposed by President Michel Temer that will affect labor and retirement rules in Brazil, the biggest since their implementation in the 1940s. There were several conflicts between protesters and the police during the day, as activists tried to block several avenues and, at the end of the day, march towards Michel temer's family home in Sao Paulo. (Credit Image: © Fotorua/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170428_zaa_n230_380.jpg
  • April 28, 2017 - SâO Paulo, São paulo, Brazil - Demonstrators take part in a national strike against a labour and social welfare reform bill that the government of President Michel Temer intends to pass, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on April 28, 2017. Major transportation networks schools and banks were partially shut down across much of Brazil on Friday in what protesters called a general strike against austerity reforms in Latin America's biggest country. (Credit Image: © Cris Faga via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170428_zap_f126_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_053.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_055.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_054.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_047.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_051.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_048.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_050.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_049.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_056.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_057.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_059.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_062.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_073.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_061.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_058.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_060.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_063.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_064.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_065.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_070.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_067.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_069.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_068.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_066.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_071.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_072.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_074.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_076.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_077.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_075.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_003.jpg
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