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  • Ted S. Warren / AP

    A protester screams Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011, as Seattle Police officers try to separate his arms linked with others hoping to prevent the removal of a tent pitched behind them in downtown Seattle's Westlake Park during an "Occupy Seattle" protest. Police moved in Wednesday afternoon and arrested people who refused to leave tents pitched in the park who were taking part in the protest, which mirrored similar demonstrations taking place in other areas of the country.

    Police, protesters clash at 'Occupy Seattle' protest

    KING 5 News reports:

    SEATTLE - Protesters and Seattle police officers clashed at Westlake Park as officers tried to remove protesters at Occupy Seattle. Many of the protesters ignored orders to pack up their tents and move out of the city park.

    Police officers on bicycles and in paddy wagons arrived around 1:20 p.m., telling protesters who camped out overnight to move their tents to allow park workers to clean the park. A few protesters at the scene were rolling up their tents while others still remained.

    Read the full story here.

    Show more
  • Whoa! It's a quadruple rainbow!

    Michael Theusner / Applied Optics

    A third-order and fourth-order rainbow can be seen at the center of this photograph, taken from the countryside in northern Germany. The tertiary and quaternary rainbows appear on the sunward side of the sky, rather than the opposite side of the sky, as is the case for primary and secondary rainbows. This is the first picture of a quaternary rainbow in nature, and the second picture ever of a tertiary rainbow.

    Look out, Double Rainbow Guy: You just might have a double-double freakout over this first-ever picture documenting a quadruple rainbow, which is the subject of a scientific paper in the journal Applied Optics.

    Seeing two rainbows in the sky is a visual treat, leading a YouTube user named Paul Vasquez to rhapsodize to the point of tears. But three or four rainbows at the same time? That's the stuff of legend. Triple-rainbow reports have been bubbling up since the days of Aristotle, but only five reports from scientifically knowledgeable observers have been recorded during the past 250 years.

    Not until this year has a triple rainbow or a quadruple rainbow been photographed and published in the scientific literature.


    Such rainbows are more technically referred to as tertiary or quaternary rainbows. Like the better-known primary or secondary rainbows that Vasquez gushed over, these rare rainbows appear when sunlight bounces around the inside of a raindrop, is refracted and spread through a range of visible-light wavelengths and shines out to the observer as a multicolored arc in the sky.

    The light beams that creates single or double rainbows take one or two bounces inside the raindrop, as shown in this diagram, and they're always visible in the part of the sky opposite the sun. In contrast, third-order and fourth-order rainbows require a triple or quadruple bounce, and appear on the sunward side of the sky, at angles of 40 and 45 degrees with respect to the sun.

    That makes it well nigh impossible to capture all four rainbows in the same picture — and because some light is lost with each bounce, the third and fourth rainbows are incredibly faint. Even if there are raindrops in the right place, the effect is easily overwhelmed by the sun's glare.

    Last year, U.S. Naval Academy meteorologist Raymond Lee and a colleague, Philip Laven, laid out a prediction for the conditions that would produce third-order rainbows, and they challenged rainbow-chasers to go out and find one. Among the requirements: dark thunderclouds, and either a heavy downpour or a rainstorm with nearly uniform rain droplets. If the sun broke through the clouds under these conditions, it could project a dim tertiary rainbow against the dark clouds nearby, they said.

    Michael Grossmann / Applied Optics

    Michael Grossmann's photograph of the skies over Kampfelbach during an evening rain shower is at left, with two points marked A and B as a reference for image orientation. A processed version of the image is at right, revealing a faint tertiary rainbow between the white arrows.

    Some experts thought it'd be impossible to make out the rainbow, but amateur rainbow-chasers rose to the challenge. On the evening of May 15, the required conditions came together for Michael Grossman, an observer in Kampfelbach in southwestern Germany. He turned toward the sun and started snapping pictures where the tertiary rainbow should have shown up.

    "It is really exaggerated to say that I saw it, but there seemed to be something," he said in an Optical Society news release.

    When the pictures were put through contrast expansion and unsharp masking, the faint arc of the tertiary rainbow came through.

    Grossmann's feat made an impression on another German rainbow-chaser, Michael Theusner, and he had his camera at the ready on the evening of June 11 when a rainstorm came toward his home in Schiffdorf in northern Germany. Here's how he described the event to me in an email:

    "Actually, the chasing started as a normal storm-chasing effort. I was on my way home when the storm front approached from the southwest. A nice shelf cloud had formed at the base of the storm, and I hurried home to fetch my camera (Canon 40D + Canon EF-S 17-55 mm lens) to take some photos. Then I went to a nearby field road, where you have an unobstructed view of the sky. However, when I finally reached that location, the shelf cloud had largely disappeared. So I was disappointed at first, but hoped for the rear of the storm to show some interesting cloud features. So I waited while heavy rain was falling.

    "When the sun started to come out, I realized that the situation was just like the one Michael Grossmann had had when he took the first photo of the third-order rainbow. I had read about his observation on June 3 in a German Internet discussion forum for atmospheric phenomena — only about a week earlier. Thus, I tried to catch that rare rainbow, too.

    "I had asked Michael Grossmann in the forum whether or not he had taken several images so as to stack them to increase the signal-to-noise ratio — a technique well known to amateur astronomers like me. Using that technique, it is possible to increase the visibility of faint signals in images. Unfortunately, he had not. I decided to use that technique to increase the chances to record the third-order rainbow. I took several image series until the rain stopped at my location. I did not see that rainbow visually.

    "Back home I started processing, and already the first image series that I took when the sun brightly lit the raindrops showed the third-order rainbow! I was excited and started converting and stacking the order image series. One of them looked strange, however. Another rainbow was visible just to the third-order bow's right. Fainter, but still visible. I checked the Internet for higher order bows and quickly realized that that image series likely showed the fourth-order rainbow. I roughly calculated the radius of that bow and it matched the predicted location of the quaternary bow.

    "I was stunned, as I discovered that this was very likely the very first image in the world to show this rainbow."

    Theoretically, it's possible to have a quintuple or a sextuple rainbow, but the optical geometry of the bounces within the raindrop is such that the fifth- and sixth-order rainbows would be overwhelmed by the light from the first- and the second-order rainbows. "So it may never be possible to image those," Theusner said.

    The research papers describing the observations, and providing guidance for future rainbow-chasers, appear in a special issue of Applied Optics. The bottom line is that the phenomenon is too dim to see with the naked eye, "with the possible exception of very rarely combined circumstances of favorable illumination, background and the strength of rain," Grossmann said. You'd have to point your camera in the right direction without actually seeing the bow, and then do some heavy-duty image processing. But Grossmann and Theusner have proven that it can be done. And for Lee, the meteorologist who issued the original challenge, that's like a ray of sunshine.

    "It was as exciting as finding a new species," he said.

    More about atmospheric phenomena:


    Here are the three papers published this week in the Applied Optics, the journal of the Optical Society:

    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page or following @b0yle on Twitter. You can also add me to your Google+ circle, and check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds. 

  • Former Apple CEO and founder Steve Jobs has died

    John G. Mabanglo / EPA

    Apple CEO Steve Jobs off stage watching application demonstrations at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, California,

    Paul Sakuma / AP

    Apolline Arnaud, 12, a neighbor of Steve Jobs, writes a message in front of Jobs' home in Palo Alto, Calif., Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011.

    Andrew Burton / Getty Images

    Surina Shukri, from New York, lights a candle in remembrance of Steve Jobs, founder and former CEO of Apple Inc, outside the Apple Store at West 66th Street on October 5, 2011 in New York City.

    Stephen Lam / Reuters

    Software developer Steve Streza displays a photograph of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs after news of Jobs' death outside the Apple Store in San Francisco, Calif. October 5, 2011.

    AP reports:

    CUPERTINO, California — Apple Inc. said the company's co-founder Steve Jobs died Wednesday. He was 56.

    In a brief statement the company said Jobs died Wednesday. He had been battling pancreatic cancer.

    "We are deeply saddened to announce that Steve Jobs passed away today," the company said in a brief statement. "Steve's brilliance, passion and energy were the source of countless innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives. The world is immeasurably better because of Steve."

    Read the full story here.

    Related stories:

  • Early fall storm hammers California with snow and rain

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    Peter Nelson shovels snow from the driveway of a home he is helping remodel near Soda Springs, Calif., Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011. An early October storm swept through Northern California bringing rain to the lower levels and up to six inches of snow to the Sierra Nevada.

    Jae C. Hong / AP

    A man walks with an umbrella in downtown Los Angeles, Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011. An unusually early winter storm dumped nearly an inch of rain on parts of California's agricultural heartland in less than five hours, flooding streets, uprooting trees and soaking a bumper crop of raisins drying in vineyards.

    Gregory Bull / AP

    A kite surfer loses his board as he is picked up off the water by a gust in heavy winds Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011, in Cardiff-by-the-Sea, Calif. An early fall storm is dumping rain across Southern California, snarling traffic and scouring mountain and desert areas with strong gusty winds.

    AP reports:

    FRESNO, Calif. — A storm dumped more than an inch of rain on parts of California's agricultural heartland in less than five hours, flooding streets, uprooting trees and soaking a bumper crop of raisins drying in vineyards.

    The storm hit Tuesday in Northern California, then swept through the central portions before bringing rainfall to Southern California by midmorning on Wednesday.

    A live web cam at China Peak in the central Sierra Nevada showed snow accumulation on the slopes. Squaw Valley USA reported eight inches of new snow overnight, with up to nine more predicted by Thursday. The snow forced the closing of the 9,300-foot Tioga Pass through Yosemite National Park.

    Read the full story here.

  • Boy in Nepal hailed as Ganesh, god of good fortune

    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    Sambeg Shakya, 6, gets ready to play his role as a living god at the Indra Jatra festival in Kathmandu Sept. 16. Sambeg Shakya was hailed last year by Buddhist priests as Ganesh, or the god of good fortune, since when he has led several processions of Nepal's better-known 'living goddesses', also known as Kumari. The centuries-old ritual, once used by now-toppled kings who thought it would make them stronger, was the climax of the annual Hindu festival of Dasain, which lasts for two weeks and has become a major tourist attraction in Nepal. Sambeg will continue in his supporting role until he is big enough to fit in a chariot pulled by men, after which he must return to real life.

    It must be confusing for a six year old to be a "god," then a mortal.

    Reuters reports:

    A five-year-old Nepali boy, worshiped by many as a god, sits cross-legged with a stuffed teddy bear in his brick-and-cement home in Kathmandu.

    Sambeg Shakya was hailed last year by Buddhist priests as Ganesh, or the god of good fortune, since when he has led several processions of Nepal's better-known 'living goddesses', also known as Kumari.

    On Wednesday, skinny Sambeg, his eyes rimmed in black kohl and wearing a gold brocade dress, walked at the head of a line of nine tiny girls to another girl believed to be the bodily incarnation of Taleju, the goddess of power.

    The centuries-old ritual, once used by now-toppled kings who thought it would make them stronger, was the climax of the annual Hindu festival of Dasain, which lasts for two weeks and has become a major tourist attraction in Nepal.

    Sambeg will continue in his supporting role until he is big enough to fit in a chariot pulled by men, after which he must return to real life.


    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    Sambeg Shakya, 6, is pulled along in a chariot by devotees during the Indra Jatra Festival in Kathmandu Sept. 16.

    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    Six year-old Sambeg Shakya's (C) grandmother Purna Rupi Shakya (L) bows down in front of him while his aunt Sumitra Shakya changes his clothes at his home in Kathmandu Sept. 16.

    "I want to become a doctor," Sambeg, his long hair tied in a bun on top with a peacock feather planted on it, told Reuters.

    He is in grade one, the first of ten years in high school.

    His father Bishwo Prakash said his family will help the boy pursue the studies he chooses.

    "He is very bright and good at learning. He does not forget what is told to him once," Prakash said. "I am very happy that my son plays the divine role."

    Prakash said his son likes porridge, biscuits, goat and buffalo meat, but must not eat chicken or eggs.

    The government pays $63 a month to meet Sambeg's living costs, but his family said the money was not enough.

    "The government must increase the allowances to cover the living costs and education of the child who plays a culturally significant role," Prakash said.

    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    Sambeg Shakya, 6, waits near his home for his father in Kathmandu Sept. 16.

    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    Sambeg Shakya, 6, holds the hand of his father Bishwo Prakash Shakya while on his way to school in Kathmandu Sept. 16.

    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    Sambeg Shakya, 6, takes part in school assembly at his school in Kathmandu Sept. 16.

     See an earlier PhotoBlog post from Nepal: Worshipped and then cast aside: the life of a living goddess.

  • 10 years in Afghanistan: With US troops on a mountaintop outpost

    By Matt Ford, Associated Press

    It was the first thing I saw when I landed at Forward Operating Base Tillman in eastern Afghanistan’s Paktika province: a craggy mountain with several huts perched right at the peak, a place called Outpost One. I wanted to meet the men who lived on the mountain.

    Matt Ford / AP

    U.S. Army soldier Pfc. Kyle McClintock, 23, as he stands guard at Outpost One on a mountain top overlooking Forward Operating Base Tillman near the Pakistan border. Growing up, McClintock hated that his mom and dad were in the Army. As Army reservists, they would be gone for long periods. His father fought in Saudi Arabia during Desert Storm, and his mother served in Afghanistan along the Uzbekistan border.

    In the remote mountainous regions along the Pakistan border, these outposts are the first line of defense against the Taliban, members of the Haqqani network and other insurgents that move into Afghanistan from Pakistan’s tribal areas.

    The outpost used to be located much lower on the mountain, but it was overrun in 2007.   In Afghanistan, the oldest tenet of warfare still applies: The advantage goes to he who holds the high ground. So they moved the outpost as high as they could – to the summit.

     

    There is no running water, so they wash themselves with bottles of water and spit toothpaste over a cliff.  The soldiers take turns standing guard on the roof of one of the makeshift structures built out of plywood and sandbags surrounded by multiple gun positions and surveillance equipment.

    The rest of the soldiers entertain themselves any way they can.  They watch movies on their computers, play cards and lift weights with a bench press and two dumbbells.  They don’t know what unit before them brought the weights up the side of the mountain, but they're glad they did.

    I was taken by how young most of the men are.  Now in their early 20s, they were just children in grade school when the war began and they have little recollection of the initial invasion.

    Now they sit on top of a mountain in Afghanistan, at war.

    Explore both the impact on coalition military forces as well as civilians in Afghanistan, a decade into the war

    Look back at Afghanistan at the start of the war

    U.S. military leaders eager to turn other threats after years of focusing on Afghanistan

  • Martin Mejia / AP

    Shamans perform a ritual to send good vibes to Peru's soccer team next to photos of Peru's players Jefferson Farfan, left, Juan Vargas, center, and Claudio Pizarro outside the National Stadium in Lima, Peru, Wed., Oct. 5. Peru will face Paraguay in a 2014 World Cup qualifying soccer game in Lima, Peru next Friday.

    Shamans send good vibes to Peru national soccer team

    I wonder if the Boston Red Sox have thought about hiring these guys.

  • Rich Spanish duchess weds for third time at age 85

    Gianni Ferrari/Getty Images

    Left: Portrait of Duchess of Alba with her husband Luis Martinez de Irujo y Artacoz and her daugther newborn baby, Eugenia, Liria Palace, Madrid, 1968.
    Right: The Duchess Cayetana of Alba with her husband Jesus Aguirre in the 'Palacio de Liria ', 1978, Madrid, Spain.

    Why are we so fascinated with royalty and weddings? While I'm sure the sight of an 85-year-old woman dancing at her wedding makes many readers uncomfortable, the Duchess of Alba has a fascinating history. According to Wikipedia, her wedding in 1947 overshadowed that of Princess Elizabeth (now Queen Elizabeth II) a month later.

    As AP reports:

    SEVILLE, Spain — A wealthy, 85-year-old Spanish duchess considered the world's most title-laden noble married a civil servant 25 years her junior on Wednesday, shrugging off her children's qualms and celebrating by kicking off her shoes and dancing flamenco.

    A crowd of several hundred clapped and roared its approval as the Duchess of Alba waved, smiled and danced on a red carpet after her wedding to Alfonso Diez at Palacio de las Duenas, her 15th-century residence in the cobblestoned old quarter of Seville.

    Miguel Angel Morenatti / AP

    Maria del Rosario Cayetana Alfonsa Victoria Eugenia Francisca Fitz-James Stuart y de Silva, Spanish Duchess of Alba, dances flamenco in presence of her husband Alfonso Diez after their wedding at Las Duenas Palace in Seville, Spain Wednesday Oct. 5.



    Javier Diaz / Reuters

    Spanish bullfighter Cayetano Rivera (L) and his girlfriend Eva Gonzalez arrive at Las Duenas Palace to attend the wedding of Spain's Duchess of Alba Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart y Silva and Alfonso Diez in Seville Oct. 5.

    Ricardo Garcia - Pool / Getty Images

    Alfonso Diez Carabantes and Duchess of Alba, Cayetana Fitz James Stuart during their wedding ceremony at Duenas Palace on October 5th, in Seville, Spain.

    José Manuel Vidal, pool / Getty Images

    Duchess of Alba, Maria del Rosario Cayetana Fitz-James-Stuart dances with son Cayetano Martinez de Irujo during her wedding ceremony to Alfonso Diez Carabantes held at Duenas Palace on Oct. 5 in Seville, Spain.

  • Birmingham's civil rights hero, Fred Shuttlesworth, dies

    AP file

    Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth right, integration leader, escorts Dwight Armstrong, 9, and his brother Floyd, 11, from the Graymont Elementary School in Birmingham, Ala, Sept. 9, 1963. State troopers, on order from the governor, opened the school but turned the African Americans away.

    AP file

    Civil rights leaders, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., left, Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, center, and Rev. Ralph Abernathy hold a news conference in Birmingham, Ala., May 8, 1963.

    Linda Stelter / The Birmingham News via AP file

    Civil rights leader Fred Shuttlesworth, front left, greets former President Bill Clinton in Selma, Ala., March 4, 2007, as Sen. Barack Obama stands behind them.

    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called Shuttlesworth "one of the nation's most courageous freedom fighters ... a wiry, energetic and indomitable man."  Though King was more well-known, Shuttlesworth led the fight in Birmingham-- the center of the civil rights struggle. He survived a bombing, was beaten, injured by fire hoses during protests and repeatedly arrested.

    I wonder how he felt when President Obama was inaugurated as our first black president?

    Full story.

    Slideshow on the march from Selma to Montgomery, known as 'Bloody Sunday.'

  • Jim Hollander / EPA

    An ultra Orthodox Jewish boy peers through a curtain as a butcher takes hold of a chicken before the bird is slaughtered as part of the Kapparot ceremony in Jerusalem, Israel on Oct. 5. Kapparot begins by reciting a prayer and then spinning the bird over their head to release the sins accumulated over the past year, ahead of the high-holiday of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. After the Kapparot ritual is performed, the bird is slaughtered and donated to charity.

    A Kapparot tradition

    The Kapparot Jewish festival happens every year just before Yom Kippur. As part of the tradition, a person's sins are transferred to a chicken during a ceremony. Afterwards, the slaughtered chicken is donated to the poor.

  • Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    Leaves stick to the road on Oct. 5 in London. A combination of late Summer high temperatures and an early fall of leaves onto a sticky non-slip section of road tarmac created a leafy collage.

    Accident or art installation?

    This scene seems more like an art installation than an accident. The heat wave in London caused these early autumn leaves to stick on the non-slip section of the road. It makes me think of the Land Art artists who would use landscapes and nature in their work, similar to the work of Christo and Jeane-Claude.

  • Breakfast at Tiffany's turns 50

    Keystone Features via Getty Images

    George Peppard, center left, and Audrey Hepburn take a break during filming 'Breakfast At Tiffany's' in New York City in June 1961.

    Paramount Pictures via Getty Images

    Audrey Hepburn, as Holly Golightly, holds a cup and a paper bag while looking into one of the window displays at Tiffany's in a still from the film, 'Breakfast at Tiffany's'. She wears sunglasses, a little black dress, long gloves and a tiara in her chignon.

    Today marks the 50th Anniversary of the classic film "Breakfast at Tiffany's." It is hard to believe that the film has been around for half a century. It still feels contemporary and modern, largely due to how ingrained it has become in our culture. The film continues to be regularly referenced, and can be credited with setting the standard for the "little black dress." The dress worn by Audrey Hepburn was designed by Givenchy and sold at auction for $923,187 in 2006.

    AP file

    George Peppard, left, Audrey Hepburn and Patricia Neal are shown in a scene from, "Breakfast at Tiffany's."

    Paramount Pictures via Getty Images

    Actors George Peppard and Martin Balsam compete to light Audrey Hepburn's cigarette at a formal party in a still from director Blake Edwards' film, 'Breakfast at Tiffany's' in 1961.

    Keystone Features via Getty Images

    Audrey Hepburn stops for lunch on Fifth Avenue in New York during filming for 'Breakfast At Tiffany's' in New York City in 1961.

    For more images of Audrey Hepburn see Life's gallery: Audrey Hepburn at her most stunning

    Lincoln center is also having a Breakfast at Tiffany's 50th Anniversary screening.

  • Outraged protesters clash with police in Greece

    Riot police engaged protesters in Athens, after a small group of protesters started throwing rocks in Syntagma Square on Wednesday. Meanwhile, thousands of striking workers marched to parliament, protesting austerity measures.

    Alkis Konstantinidis / EPA

    Riot police detains a demonstrator during clashes in Athens, Greece, 05 October 2011. Civil Servants' Supreme Administrative Council (ADEDY) and General Confederation of Workers of Greece (GSEE), Greece's two largest umbrella federations representing the public and private sector staged a 24-hour nationwide strike protesting against the ongoing austerity measures taken by the Greek government.

    Yiorgos Karahalis / Reuters

    Policemen take their positions around the parliament during a protest in Athens' Syntagma (Constitution) square October 5, 2011. Police fired tear gas at stone-throwing youths in central Athens Wednesday, where thousands of striking state sector workers marched against cuts the government says are needed to save the nation from bankruptcy.

    Yiorgos Karahalis / Reuters

    A protester clashes with a policeman during an anti-austerity rally in Athens' Syntagma (Constitution) square October 5, 2011. Police fired tear gas at stone-throwing youths in central Athens Wednesday, where thousands of striking state sector workers marched against cuts the government says are needed to save the nation from bankruptcy.

    Louisa Gouliamaki / AFP - Getty Images

    Anti riot policemen clash with demonstrators during a protest rally marking the 24-hour general strike on October 5, 2011. More than 30,000 public sector workers demonstrated in Greece today in a strike against deeper austerity cuts that shut down courts, schools and transport, including air traffic.

    Simela Pantzartzi / EPA

    Protestors push a high fence blocking the entrance to the Greek Parliament during a demonstration in central Athens, Greece, 05 October 2011. Civil Servants' Supreme Administrative Council (ADEDY) and General Confederation of Workers of Greece (GSEE), Greece's two largest umbrella federations representing the public and private sector staged a 24-hour nationwide strike protesting against the ongoing austerity measures taken by the Greek government.

    Read more on the protests in our full story

  • Patrick Pleul / EPA

    A picture combo made available on October 5 shows a horse-chestnut tree (Aesculus hippocastanum) in a field in Jacobsdorf, Germany pictured over the course of four seasons in 2011 - winter (top left), spring (top right), summer (lower left) and autumn (lower right).

    One tree, four seasons

  • Cheryl Ravelo / Reuters

    A coffin loaded onto a boat is pushed through floodwaters during a funeral in Calumpit, Bulacan, a Filipino province north of Manila, on October 5.

    Coffin carried by boat through flooded Filipino town after typhoon

    The AP reports:

    Scores of people living in flood-hit towns north of Manila continue to struggle having not seen dry land for nearly a week. Floods from rains brought by Typhoons Nesat and Nalgae are only beginning to recede and houses, buildings and fields remain submerged.

    See more images of the recent typhoons on PhotoBlog.

  • Nacho Doce / Reuters

    A woman prays as she holds her dog after getting it blessed by a priest at Sao Francisco de Assis (Saint Francis of Assisi) Church in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on October 4. Pet owners bring their animals to be blessed every year on the day of Sao Francisco de Assis.

    A pooch is blessed

    See more images of the blessing of the animals around the world on Animal Tracks.

  • Alan Gibson / AP

    The container ship Rena sits stranded on a reef off the coast of Tauranga, New Zealand, Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011. Authorities have been assessing whether any oil has spilled from the 236m cargo vessel Rena, which struck the Astrolabe Reef, north of Motiti Island in the early hours of Oct. 5.

    Container ship strikes reef off New Zealand coast

    New Zealand Herald reports:

    The vessel, which left Napier bound for Tauranga Port, is on a 10 degree list, but is stable on the reef.

    Two of its cargo holds are flooded, and pumps are being used to extract the water.

    "As a precautionary measure, fuel in tanks on the port side is being transferred to the starboard side," Maritime New Zealand said in a statement.

    Read the full story here.

  • Ted S. Warren / AP

    Amanda Knox, right, is comforted by her mother, Edda Mellas, center, and offered water by her father, Curt Knox, looks on as they wait to talk to reporters, Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2011, in Seattle. Knox was freed Monday after an Italian appeals court threw out her murder conviction for the death of her British roommate, Meredith Kercher.

    Tearful homecoming, Amanda Knox back in Seattle

    SEATTLEAmanda Knox arrived home in Seattle on Tuesday and in a halting voice nearly choked with emotion told the people who supported her fight to overturn her Italian murder conviction: "Thank you for being there for me."

    The British Airways jet carrying Knox landed at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport about 5:09 p.m., one day after an Italian court cleared the 24-year-old college student of murder and freed her after nearly four years in prison.

    Read the full story here.

  • Shah Marai / AFP - Getty Images

    An Afghan boy leans against a wall as he cries on the outskirts of Kabul on Oct. 4. Afghanistan is at the bottom of the Mothers' Index, compiled by the nonprofit group Save the Children, which shows mothers and their children endure "grim conditions," with one in six kids dying before age five and one in three suffering from malnutrition.

    Afghanistan at the bottom of Save the Children Mother's Index

    Guess which country isn't in the top ten . . .

    From Save the Children: Ten best and worst places to be a mother.

    Related: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads slideshow

  • Helicopter crashes in NY's East River; tourist dies, four saved

    AP reports:

    Emergency crews arrived to find the chopper inverted in the murky water with just its skids showing on the surface. The pilot, Paul Dudley, and three passengers were bobbing in the chilly water, and it looked as though a man was diving down and coming back up, possibly in an attempt to rescue the remaining passenger, witnesses said.

    Officers jumped in and pulled out two women and a man, police spokesman Paul Browne said. The women were in critical condition, and the man was stable. All were hospitalized. The pilot swam to the riverbank, remained at the scene and was uninjured.

    Greg Mocker / WPIX via AP

    Divers and first responders help people to shore at a dock the East River after their helicopter crashed, Tuesday, Oct. 4, in New York. A helicopter with five people aboard crashed into river after taking off from a launch pad on the riverbank, killing one and injuring injuring others.

    WPIX via AP

    Divers pull a woman from the water onto a dock on the East River after the helicopter she was in crashed, Tuesday, Oct. 4 in New York.

    A helicopter with a pilot and four passengers crashed into New York City's East River shortly after taking off Tuesday afternoon, killing one of the passengers. NBC's Mara Schiavocampo reports from the scene.

  • Depleted insect population in Texas threatens survival of bats at Bracken Cave

    These bats put on quite a show as they come out before sunset; unfortunately, what is good for bat watchers is not so good for the bats.     Full story.

    Related:

    1.5 million bats in Texas city left hungrier by drought

    Bat Conservation International's Bat Viewing Sites Around the World.

    Eric Gay / AP

    Some of the 20 million bats emerge from Bracken Cave in Bracken, Texas. A depleting insect population has forced millions of bats around drought-stricken Texas to emerge before nightfall for food runs, making them more susceptible to natural predators. Some experts have already noticed fewer bats emerging from caves and have seen evidence that more infant bats are showing up dead, hinting at a looming population decline.


    Eric Gay / AP

    Some of the 20 million bats emerge from Bracken Cave in Bracken, Texas.

    Eric Gay / AP

    Some of the 20 million bats emerge from Bracken Cave in Bracken, Texas.

     

     

  • Beltre's three homers lead Rangers to ALCS

    We all make mistakes in our everyday work, but you have to feel for the TBS cameraman who runs down the third base line when a player makes his home run trot.

    Full story.

    J. Meric / Getty Images

    Infielder Adrian Beltre #29 of the Texas Rangers runs down teh third base line as a TV photographer falls trying to follow him after hitting a second inning home run against the Tampa Bay Rays during Game Four of the American League Division Series at Tropicana Field on October 4, 2011 in St. Petersburg, Florida.

    Mike Ehrmann / Getty Images

    Yorvit Torrealba #8 of the Texas Rangers watches highlights on a phone after a TBS cameraman falls after Adrian Beltre #29 hits a home run in the second inning against the Tampa Bay Rays in Game Four of the American League Division Series at Tropicana Field on October 4, 2011 in St. Petersburg, Florida.

     

  • Wife seeks missing wedding ring of husband killed in Afghanistan

    In August, we covered the tragic story of 30 U.S. service members and eight Afghans who were killed when insurgents shot down their Chinook helicopter in Afghanistan. It was the deadliest single loss for U.S. forces in the decade-long war.

    Aaron Vaughn, shown below, was one of the 22 Navy SEALS on board from Team 6. His widow Kimberly Vaughn wore his wedding band since his death “as a constant reminder of their love.” 

     

    Vaughn family

    This undated photo provided by the Vaughn family shows Aaron Vaughn, right, and his wife Kimberly of Virginia Beach, Va. Aaron Vaughn, a 30-year-old father of two, was among the Navy SEALs killed in August when a rocket-propelled grenade fired by a Taliban insurgent downed their Chinook helicopter en route to a combat mission.

    While traveling on Oct. 1, she lost his silver ring with her name inscribed inside, while traveling from Texas to the east coast. She and her friends have started a Facebook campaign in hopes that the ring will be found and returned to her.  For more details on the ring and Kimberly’s itinerary that day, go to the Facebook page

    In the video below, Aaron’s family describes the man they lost.

    The family of Aaron Vaughn, one of the Navy SEALs killed in Afghanistan over the weekend, discusses his life and his love for his country with TODAY's Matt Lauer.

     

  • New solar plant in Spain provides 24-hour power

    Julio Munoz / EPA

    General view of the first solar power plant by concentration with a central tower receiver, inagurated in Sevilla, southern Spain, on 04 October.

    Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters

    Photographers and a cameraman work at the new solar power plant "Gemasolar" the day of its inauguration in Fuentes de Andalucia, southern Spain October 4, 2011.

    Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters

    The new solar power plant "Gemasolar" is pictured the day of its inauguration in Fuentes de Andalucia, southern Spain October 4.

    Here's more about this solar power plant and how it produces electricity after the sun goes down.

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