Columns and second ratings below are my predictions; rows and first ratings below are predictions of volunteers.
| Indoor | Likely Indoor | Ambiguous | Likely Outdoor | Outdoor | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indoor | 401 | 15 | 7 | 4 | 4 |
| Likely Indoor | 47 | 12 | 3 | 5 | 3 |
| Ambiguous | 21 | 9 | 14 | 9 | 7 |
| Likely Outdoor | 13 | 10 | 2 | 12 | 10 |
| Outdoor | 35 | 14 | 14 | 66 | 938 |
Image #15822
Prime Minister John Major arrives to hear the general election results from his Huntingdon constituency, May 2. Tony Blair's new-look Labour party stormed back to power for the first time since 1979 with a landslide victory on a scale unseen for 165 years. Major kept his Huntington seat.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #16062
U.S. special envoy Dennis Ross (R) speaks to journalists with Palestinian President Yasser Arafat after the two met late May 9. Ross flew to Egypt from Jerusalem after making no progress in overnight talks with Arafat on reviving frozen Israeli-PLO peace talks which were paralyzed by nearly two months of crisis over Israel's building of a new housing project in Arab East Jerusalem.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #16792
Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien speaks to supporters in Quebec, May 31. Canadians vote in federal elections June 2.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #16815
French socialist leader Lionel Jospin waves to supporters after the announcement of the first forecasts of the second round parliamentary elections in the village of Cintegabelle, his constituency near Toulouse June 1. Jospin scored a bitter-sweet triumph on Sunday, leading the French left to an upset parliamentary election victory.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #16902
Pope John Paul II prays behind the figure of a crucified Christ at an open air mass in the central Polish city of Gniezno June 3 on the fourth day of his 11-day visit to his native land. Police estimate some 250,000 people came to the mass in Gniezno, which had been Poland's capital until the 13th century.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #16926
A lone flower sits at the base of the controversial statue, the "Pillar of Shame," June 4 in Hong Kong's Victoria Park during a candlelight vigil. The statue, which depicts twisted, writhing bodies, was created to commemorate the hundreds of pro-democracy students who were killed in Beijing's bloody military crackdown June 4, 1989.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #17318
Hand out artwork of the new European Currency Unit (ECU) presented in Amsterdam during the European Summit, June 16. One ECU has a value of 1,13358 US Dollars.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #17387
This photo of the FBI's Ten Most Wanted web page, with an offer of a $2 million reward, shows murder suspect Mir Aimal Kansi, the suspected gunman in the 1993 attack outside CIA headquarters which killed two and wounded three others. Kansi was arraigned June 18 in Fairfax, Virginia. The FBI said that Kansi, a Pakistani immigrant, had been delivered abroad by unidentified Afghan individuals.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #17435
This controversial newspaper cartoon based on the memorable photo of a firefighter carrying a dead child from the Oklahoma bombing has sparked outrage across America. The cartoon by Steve Benson, published in the Arizona Republic June 11, prompted the mother of Baylee Almon, the girl shown in the photograph, to call for an apology, and has been condemned by firefighters nationwide. The cartoon shows a firefighter labelled "death-penalty fanatics" holding the lifeless child, who in the cartoon pleads "Please, no more killing," to which the firefighter replies, "Oh, stop your whining!" [Drawing by Steve Benson/Reprinted by permission of United Feature Syndicate, Reuters]
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #18041
This image shows the surface of Mars after the spacecraft Pathfinder landed on the surface of the Red Planet July 4. The air bags from the Patfinder can be seen in the black and white picture released by NASA.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #18427
Rescue workers dredge the Yarkon River beneath a collapsed bridge at an Israeli sports stadium to search for Australian athletes who plunged into the water moments before the opening parade of an international Jewish sporting event, July 14. One person was killed and at least 66 were injured.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #18432
Rescue workers check the Yarkon River beneath a collapsed bridge at an Israeli sports stadium to search for Australian athletes who plunged into the water moments before the opening parade of an international Jewish sporting event, the Maccabiah games. One person was killed and at least 66 were injured.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #20661
(FILE PHOTO, NOV-95) Mother Teresa, who won the Nobel Peace Prize for helping India's poor and is seen here in this file photo, has died September 5 of cardiac arrest in her religious order's headquarters in eastern India.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #22146
This 29 September file photo taken by a geostationary meteorological satellite and released 30 September by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows smoke over Indonesia caused by several fires that have been plaguing the area for weeks. Reportedly fires are blazing across much of indonesia, including the islands of Borneo, Sumatra, Java, Sulawesi, and are threatening the tourist island of Bali.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #22523
Palestinian prisoner George Rafidi (C) is greeted by his relatives as he returns to his West Bank village, Jifna, 06 October. Rafidi, a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), was freed with 20 other prisoners in a deal between Jordan and Israel that also included the release of Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the spiritual leader of Islamic Resistance Movement HAMAS, in return for two Israeli Mossad involved in the failed assassination attempt of a HAMAS official in Amman.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #22575
A Palestinian supporter of Islamic Resistance Movement HAMAS kisses the hand of the organization's spiritual leader, Sheikh Ahmad Yassin, in Gaza City, October 7. Yassin offered during an interview with the Israeli Television to stop suicide attacks against Israel if Israel stops "aggression against Palestinians" such as demolition of houses and land confiscations. Yassin was freed by Israel as part of a deal to obtain the release from Jordan of two Israeli agents involved in the attempted assassination of a HAMAS official in Amman.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #23500
South African President Nelson Mandela, defying U.S. objections to his visit, stands with Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi on the first day of his two-day state visit to the North African country, October 22. Mandela arrived in Libya for a visit described by diplomats as the most important for Gaddafi since the United Nations clamped sanctions on his nation in 1992.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #23916
This undated file picture shows Great Train robber Ronnie Biggs. Britain 29 October formally asked Brazil to extradite Biggs, now aged 68. The most notorious fugitive from British justice escaped from London's Wandsworth Prison in 1965 where he was serving a 30-year sentence for his part in robbing 2.6 million sterling pounds from a Glasgow-to-London mail train. Britain and Brazil ratified an extradition treaty in August, which closed the legal loophole which has allowed Biggs to live in Rio de Janeiro as a freeman for the past 27 years.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #24273
Jean-Paul Deneuville, general delegate of the National Federation of Road Transporters (FNTR), the main component of the Union of Transport Federations (UFT), itself the main employer's union for French truckers, arrives November 5 for negotiations in La Defense, a suburb of Paris. Employers and trade unions began talks in an attempt to end a French trucker's strike that is crippling the country and disrupting transport in much of western Europe.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #25052
Japanese Red Army hijacking suspect Jun Nishikawa(R), who was captured in Bolivia last week, is escorted by police upon his arrival to Narita Airport in Japan 18 November. Nishikawa ,47, was wanted in Japan on suspiction of taking part in the hijacking of a Japanese airliner in 1977 and an attack on the US Embassy in Malaysia in 1975.
First Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #25117
Taiwan serial murder suspect Chen Chin-hsin (C) emerges in handcuffs accompanied by his wife (R) and police after a 24-hour hostage standoff in the home of South African envoy Mac Alexander November 19 in Taipei. Chen, warned for a string of killings, broke into Alexander's home on Tuesday and held his family hostage. The standoff ended on Wednesday when Chen agreed to give up his last hostage, Alexander's wife Anne, and surrender to police.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #25143
U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright carries some files as she arrives at United Nations headquarters in Geneva, November 20. Albright met with the Foreign Ministers of France, Britain and Russia for talks on the Iraq crisis sparked by Iraq's expulsion of U.S. arms inspectors forming part of a United Nations team.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #25178
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein chairs a joint meeting of the Revolutionary Command Council and the ruling Ba'ath party in Baghdad, November 20. Iraq on Thursday approved an accord worked out with Russia allowing United Nations arms monitors including Americans to return to Baghdad and resume inspections, apparently defusing a three-week-old crisis.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #25628
A combo picture shows the cover (L) and first page of a catalogue distributed by Egypt's State Information Service, November 27. The booklet entitled "Call to Combat Terrorism" names 14 of its most-wanted Moslem militants whom it alleges are masterminding violent acts from abroad.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #25748
Czech Prime Minister Vaclav Klaus (C), chairman of the senior government coalition Civic Democratic Party (ODS), is flanked by the party's vice-chairman Miroslav Macek (R) and press spokesman Vaclav Musilek (L) as he announces his resignation at a press conference in Prague November 30. The premier stepped down following a scandal over his party's financing.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #25839
French President Jacques Chirac (R) listens to Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar (C) December 2 during his tour of cathedrals in Salamanca as French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin looks on ahead of the last meetings of the Franco-Spanish summit.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #25928
(UNDATED FILE PHOTO) Undated file picture of Stompie Seipei. President Nelson Mandela's ex-wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, who has been accused at South Africa's truth commission of ordering the death of Stompie Seipei, hugged and kissed the boy's mother Joyce Seipei December 4 at the hearings. (B&W ONLY)
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #26607
President Nelson Mandela addresses the ruling African National Congress (ANC) 50th congress at Northwest University of Mmabato, northwest of Johannesburg, South Africa, December 16. Mandela, 79, who relinquished the leadership of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) at the congress, also outlined his wish for a cultural, political and economic resurgence in Africa.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #27086
Lead Prosecutor Larry Mackey (R) makes a statement to reporters as Oklahoma City prosecutor Patrick Ryan (L) looks on after the verdict for Terry Nichols December 23 at the federal courthouse in Denver, Colorado. The jury found Nichols guilty of conspiracy and involuntary manslaughter in the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #29369
A group calling itself the Army of God, which claimed responsibility for two explosions in Georgia last year, said February 2 it carried out a bombing at a Birmingham, Alabama abortion clinic last week that killed one person. The claim was made in a letter to Reuters news agency (shown in this photo) and The Atlanta Journal and Constitution that was intercepted by federal agents on February 2. They said it was similar to letters received last year after bombings at an Atlanta abortion clinic and a gay nightclub.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #29393
A masked member of the so-called "Saddam's Comando" unit takes part in a youth conference in Baghdad February 3. Iraq, which has suffered more than seven years of international sanctions, is facing possible U.S. military action over its refusal to let U.N. inspectors into eight presidential sites. The sign on the shirt reads "Saddam's Comando".
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #29546
Colombian correctional officers load injured inmates of the Modelo prison in Cucuta near the border with Venezuela unto a truck while waiting for medical treatment. Six inmates were reported killed and 35 injured in a riot began by high risk prisoners as they tried to take over a cell block, prison officials said. By midday, the riot was under control.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #32171
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan(R) talks to the Arab League Secretary General Esmat Abdel Meguid in Cairo March 19. Abdel Meguid called for a speedy solution of the UN snactions over the Lockerbie bombing.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY OUTDOOR
Image #33526
Debra Avery surveys the tornado-damaged Oak Grove High School April 11 in Rock Creek, Alabama, where she teaches the ninth grade. A series of tornadoes devastated parts of the southern US states of Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi April 9 leaving 43 people dead.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #33750
Several men stand next to near the damaged basement archives section of the Palace of Justice building April 16 in Asuncion. A bomb exploded April 16 in what Paraguayan Judge Hugo Lopez said may have been a bid to influence a decision as to whether to free jailed presidential frontrunner General Lino Oviedo.
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Image #33811
Vice President Al Gore climbs through a broken window April 17 to view the tornado damage done to Joe's Diner in Nashville. Two tornadoes hit Nashville on April 16, injuring over 100 people and damaging at least 500 buildings. [Pool Photo by Mark Humphrey, Reuters]
First Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Image #33922
This August 1996 file photo shows Mexican writer and Nobel prize winner for literature Octavio Paz who died April 19. Paz is well known for a collection of essays entitled "The Labyrinth of Solitude." The writer died at his home in Mexico City at the age of 84.
First Rating: LIKELY INDOOR
Second Rating: AMBIGUOUS
Number of likely ambiguous images = 37.