Jump to October 2010 archive page: 1 2 3 4 5 ... 8
  • AFP - Getty Images

    A man watches as waves crash into rocks in Zhangpu on Oct. 23, in Fujian, China. Torrential rain and gale-force winds lashed southern China as Typhoon Megi made landfall after killing at least 48 people as it roared through the Philippines and battered Taiwan. Chinese State television broadcast images of strong winds bending trees in the southeastern coastal province of Fujian, where billboards had toppled over and large waves whipped the coast.

    Against the wind

    A lovely picture from a fierce storm.

    Show more
  • Roberto Salomone / AFP - Getty Images

    Riot police take cover after being attacked by protestors in Terzigno, Italy, on Oct. 23. The protesters were demonstrating against the opening of a new dump on the slopes of Mount Vesuvius.

    No dumping

    Apparently there is an existing dump which people oppose the use of on Mount Vesuvius, and there is a plan to open a new one, which is drawing the locals' ire as well. To make matters worse, the protests are happening at the same time as a strike by garbage collectors, which has resulted in tons of trash piling up and stinking up the streets of Terzigno.

  • Dmitry Lovetsky / AP

    Russian fans of Michael Jackson disguised as zombies perform his song "Thriller" at Dvortsovaya (Palace) Square in St.Petersburg, Russia, on Saturday, Oct. 23. More than one hundred participants of the Thrill The World event performed the famous hit of the late King of Pop.

    Thrill the world

    Who doesn't love an outdoor performance of the "Thriller" dance?

  • Aditya Singh/AP

    British actor-comedian Russell Brand, background right, watches as Associated Press photographer Mustafa Quraishi, standing front, struggles to retrieve the key to the vehicle in which he was traveling with a group of photographers, after it was snatched away by a bodyguard of Brand's at the Ranthambore National Park in Ranthambore, India, Friday, Oct. 22, 2010. Russell Brand's friend and a bodyguard assaulted four news photographers, including one from The Associated Press, when they were taking pictures of the British comedian Friday in an Indian tiger reserve before his wedding to Katy Perry, the photographers said. The photographers had been following about 330 feet behind two jeeps, one carrying Brand, a woman who was not Perry, a man and two children, and the second carrying the bodyguard and another man later described by police as Brand's friend and wedding guest.

    Open season on photographers

    In yet the latest incident of paparazzi vs. celebrity, bodyguards for actor-comedian Russell Brand got into a major incident with photographers at the Ranthambore National Park in India. It seems that assaulting journalists is good way to ensure negative publicity.

    As we blogged earlier, Life Imitating Art, this is nothing new.

  • Steve Dykes/Getty Images)

    John Mallinger shakes the water off of his umbrella on the 7th hole during the second round of the Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open on October 22, 2010 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    Swingin' in the rain

    It seems to me that shaking an umbrella is a good way to get soaked. But it makes a very cool image.

  • Scott Olson / Getty Images

    U.S. Marine marksman Cpl. Jacob Hoag of Bend, OR with India Battery, 3rd Battalion, 12th Marine Regiment provides security for a patrol at outpost West above Forward Operating Base (FOB) Zeebrugge on Oct. 22 in Kajaki, Afghanistan.

    Scott Olson / Getty Images

    Hoag's unit, the Marines of India Battery, 3rd Battalion, 12th Marine Regiment are responsible for securing the area near the Kajaki Dam on the Helmand River.

    Marine sniper overwatch in Kajaki

    Type your comment here ...

  • Rodrigo Abd / AP

    Afghan policeman Kabuli smokes a cigarette, in front of a district police station currently occupied by US soldiers and Afghan National Police, in Kandahar City, Afghanistan, Friday, Oct. 22, 2010.

    Rodrigo Abd / AP

    Unidentified US soldiers from L Trp 4/25CR rest before a foot patrol in Kandahar City, Afghanistan, Friday, Oct. 22, 2010.

    Smoking is dangerous. So is Afghanistan.

    USA Today reported last year that health experts are urging the Department of Defense to ban tobacco use in the military.

  • FINBARR O'REILLY/Reuters

    Afghan National Police exercise at a makeshift gym at a combat outpost in Kunjak in southern Afghanistan's Helmand province Oct. 22, 2010.

    Finbarr O'Reilly / Reuters

    A view of a makeshift gym for members of the First Battalion Eighth Marines Alpha Company at a combat outpost in Kunjak in southern Afghanistan's Helmand province Oct. 22, 2010.

    Afghan police exercise at makeshift gym

    Great improvisation.

  • Lars K Mikkelsen / Scanpix Denmark via EPA

    An aerial view taken Oct. 22 shows damage aboard Lithuanian flagged car ferry 'Lisco Gloria' as it is towed into Lindoe Docks in Odense, Denmark. A fire broke out on the ferry after an explosion overnight on Oct. 9 and raged for more than 30 hours on the ferry carrying more than 200 tonnes of fuel and anchored in Danish waters. The ferry was travelling from Kiel, northern Germany, to the Lithuanian port of Klaipeda when the accident happened.

    Damage to the car ferry Lisco Gloria

    We posted some images of the actual fire earlier this month.

  • James Cheng / msnbc.com

    Lenn "Curley" Gapinski, wearing the George Washington outfit he sometimes wears when teaching classes on the U.S. Constitution, at his vineyard near Monticello, Ind. on Oct. 16.

    Faces of the Tea Party - Vintner and constitutionalist

    It’s a bit surprising to find a winery in central Indiana, sandwiched between corn fields and patches of hardwood trees. But there it is - down the road from Monticello, Ind., and up the road from the even-tinier town of Buffalo, tucked amid a field of grapevines sits a modest home and a barn-like structure housing Evangeline Orchard’s wine-making operations. Lined up in barrels in the storage area are at least 10 varieties including blackberry, raspberry, pumpkin and, yes, tomato.

    Evangeline is the latest undertaking of Lenn “Curley” Gapinski - testimony to the Indiana native’s determination to make it on his own, and figure things out on his own, including his political philosophy.

    “The sun rose and set over FDR, according to my father,” he says.

    But with age, the 58-year-old Gapinski has moved far from the Democratic loyalties of his family. He is staunch advocate of low taxes - maybe a 10 percent flat tax - and a free market with minimal government intervention. He proudly flies the “Don’t Tread on Me” flag next to the Stars and Stripes over his orchard. “I consider myself a patriot today,” he says.

    After high school, Gapinski went off to work as a millwright at Bethlehem Steel, quickly advanced to supervisor and then moved into a mechanical engineering position on the strength of self-taught skills. He remained for 35 years, but lost his pension and health insurance as the company changed hands before retiring in 2007.

    He started thinking about the Constitution back at Bethlehem Steel, where he used to talk politics at lunch with an older worker - a conservative.

    It was during the Carter administration - a time of gas lines, price and wage freezes, and the coworker maintained that the government was moving into all sorts of areas that were not allowed by the Constitution.

    “A light came on,” says Gapinski. “I thought, ‘Hey we can’t depend on the government for everything'... I found that although I was raised a liberal, the conservative movement made more sense to me.”

    After his retirement, Gapinski and his wife, Cheryl, put their savings into this small vineyard, and he dedicated himself to two things -- growing grapes and studying the nation’s founding.

    Now, dressed as George Washington - right down to the powdered wig - he teaches classes on the U.S. Constitution to Tea Party groups.

    In his view, the country began going off the constitutional rails by 1913, when legislators passed the 16th amendment allowing Congress to levy an income tax.

    “That (amendment) gave lawmakers the opportunity to tax whatever they wanted, and they have taken advantage of it,” says Gapinski.

    Gapinski says TEA stand for Taxed Enough Already (though others in the movement dispute this), and he believes the core issue of the Tea Party is taxes.

    In pursuit of that, he would like to see the Tea Party remain at arm’s length from both major parties.

    “The Republican Party would love to have the Tea Party as an extension of the Republican Party,” says Gapinski. “But the Republican Party has not been true to its conservative values. We need to hold (them) accountable.”

    Although Gapinski agrees with the anti-abortion position of conservative Christians, he says, “This is a personal issue, not a Tea Party issue.”

    On the other hand, Gapinski’s faith and his political views are inseparable.

    Speaking to church congregations around the area, Gapinski likes to show a video called “Our Godly American Heritage,” produced by David Barton, which argues that the founding fathers never intended to keep religion out of government, but wanted to prevent any one denomination of Christianity from prevailing over others.

    Gapinski believes that the way the “separation of church and state” is implemented wrongly because it tries to rid public institutions of religion.

    “There has been a lot of misinformation on our heritage in the last century, especially since the 1960s,” says Gapinski. “I want to show the deep relationship the founding fathers had with our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.”

    In his personal life, Gapinski’s faith will guide his vote this Nov. 2.

    “The night before elections, my wife and I will get down on our knees and pray. We will open our Bibles randomly to see if there are messages (God) wants us to hear,” he says. “And we will go on the Internet to do a last round of research in case there is anyone we are unsure of.”

    Then, he and Cheryl will go to vote at 6:30 in the morning when the polls open.

    Click here to read why msnbc.com is publishing this project.

    Click here to see and read all the "Faces of the Tea Party" posts.

  • TNT via EPA

    A new electric scooter, the cyclocargo, will be used starting October 22 to deliver parcels, documents and freight items in the center of Brussels, Belgium for parcel service TNT. The company is reducing CO2 emissions across the globe as part of their Planet Me program.

    'Orange' goes green

    I wonder what American UPS drivers would think of this rig? Big Brown has its own ideas of how to go green, but I doubt this is one of them.

  • Feisal Omar / Reuters

    Al Shabab militants parade new recruits after arriving in Mogadishu October 21, 2010, from their training camp south of the capital.

    If Al Shabab held a photo op, would anyone come?

    Apparently, yes they will. This isn't a great picture, but it still fascinates me, and prompts two main thoughts:

    First, note the tripods in the background. It's as if the bad guys in The Road Warrior got themselves a PR person and set up a photo op.

    Second, do you think those welds holding the heavy machine gun to the bag rack of the ATV "technical" are going to hold up if the weapon is being fired at full auto?

    Previously on Photoblog, two strong pictures from Feisal Omar:

  • Christian Charisius / Reuters

    German Transport Minister Peter Ramsauer wears 3D glasses as he watches a Virtual Reality Powerwall to see the Airbus A350 in virtual reality, during a visit to the Airbus facility in Finkenwerder near Hamburg October 21, 2010.

    Virtual reality at Airbus

    The A350 really is virtual right now. According to Logistics Week, the aircraft is in development and is scheduled to hit the market in 2013. The other day, Hong Kong Airlines ordered 15 of them.

    Previously on Photoblog:

    And don't worry, Made in America fans, we've also done our share of Boeing coverage.

  • Vanderlei Almeida / AFP - Getty Images file

    File photo dated Aug. 20, 2008 shows a general view of the "Morro da Providencia" favela, one of the most violent of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil where French photographer JR exhibited a project called "Women Are Heroes." The photographer, whose real name is unknown but who is famous for displaying his giant photographs across cities worldwide, was awarded the 100,000 USD TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) Prize on Oct. 20, 2010.

    Photographer and street artist JR wins $100,000 TED Prize

    We're a few days late with this news, but better late than never I guess.

    The New York Times: Award to Artist Who Gives Slums a Human Face:

    Reached by telephone on Wednesday morning on a bus in Shanghai, where he was headed to work on a largely unauthorized photo-pasting project to draw attention to the city’s demolition of historic neighborhoods, J R said that he had learned of the prize only two weeks ago and that he had not yet had time to think of a wish.

    But he said that it would undoubtedly involve his kind of guerrilla art, which he has been creating with the help of volunteers in slums in Brazil, Cambodia and Kenya — where the outsize photographs, printed on waterproof vinyl, doubled as new roofs for ramshackle houses. “I’m kind of stunned,” he said of the prize. “I’ve never applied for an award in my life and didn’t know that somebody had nominated me for this.”

    Read the rest of the story, and see more pictures, at the Times site.

  • Roberto Schmidt / AFP-Getty Images

    A member of a brass band holds a tattered sheet of music at a local school in the Korogocho slum in Nairobi on October 16, 2010.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP-Getty Images

    Seventeen-year-old Steve Odieno (R) warms up his trumpet in a corner before a presentation at a local corporate function in Nairobi on October 19, 2010. Odieno, who was born and raised in Western Kenya, is the eldest of five siblings and came to live in Nairobi with his father and to look for better quality schooling.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP-Getty Images

    Seventeen-year-old Steve Odieno blows into a trumpet during band practice at a local school in the Korogocho slum in Nairobi on October 16, 2010. Odieno, who was born and raised in Western Kenya, is the eldest of five siblings and came to live in Nairobi with his father and to look for better quality schooling. Through a local church, Steve joined the "Ghetto Classics" about a year ago.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP-Getty Images

    Young children watch as older kids play in brass band practice at a local school in the Korogocho slum in Nairobi on October 16, 2010.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP-Getty Images

    Kennedy Odhiambo blows into the banged up tuba assigned to him during a presentation by his band during a corporate event in Nairobi on October 19, 2010.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP-Getty Images

    Seventeen-year-old Steve Odieno (C) walks through his neighborhood as he heads home after school in the Korogocho slum in Nairobi on October 18, 2010.

    Music to empower the youth

    AFP Photographer Roberto Schmidt photographed kids involved in a project in Korogocho, Nairobi called "Ghetto Classics" that uses music to empower the youth there. The brass band group is comprised of some 25 kids that only gets to practice every two weeks as the musical instruments they use are borrowed and there are not enough funds to pay the band director more often. The Ghetto Classics Project is a partnership between the Art of Music and the Kutoka Network - a network of parishes and organizations working in the urban slums, working to creates policies and new plans to help slum dwellers work their way out of poverty. Its purpose is to use music education to provide youth living in the slum with opportunities to better themselves and their community by giving them life skills that come with the discipline of studying art music.
    Mr. Schmidt said he, "was really happy when I heard that you guys wanted to do this slide show. I really hope that someone in the wider audience is affected by it and would be willing to help out this outfit. They are truly good kids who are making an honest effort." See more photos here.

    Click 'Show more' below to watch the video.



  • MK Chaudhry / EPA

    Pakistani groom Azhar Haidri sits with his brides, Humaira Qasim, left, and Rumana Aslam during their wedding ceremony in Multan, Pakistan, Oct. 20, 2010. Azhar Haideri gained national attention for planning to marry two women in 24 hours. One bride was the woman arranged by his family and the other one with whom he had fallen in love. Pakistani law allows polygamy based on the concept that Islam, the main religion in the country, allows up to four wives.

    Tale of two wives in Pakistan

  • Christian Lutz / AP

    European parliament members debate the maternity leave bill at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, Oct. 20, 2010. The bill was passed. It will allow minimum maternity leave in the EU to be extended from 14 to 20 weeks with full pay.

    Work / life balance?

    This was a close and controversial vote. Do you feel that your workplace is achieving work / life balance?

  • Justin Lane / EPA

    New York Yankees second baseman Robinson Cano relays to first base after forcing out Texas Rangers baserunner Elvis Andrus to complete the double play in the top of the first inning of game five of the American League Championship Series at Yankee Stadium in Bronx, New York, Oct. 20, 2010.

    Mark Humphrey / AP

    Texas Rangers' Ian Kinsler singles off New York Yankees pitcher C.C. Sabathia in the second inning.

    Nick Laham / Getty Images

    Alex Rodriguez, right, of the New York Yankees scores past the tag attempt of catcher Matt Treanor of the Texas Rangers in the bottom of the second inning.

    Baseball helps October go by a little easier

    Watching the playoffs and the World Series helps me let go of summer.

  • Mick Tsikas / Reuters

    A container ship from China comes into port in Melbourne, Australia, Oct. 19, 2010. Asian stocks fell on Wednesday, with Japan's Nikkei average tumbling over 2%, as investors fretted that China may be embarking on a money tightening cycle after it surprised the global economy with its first interest rate rise since 2007.

    David Gray / Reuters

    A construction worker carrying scaffolding walks past a billboard advertising the new residential building being built in central Beijing, Oct. 20, 2010. Property shares in China and Hong Kong fell sharply on Wednesday as a surprise interest rate hike by China raised concerns of fresh measures to cool the real estate market. It could mark the start of more aggressive monetary tightening, analysts said.

    China's time

    Newsweek has a good story about how many young Chinese view the United States as a place to get an education, but they want to return to China because of its business opportunities.

    Rana Foroohar writes: I asked one physics genius in a fuzzy pink sweater what her plans were after graduation. She had already lined up a scholarship to pursue an M.B.A. at Stanford. After that, she said, "I'll probably stay in the U.S. for a while and work at McKinsey or a venture-capital firm in Silicon Valley." Then, she continued, "I'll come back to China and start a company.

    Read the full Newsweek story here.

    Msnbc.com's John Schoen writes that China wants home-grown innovators.

  • Sukree Sukplang / Reuters

    A man dries his shirt at a flooded area in Ayutthaya. (Below) A man walks through his flooded house in Ayutthaya, 50 miles north of Bangkok on Oct. 20, 2010. Flooding has killed at least 11 people in the past 10 days in Thailand.

    Sukree Sukplang / Reuters

    Flooding in Thailand

    I'm often amazed at people's ability to just keep getting things done when times are at their worst.

    From Reuters
    AYUTTHAYA, Thailand — The worst floods in decades in Thailand and severe flooding in neighboring Cambodia have killed 20 people, authorities said on Wednesday, as rescue workers braced for more rain and possible flooding in Bangkok.

    Rescue teams evacuated stranded villagers by boat in some provinces, including the old Thai capital Ayutthaya where flood waters swelled to about five feet in some districts, cutting off roads and inundating homes, shops and farmlands.

    "The water usually comes and goes very quickly but this time, there is so much," said Sabai Maingam, 48, wading through chest-high water in her store.

    Thailand's Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation said 12 people had been killed since Oct. 10.

    Flooding has hit 17 provinces, swamping tens of thousands of acres of farmland and damaging at least one major northeastern road, said Vibul Sanguanpong, director-general of the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation.

  • Gonzalo Fuentes / Reuters

    Passengers walk on the highway as French striking workers block the Charles-de-Gaulle airport in Roissy near Paris Oct. 20, 2010. Striking public sector workers disrupted travel across France as trade unions kept up their resistance on Wednesday to an unpopular pension reform due for a final vote in the Senate this week.

    A lovely day for a hike at de Gaulle

    We have a full story on the strikes in France.

    Can you imagine making this hike to or from JFK, or O'Hare, or LAX?

  • Tiziana Fabi / AFP - Getty Images

    A key attached to a box reads "Nuclear alarm" in a control room of the nuclear research center Ena Casaccia on the 50th anniversary of the plant on October 20, 2010 near Rome. The Casaccia Research Centre is ENEA's largest complex dedicated to research, development, applications, and the dissemination of innovative technologies in the field of peaceful uses of nuclear energy.

    Break glass in case of nuclear accident

  • Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters

    A general view shows the PS10 solar plant at "Solucar" solar park in Sanlucar la Mayor, near Seville, Oct. 20, 2010. The solar thermal power plant uses mirrors to concentrate the sun's rays onto towers where they produce steam to drive a turbine, producing electricity.

    Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters

    A photographer takes pictures in the solar plant.

    Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters

    Solar power arrays in Spain

    A fascinating-looking place, well seen by Marcelo del Pozo. Sort of reminds me of Tatooine in Star Wars, even if these panels are farming heat rather than moisture.

    There are more pictures of the installation, which looks like a very beautiful piece of industrial design and engineering, at the European Solar Thermal Electricity Association web site. The wide shots on that site really help you understand how this facility works, as they show the tower that the mirrors are reflecting sunlight onto.

    A quick web search yields more information about the facility, but I'm unable to find any information on the economics of the plant--whether it is profitable and competitive with other energy sources in terms of price. We're asking those questions a lot in our video series on U.S. environmental entrepreneurs.

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