Jump to June 2012 archive page: 1 2 3 ... 16
  • Crisis grows at Yida refugee camp in South Sudan

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    Sudanese girls jump rope as many look on at the Yida refugee camp along the border with North Sudan June 30, 2012 in Yida, South Sudan.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    New arrivals wait in long lines to register with UNHCR at the Yida refugee camp along the border with North Sudan, June 30, in Yida, South Sudan.

    Water has been a precious resource with which aid agencies have struggled. Yida refugee camp has swollen to nearly 60,000, as the refugees flee from South Kordofan in North Sudan with new arrivals at 300-600 a day.  The rainy season has increased the numbers of sick children suffering from diarrhea and severe malnutrition as the international aid community struggles to provide basic assistance to the growing population, as most have arrived with only the clothes they are wearing. Many new arrivals walked from 5 days up to 2 weeks or more to reach the camp.

    Related story: Sudan agrees to allow aid in rebel-held border areas
    Related story: ‘Lost Boys’ peril returns in Sudan

  • House burns after struck by lightning in Maryland

    Sam Yu / The Frederick News-Post via AP

    A two-alarm fire started by a lightning strike from a thunderstorm late Friday night engulfs a home north of Frederick, Md., early June 30. The fire was reported at about 11:45 p.m., Friday during a storm system that went through the area. There were numerous reports of trees and power lines down in the area from the storms.

    More coverage of the storms.

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    With more triple-digit heat in the forecast, millions of people in the Mid-Atlantic area were without power on Saturday after violent storms with 80-mph gusts toppled trees, cut power lines and killed six people in Virginia alone.

    A deadly overnight storm uprooted trees around Washington, D.C., and left hundreds of thousands of people without power. NBC's Mike Viqueira reports.

  • Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

    Young fan strains for glimpse of Olympic flame in England

    A young girl squeezes between an honour guard of soldiers to get a glimpse of Johnson Beharry VC carrying the Olympic torch at the National War Memorial on Armed Forces Day, June 30, in Alrewas, Staffordshire, England. Johnson Beharry, holder of the Victoria Cross, the highest military decoration, carried the Olympic flame and respectfully held the torch in front of the Armed Forces Memorial at The National Memorial Arboretum. The Olympic Flame is now on day 43 of a 70-day relay involving 8,000 torchbearers covering 8,000 miles.

    More Olympic news.

  • NASA's Super Guppy delivers piece of space shuttle history to Seattle

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    A crowd in the Georgetown neighborhood of Seattle watches NASA's Super Guppy aircraft approach Boeing Field, carrying a key piece of a space shuttle mockup that will go on display at Seattle's Museum of Flight.


    SEATTLE — It may not be a real space shuttle, but it's ours.

    Today NASA delivered a key piece of the mockup that astronauts used for space shuttle practice to the Museum of Flight in Seattle, my hometown. And it arrived aboard one of the most ungainly-looking airplanes ever built. The wingless mockup is known as the Full Fuselage Trainer, or FFT. The plane has a nickname that's more colorful: the Super Guppy.

    The Super Guppy looks more like a Super Whale. The wide-body turboprop airplane has a cargo hold that's been built up into a bulbous shape, specifically to carry big stuff for outer space. Only five of the Guppies were ever produced, and they were used to cart spacecraft components around for the Gemini, Apollo, Skylab and shuttle programs. This Super Guppy is the only one of its kind still flying, and this week's odyssey with the most important piece of the Full Fuselage Trainer is one of the highest-profile flights the plane has ever taken.


    For decades, the plywood-built FFT sat in a building at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. The crew compartment — the part of the structure that was flown to Seattle today — was outfitted with all the buttons, switches, cockpit displays and middeck lockers that the real shuttles had. None of those gadgets worked, but they helped the astronauts get familiar with the layout before they started handling the real controls. Astronauts could also practice how they'd get out of the shuttle in the event of a landing-strip emergency.

    With the end of the space shuttle era, NASA's Johnson Space Center no longer needed the FFT, so the space agency decided to donate it for display. The Seattle museum made a play for one of the flown shuttles, and even built a shuttle-sized, 15,500-square-foot Space Gallery to display it in. But Seattle lost out to Florida, California, New York and the "other Washington" in the competition for Atlantis, Endeavour, Enterprise and Discovery. The Full Fuselage Trainer served as the consolation prize.

    Most of the FFT's plywood parts could be shipped up by traditional means for later assembly, but the shuttle crew compartment had to be transported all in one piece. That's why NASA's Super Guppy was called into service.

    The airplane has a 25-foot-high, 25-foot-wide, 111-foot-long cargo compartment — big enough to hold the mockup's most awkward piece, even when it's bound up in shrink wrap and a protective steel frame. Over the past couple of days, the Super Guppy has been making a journey from its home at Ellington Air Force Base in Texas, over to California, and then up to Seattle at a top speed of around 200 knots. It wasn't exactly a record-setting pace — but what the Super Guppy lacks in speed, it more than makes up for in the "What the Heck Is That?" department.

    The Guppy flew over my hometown and its surroundings with a Seattle-born astronaut, Greg Johnson, at the controls. Then it floated down to a landing right in front of the museum, which is adjacent to Boeing Field. One of the commentators at the museum called it a "beautifully ugly airplane."

    Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire pointed to the craft with pride as the sky spit down rain. "When we get together in Washington state, we can land the big whale right behind me," she said.

    Museum of Flight

    NASA's Super Guppy and a chase plane fly above the mostly cloudy skies of Seattle.

    Museum of Flight

    After its touchdown at Seattle's Boeing Field, the turboprop-powered Super Guppy taxis over to the Museum of Flight next door.

    Museum of Flight

    The entire front of the Super Guppy swings open to reveal the cargo inside.

    Museum of Flight

    The 65,000-pound Tunner 60K aircraft cargo loader and transporter rolls toward the Super Guppy.

    Museum of Flight

    The cargo compartment for the Full Fuselage Trainer, wrapped in protective plastic, has been taken out of the Super Guppy for a short ride on the Tunner transporter to its new home in the Museum of Flight's Charles Simonyi Space Gallery.

    Several thousand onlookers watched as the Super Guppy's entire front opened up to the side like a four-story-high door. 

    "It's really cool that it's actually able to fly," Allison Kirkman, a 10-year-old student at Spirit Ridge Elementary School in Bellevue, Wash., told me as she watched from the tarmac. "It's an amazing plane, and how they built it is cool, too."

    The shrink-wrapped shuttle crew compartment was moved out of the wide-yawning Super Guppy onto a 65,000-pound mobile transporter, then rolled over to the museum's Charles Simonyi Space Gallery. Over the next couple of months, the shuttle mockup will be assembled in a place of honor, alongside a Russian Soyuz capsule and a prototype lander that was used in Blue Origin's spacecraft development program. Museumgoers like Kirkman will be able to walk through the shuttle mockup's cargo bay — and they might even be able to crawl through the crew compartment, just like the astronauts did.

    Kids, prepare to be amazed ... again.


    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

  • Millions lose power in Washington, D.C., area storm as heat wave continues

    Patrick Semansky / AP

    A worker uses a chainsaw to clear branches from a tree that fell onto the 14th fairway at Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Md., Saturday, June 30, 2012, after a strong storm blew through overnight. The AT&T National golf tournament was postponed to allow workers to clear the course. More than two million people across the eastern U.S. lost power after violent storms and two people died, including a 90-year-old woman asleep in bed when a tree slammed into her home, a police spokeswoman said Saturday.

    Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

    Storm-damaged trees litter the east lawn of the U.S. Capitol.

    "We have more than half our system down," said Myra Oppel, a spokeswoman for Pepco, a utility serving the D.C. area that had 400,000 customers without power after 80 mph gusts knocked down trees and power lines Friday night.

    "This is definitely going to be a multi-day outage," Oppel added -- not good news for those relying on air-conditioning to deal with the muggy, triple-digit temperatures this weekend.

    -- Reported by msnbc.com staff and news service reports

    Read the full story.

    Mandel Ngan / AFP - Getty Images

    An uprooted tree caused damage to electrical lines and a home in the American University neighborhood of Washington, DC, on June 30, 2012 the morning after a violent storm swept through the area.

    The Weather Channel's Julie Martin reports from Atlanta on the heat wave expected to bring temperatures of 100 degrees to 24 of the 50 states this weekend.

     

  • Gymnasts compete for spot on Olympic team

     

    Brian Snyder / Reuters

    U.S. gymnast Sabrina Vega competes on the balance beam in this multiple exposure photograph at the U.S. Olympic gymnastics trials in San Jose, Calif. June 29, 2012.

    Jae C. Hong / AP

    Gabby Douglas hugs her coach Liang Chow after performing her floor exercise routine on Friday night.

    AP reports:  Jordyn Wieber looks ready for London. As for the rest of the U.S. women, they still have some work to do. 

    The reigning world champion was about the only one not affected by nerves Friday, breezing through the first night of the Olympic trials and all but assuring herself of the lone guaranteed spot on the five-woman London team. Wieber finished with 61.7 points, 0.3 points ahead of Gabby Douglas, who had to work out of a hole after making a big error on uneven bars, her first event. Continue reading the full story.

    Ronald Martinez / Getty Images

    Anna Li competes on the beam during day 2 of the trials.

    Julie Jacobson / AP

    Nastia Liukin performs on the balance beam.

    Gregory Bull / AP

    Jordyn Wieber performs on the balance beam on Friday night.

     

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  • Rookie Dillon wins NASCAR Nationwide

    Nigel Kinrade / AP

    Austin Dillon celebrates his win with a burnout after the NASCAR Nationwide Series auto race at Kentucky Speedway, Friday, June 29, 2012, in Sparta, Ky.

    Michael L. Levitt / AP

    Austin Dillon performs slides in the grass after winning the race.

    AP reports: Pole-sitter Austin Dillon, driving the legendary No. 3 car, led most of the final 113 laps to win the NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Kentucky Speedway on Friday night. The No. 3, of course, was driven to fame by Dale Earnhardt before his death on the track at the 2001 Daytona 500. Richard Childress was the team owner for Earnhardt, and is also the grandfather and team owner for Dillon.

    As Dillon was clinching the win, his grandfather said over the radio, "Dale would have been proud of that." It was the first Nationwide victory for Dillon, a rookie who captured the Truck Series title a year ago.

  • Ariana Cubillos / AP

    Venezuelan Catholics honor Saint Peter

    Faithful, dressed in colonial era clothing and wearing handkerchiefs representing the colors of the political parties of the time, take part in the annual San Pedro Parranda in Guatire, Venezuela on June 29, 2012. The celebration is believed to have originated in the 19th century by the black slave Maria Ignacia, who believed that San Pedro, or Saint Peter, had answered her prayers and began singing and dancing through the town as she had promised if the saint granted her the miracle of healing her daughter. Today residents carry on the tradition, mostly men, who take to the streets with maracas, singing folk songs dedicated to San Pedro.

  • Harrison Township remembers fallen soldier

    John M. Galloway / AP

    Marines salute the hearse carrying the casket of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Steven P. Stevens, who was killed in Afghanistan, at Selfridge Air National Guard Base in Harrison Township, Mich. on June 29, 2012.

    John M. Galloway / AP

    Hailey Nagel waits for the remains return of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Steven P. Stevens.

    John M. Galloway / AP

    Family members react as the casket of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Steven P. Stevens is transferred at Selfridge Air National Guard Base.

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  • Esam Omran Al-fetori / Reuters

    Issa Mahmoud, 14, practises with a punching bag during a boxing training session in Libya on June 27, 2012. Boxing, which was banned in 1979 by former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, has made a comeback with five boxing clubs to train at in Tripoli.

    Boxing returns to Libya

    .

  • Closer views of Colo. wildfire damage

    Brendan Smialowski / AFP - Getty Images

    Damage in the Mountain Shadow neighborhood, about 72 hours after wildfires swept through, waits to be cleaned in Colorado Springs, Colo. on June 29, 2012.

    Brendan Smialowski / AFP - Getty Images

    A sprinkler waters burnt grass in the Mountain Shadow neighborhood in Colorado Springs, Colo. on June 29, 2012.

    Carolyn Kaster / AP

    Burnt appliances sit abandoned in the Mountain Shadow neighborhood devastated by raging wildfires in Colorado Springs, Colo. On June 29, 2012.

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    A home damaged by fire stands in the Mountain Shadow neighborhood in Colorado Springs on June 29, 2012.

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  • Abed Al Hashlamoun / EPA

    UNESCO grants heritage status to Bethlehem

    A Greek Orthodox sweeps in the Church of the Nativity in the biblical West Bank city of Bethlehem on June 28, 2012. UNESCO voted to grant world heritage status to the Church of the Nativity. The declaration by UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization covers the West Bank church, venerated by Christians as the birthplace of Jesus, and the surrounding route taken by religious pilgrims.

    Read more here

  • Tattoo enthusiasts convene in Va. and Ohio

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    Jeff Bitting, right, from St Augustine, Florida, speaks back stage with fellow full-body tattoo contestants before judging at the National Tattoo Association Convention in Cincinnati, Ohio on April 13, 2012. In his 33 years of getting tattoos, Bitting says he has had about 500 hours of work and will complete his other leg in his bid to win more full-body contests.

     

    Reuters Senior photographers Jason Reed and Larry Downing traveled across the country recently to attend two different tattoo conventions in Hampton Roads, Va., and Cincinnati, Ohio, while working on a multimedia project entitled, “Addicted to the Needle” which opens a window into the private world and the culture of tattooing.

    See more photos here

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    A tattooed participant holds her baby in the Hampton Roads Tattoo Festival in Hampton Roads, Va. on March 3, 2012. The hobby of collecting tattoos has exploded into mainstream society with tattoo conventions and festivals held year-round across the U.S.

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    David Billings, from Abingdon, Md., wears a full-back tattoo featuring all nine members of his favorite band, Slipknot, as a woman admires the art at the Hampton Roads Tattoo Festival in Va. on March 2, 2012. Billings said he's had over 150 hours of tattoo work done over a 12-year period, now covering over half his body. He says tattoos are now as main stream as the Coca-Cola Co.

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  • "Britain from Above" project displays archival photographs

    Aerofilms Collection / EPA

    Tower Bridge and the Tower of London in March 1921.

    The “Britain from Above” project preserves 95,000 of the oldest and most valuable photographic negatives in the Aerofilms collection, dating from 1919 to 1953. The negatives, which consist of both glass plates and early film negatives, are carefully conserved and scanned into digital format for public view.

    According to its curators, English Heritage, this vast, historic collection was created by Aerofilms Ltd, the first commercial aerial photography company in Britain, set up by Frances Lewis Wills and Claude Grahame-White in 1919. The whole Aerofilms oblique collection contains more than 1.2 million negatives and thousands of photograph albums, held in Swindon, Edinburgh and Aberystwyth.

    The 95,000 negatives illustrate the dramatically changing face of Britain in the first half of the 20th century. The project launched a new interactive website in June 2012.

    Aerofilms Collection / EPA

    Houses of Parliament and Parliament Square, Westminster, London in June 1926.

    Aerofilms Collection / EPA

    Saint Paul's Cathedral, London in March 1921.

    Aerofilms Collection / EPA

    Purves Road, Kensal Green, London in March 1921.

    Aerofilms Collection / EPA

    The FA Cup Final between Sheffield Wednesday and Cardiff City, Wembley Park, London in April 1925.

    Aerofilms Collection / EPA

    Crystal Palace, Penge, London in April 1925.

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  • Grandma begins 103-mile swim from Cuba to Florida

    Str / EPA

    British-Australian swimmer Penny Palfrey swims from 'La Marina Hemingway', Cuba, on June 29, with destination Florida, USA. Palfrey, 49, tries to swim across the Strait of Florida, without being protected by a shark cage in 40 to 50 hours.

    Ramon Espinosa / AP

    British-Australian swimmer Penny Palfrey smiles as she is flashed a thumbs up at the start of her bid to complete a record swim from Cuba to Florida, in Havana, Cuba, on June 29. Palfrey aims to be the first woman to swim the Straits of Florida without the aid of a shark cage. Instead she's relying on equipment that surrounds her with an electrical field to deter the predators.

    Reuters -- Marathon swimmer Penny Palfrey, a 49-year-old grandmother, dove into the clear waters of the Florida Straits on Friday to try to break her own world record by swimming 103 miles from Cuba to the United States without a shark cage.

    With the just-risen sun casting an orange glow in the eastern sky, Palfrey dove into the calm sea from a rocky point at Havana's Hemingway Marina, then stroked methodically away as a handful of spectators looked on.

    "Beautiful sea, beautiful sunrise, it's a lovely morning in Cuba," the compact, muscular Palfrey told reporters just before entering the water.

    Read the full story.

    Franklin Reyes / AP

    British-Australian swimmer Penny Palfrey, adjusts her goggles before jumping into the water to begin her bid to complete a record swim from Cuba to Florida, in Havana, Cuba, on June 29. Palfrey aims to be the first woman to swim the Straits of Florida without the aid of a shark cage. Instead she's relying on equipment that surrounds her with an electrical field to deter the predators.

     

     

  • Getting down and dirty for the start of rice planting season in Nepal

    Niranjan Shrestha / AP

    Nepalese farmers dance as they celebrate "Asar Pandhra", or the festival of planting rice, in Pokhara, about 125 miles west of Katmandu, Nepal, on June 29.

    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    A boy enjoys the waterfall as he cleans himself after celebrating Asar Pandhra festival in Pokhara valley, west of Nepal's capital Kathmandu on June 29. Farmers in Nepal celebrate the festival to mark the commencement of rice crop planting in paddy fields.

    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    A tourist dances as she celebrates Asar Pandhra festival in Pokhara valley, west of Nepal's capital Kathmandu on June 29. Farmers in Nepal celebrate the festival to mark the commencement of rice crop planting in paddy fields.

    Prakash Mathema / AFP - Getty Images

    Nepalese youth play in the mud as they plant rice in a field in Pokhara, west of Kathmandu on June 29. The farmers are celebrating National Paddy Day on 'Asar 15' of the Nepali calendar as the annual rice planting season begins.

    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    A Nepalese woman kisses a tourist while celebrating Asar Pandhra festival in Pokhara valley, west of Nepal's capital Kathmandu on June 29. Farmers in Nepal celebrate the festival to mark the commencement of rice crop planting in paddy fields.

  • AFP - Getty Images

    The wedding of two frogs, arranged by farmers seeking rainfall, is performed in Nagpur on June 29, in order to please the Rain Gods and in the hope that their region would soon receive monsoon showers. People blew trumpets and sang songs, as the priest solemnized the marriage with the usual Hindu marriage rituals to the chanting of Hindu hymns and by putting streaks of vermilion on the female frog's head. The frogs were picked up from different ponds, following the local belief among the farmers in this part of India that a frog marriage pleases the Rain Gods and ensures a good harvest with rain.

    Frogs receive traditional Hindu wedding ceremony

    Let's hope that these nuptials do not end up like Austria's now divorced tortoises, who were together for over a century.

  • India floods displace more than 850,000

    Biju Boro / AFP - Getty Images

    A mahout moves an elephant to higher ground as villagers paddle with their belongings through flood waters in the Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary, some 55 km from Guwahati, the capital city of Assam, India on June 28, 2012.

    Raging floodwaters fed by monsoon rains have inundated more than 2,000 villages in northeast India, sweeping away homes and forcing more than 850,000 people to flee their homes.

    Floodwaters have submerged 90 per cent of a wildlife sanctuary in Assam, forcing rhinos and other wild animals to shelter in the woodland of the park which is located at a higher altitude. 

    -- The Associated Press and Agence France Presse contributed to this report

    EPA

    Wild Asiatic water buffalo run to take shelter on high ground inside the Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary in the flood-affected Morigaon district of Assam on June 28, 2012. The sanctuary has been underwater for two days.

    Anupam Nath / AP

    A man pauses before making his way through flood waters at Burhaburhi village, about 40 miles east of Guwahati on June 29, 2012.

     

  • Police chase politician down street following protests over fire at Kashmir shrine

    Dar Yasin / AP

    Indian policemen chase the People's Political Party Chairman Hilal Ahmed War, in black, as he tried to defy curfew orders to reach the Sheikh Abdul Qadir Jeelan shrine in Srinagar on June 29, 2012.

    Normal life across Indian-controlled Kashmir was disrupted for the fifth straight day on Friday as the government imposed strict restrictions on movement of people to prevent protests after a fire at the Sufi shrine, The Associated Press reports.

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    Clashes broke out between police and protesters after fire destroyed a revered 11th century shrine in Indian Kashmir on Monday. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

     

  • Georges Gobet / AFP - Getty Images

    Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker reacts as he arrives for a second day of the European Union summit in Brussels on June 29, 2012. Leaders from the 17 countries sharing the euro sealed a dramatic deal Friday to direct emergency measures at crisis-hit Italy and Spain and boost the embattled economy, sending markets sharply upwards.

    A funny thing happened at the EU summit

    We can only speculate as to the cause of Jean-Claude Juncker's melodramatic reaction as he got out of his car this morning. Perhaps, like many people around Europe, he was shocked that the continent's leaders appear to have finally come up with a set of measures that show they are serious about solving their crippling debt crisis.

  • Luis Robayo / AFP - Getty Images

    Watching Euro 2012 in a shack on a Colombian hillside

    Farmers watch telvised coverage of the Euro 2012 semi-final in a shack on a hill in Calandaima, a rural area of Miranda, Colombia, on June 28, 2012.

    Local farmers are in dispute over lands occupied by the army to give them a tactical advantage in the war against FARC guerrillas, Agence France Presse reports. The farmers, afraid of being caught in the crossfire, want the troops to leave the area. A caravan of Colombian social activists on Thursday moved to the top of the Calandaima hill to deliver food to the peasants.

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  • China's Shenzhou-9 crew returns to Earth after history-making trip

    Ren Junchuan / Xinhua via Reuters

    Chinese astronauts (left to right) Liu Wang, Jing Haipeng, and Liu Yang salute in front of the re-entry capsule of China's Shenzhou 9 spacecraft in Siziwang Banner, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, on June 29, 2012.

    Wang Jianmin / Xinhua via AP

    the re-entry capsule of China's Shenzhou-9 spacecraft lands safely in Siziwang Banner of north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region on Friday.

    Ren Junchuan / Xinhua via AP

    Members of the search team approach the re-entry capsule of China's Shenzhou 9 spacecraft in Siziwang Banner of north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region on Friday.

    Space.com reports: Three Chinese astronauts have returned to Earth after spending 13 days on a historic space mission that made their country only the third nation ever to dock a manned spacecraft to another craft in orbit.

    The Shenzhou 9 space capsule landed at about 10 p.m. ET (10 a.m. Friday, Beijing time) in Inner Mongolia, an autonomous region of the People's Republic of China. The astronauts left the Tiangong 1 prototype space lab module a day earlier. Continue reading the full story.

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    China's first female astronaut and two other crew members emerged smiling from a capsule that returned safely to Earth from a 13-day mission. Msnbc.com's Craig Melvin reports.

     

  • New Orleans Hornets take Anthony Davis as first NBA draft pick

    Elsa / Getty Images

    Anthony Davis of the Kentucky Wildcats hugs his mother Eranier after he was selected number one overall by the New Orleans Hornets during the first round of the 2012 NBA Draft at Prudential Center on June 28, 2012 in Newark, New Jersey. Check out the NBA Draft HQ on nbcsports.com for more info.

     

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  • Hairy legs on heels race for gay pride in Madrid, Spain

    Daniel Ochoa De Olza / AP

    A competitor walks to the start line before the Gay Pride High Heels race in Madrid, Spain, on June 28, 2012.

    Daniel Ochoa De Olza / AP

    A boy cries at the starting line before the Gay Pride High Heels race.

    Daniel Ochoa De Olza / AP

    Competitors run during the Gay Pride High Heels race in Madrid.

    Daniel Ochoa De Olza / AP

    A competitor runs during the Gay Pride High Heels race in Madrid.

     

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