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  • Students all aflutter at the Sensational Butterflies exhibition in London

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    A girl allows a butterfly to be placed on her nose at the Sensational Butterflies exhibition at the Natural History Museum on April 6 in London, England. The exhibition is divided up into five sensory zones exploring how butterflies see, hear, taste, smell and touch. The display containing hundreds of butterflies runs from April 12 to September 11.

    Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

    School children play with butterflies at the Sensational Butterflies exhibition at the Natural History Museum on April 6 in London, England. The exhibition is divided up into five sensory zones exploring how butterflies see, hear, taste, smell and touch. The display containing hundreds of butterflies runs from April 12 to September 11.

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    Chrysalises hang at the Sensational Butterflies exhibition at the Natural History Museum on April 6 in London, England.

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    A girl allows a butterfly to be placed on her nose at the Sensational Butterflies exhibition at the Natural History Museum on April 6 in London, England.

     What fun for these kids. For more on the exhibit click here.

    Show more
  • Peter Morrison / AP

    Police Service of Northern Ireland officers carry the coffin of their colleague Ronan Kerr to a funeral mass at the Church of Immaculate Conception in Beragh, Northern Ireland on Wednesday, April, 6. PSNI officer Kerr was killed Saturday in a car bomb attack at his home in Omagh. Government and church leaders from across Ireland joined several thousand mourners Wednesday for the funeral of a Catholic policeman slain by IRA dissidents — a rare killing that has highlighted the dramatic social changes of Northern Ireland's peace process.

    Northern Ireland police officers honor colleague killed in bomb attack

    For the latest on this story click here.

  • 'The gods may have punished us,' Japanese woman worries

     

    Kuni Takahashi

    Fukuko Hatakeyama, whose house was washed away in the tsunami, talks about her loss as she stands in debris in Miyagi prefecture on March 29.

    Kuni Takahashi, a photojournalist based in Mumbai, returned to his native Japan after the earthquake and tsunami. He was born in Sendai, one of the most devastated towns on the northern coast.

    "Did you find anything?” I ask the woman when I see her digging through the debris with her cane in Kesennuma, Miyagi prefecture.  

    “I had 4,500,000 yen (US$53,000) wrapped in special cloth but it’s gone," says 80-year-old Fukuko Hatakeyama, clearly upset.

    She'd been saving the money, wrapped in fire-proof material, for years to leave it to her son.  

    Her house, flattened by the massive tsunami and the remains ravaged by fire, is gone. Debris is piled and scattered for more than half-a-mile. Her son and daughter-in-law, who live in a nearby evacuation center, tell her not to go back to the area because it is dangerous with debris.  But she sneaks out anyway.

    “I come here every day to look for it but I can’t find anything. Now there is nothing I can leave to my son when I die," she says.

    She adds quietly: “There are too many people on the earth messing with nature…the gods may have punished us.”

     

    More photos from Kuni Takahashi on photoblog.

    ‘I come here every day trying to spend time with my wife who I couldn't save'

    'I still keep calling my sister's phone, hoping she may pick it up'

     

  • Luca Bruno / AP

    A Berlusconi supporter displays women's underwear outside the court in Milan on Wednesday, April 6.

    Showing undies in support of Berlusconi at sex trial

    According to the AP, Berlusconi supporters have pledged to maintain a vigil on a traffic island opposite the courthouse where dozens have gathered for recent hearings in three other pending Berlusconi cases, all involving corruption and fraud allegations.

    Full story here: Berlusconi sex trial opens, is adjourned

  • Scores of migrants missing after boat capsizes off Italian island

    Ettore Ferrari / EPA

    Red Cross workers carry a migrant on a stretcher after he arrived on the Italian island of Lampedusa early on April 6. Scores of migrants were feared dead after a boat thought to be carrying about 200 people from North Africa capsized off the island, officials said. Only 48 people were rescued so far, Italian coast guard officer Pietro Carosia said. The 48 survivors, who were picked up by a coast guard patrol some 39 nautical miles from Lampedusa, had arrived on the island by mid-morning.

    Ettore Ferrari / EPA

    Migrants disembark a boat after arriving at the harbor of the Italian island of Lampedusa on April 6.

    ROME — Italian coast guard officials were trying Wednesday to rescue migrants lost at sea after their boat capsized off the coast of Lampedusa, a tiny Italian island close to North Africa, officials said. Many were feared dead.

    The Coast Guard has saved 48 out of 200 believed to be aboard the rickety board, said Pietro Carosia of the Italian Coast Guard. But helicopters also have spotted corpses in the sea, Carosia said, declining to provide a number. Continue reading.

  • Gbagbo supporters seized as pressure increases on Ivory Coast strongman

    AFP - Getty Images

    Backers of Ivory Coast strongman Laurent Gbagbo seized by supporters of the country's internationally recognized leader Alassane Ouattara are held on April 5 at the Golf Hotel, Ouattara's headquarters in Abidjan.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Backers of Ivory Coast strongman Laurent Gbagbo seized by supporters of the country's internationally recognized leader Alassane Ouattara are led on a rope on April 5 at the Golf Hotel, Ouattara's headquarters in Abidjan.

    Read about the latest developments in Abidjan, where Laurent Gbagbo is bunkered down in his residence as forces loyal to presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara attack the building.

  • Children in Fukushima attend their first day of elementary school

    Carlos Barria / Reuters

    Children attend a ceremony on their first day of school at Shimizu elementary school in Fukushima, northern Japan on April 6. Over 70 schools began their regular classes on Wednesday in the city of Fukushima, after the earthquake and tsunami that hit the country on March 11.

    Carlos Barria / Reuters

    A girl walks with her mother after her first day of school at the Shimizu elementary school in Fukushima on April 6.

    Carlos Barria / Reuters

    Children sit inside a classroom on their first day of school at Shimizu elementary school in Fukushima on April 6.

    As Alan Boyle reports on Cosmic Log, the Fukushima nuclear disaster's long-term impact on Japan is expected to be considerable. I find myself wondering how these children's lives will be affected as they go through their school careers.

  • Flowers and North Korea

    Feng Li / Getty Images

    A billboard image of the Kimilsungia flower is seen on the street on April 3 in Pyongyang, North Korea.

    The Kimilsungia is a variety of orchid named in honor of North Korea's 'Great Leader', Kim Il-sung. The North Korean government says that the "immortal flower" is "blooming everywhere on the five continents."

    Kim Jong-il, the son and successor of Kim Il-sung, explained the origin of the flower's name in a 2005 speech which had the catchy title Kimilsungia Is an Immortal Flower That has Bloomed in the Hearts of Mankind in the Era of Independence. In this extract, Kim Jong-il recalls a visit he and his father paid to Indonesian President Sukarno in 1965.

    When visiting the Bogor Botanical Garden, I felt more deeply how much President Sukarno respected and revered President Kim Il Sung. With a long history, this world-renowned botanical garden was well worth visiting. With flowers of the orchid family, cactuses and other rare tropical flowers in full bloom, I felt as if I were visiting a world flower fair. When we approached a display in a greenhouse of the botanical garden, Sukarno took a pot of flowers from the director of the botanical garden, and asked President Kim Il Sung how he liked the flowers. The director explained that it was a variety of the orchid family a famous florist of the garden had bred after long, painstaking research, and it was a peculiar flower in that it blossomed twice a year, being in bloom for two to three months. After looking at the flower for a while, President Kim Il Sung said that it was very beautiful and expressed thanks to his host for showing him such a fine flower. Then, Sukarno said sincerely that he wanted the flower to be named after President Kim Il Sung. The director of the botanical garden, too, expressed his wish to call it Kimilsungia. President Kim Il Sung gently declined their suggestion, saying that he had done nothing so special and that there was no need to name a flower after him. Sukarno replied, "No. You have rendered enormous services to mankind, so you deserve a high honour." He refused to withdraw his request. Back in Jakarta, he repeatedly brought the matter to us. On receiving a report about it, President Kim Il Sung said that if President Sukarno and the Indonesian people wished it so sincerely, he would accept the suggestion as a token of their esteem for our people. This is how a flower named after a great man for the first time in the thousands of years of human history came into the world.

    Read the full speech. On the occasion of his 46th birthday, Kim Jong-il, too, had a flower named after him: the Kimjongilia.

  • Texas A&M defeats Notre Dame in the NCAA Women's championship game

    John Sommers II / Reuters

    Texas A&M Aggies Danielle Adams drives past Notre Dame forward Becca Bruszewski during the women's final Final Four college basketball championship game in Indianapolis, Ind., April 5, 2011.

    AP reports
    INDIANAPOLIS -- Danielle Adams scored 22 of her 30 points in a dominating second half and Texas A&M beat Notre Dame 76-70 on Tuesday night to win its first national championship.

    Texas A&M built an early 13-point lead with its aggressive defense, fell behind by seven in the second half, then rallied by pounding the ball inside to the 6-foot-1 Adams, who bulled her way to 9-for-11 shooting in the final 20 minutes.

    Tyra White added 18 points for the Aggies, including a huge 3-pointer as the shot clock buzzer sounded to put A&M up 73-68 with 1:07 left.

    That was enough to bring the title to a school that didn't even admit women until 1963 and to deny a second championship to Notre Dame, which won 10 years ago in St. Louis.

    Skylar Diggins led the Irish in this improbable title game matchup of No. 2 seeds with 23 points. Devereaux Peters had 21 points and 11 rebounds for Notre Dame, which was burned by A&M's 68 percent (15-for-22) second-half shooting.

    John Sommers II / Reuters

    Notre Dame guard Natalie Novosel fights for a rebound during the game.

  • Bennett Raglin / Getty Images for Madame Tussauds

    TV personality Kelly Ripa (R) attends the unveiling of her wax figure at Madame Tussauds New York on April 5, 2011 in New York City.

    Regis and Kelly have wax figures unveiled in New York

    The two faceless men opening the curtains add an even creepier symmetry to this photo. Which Regis and Kelly would you rather hang out with? To see images of more LIVING celebrity sightings, check out our daily slideshow here.

  • Severe weather in Georgia demolishes homes, claims lives

    Eight people have been killed so far in what the AP reports is the largest report of severe weather - 1,100 storms - in a 24-hour period since 2000.

    Ryan Smith / Rome News-Tribune via AP

    A police car shines a spot light on a broken power pole in Rome, Ga. on Monday, April 4, 2011 during a thunder storm.

    Ryan Smith / Rome News-Tribune via AP

    Rome firefighters inspect a tree that fell on a house on Monday, April 4, 2011 during a thunder storm in Rome, Ga.

    While the family below was lucky to not have been injured when a tree crashed into their bedrooms, a Jackson, Ga. family was not as lucky when a tree limb killed a father and young son. Read the full story here.

    Ellie Mahon / Rome News-Tribune via AP

    Sam Megginson looks at the damage to his bedroom on Tuesday, April 5, 2011, in Rome, Ga. A tree fell through the roof of his home on Monday night during a thunder storm.

    Ellie Mahon / Rome News-Tribune via AP

    Lucy Megginson comforts her son Sam Megginson after a tree crashed through the roof of their home in Rome, Ga., on Tuesday April 5, 2011 as Matt Megginson surveys the damage.

  • NTSB calls for inspection of Boeing 737 jetliners

    Alex Wong / Getty Images

    National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Deborah Hersman points out on a model Southwest Airlines plane the position where the fuselage skin was torn from a Boeing 737-300 aircraft during a news briefing April 5, at the NTSB headquarters in Washington, DC. The 15-year-old Southwest aircraft was on its way from Phoenix to Sacramento and had to make an emergency landing when the accident happened on Friday, April 1, 2011.

    AP: The order is aimed at finding weaknesses in the metal exterior, but virtually all of the affected aircraft will have already been inspected by the time the order takes effect.

    The safety directive applies to about 175 aircraft worldwide, including 80 planes registered in the U.S., the Federal Aviation Administration said. Of those 80, nearly all are operated by Southwest. Two belong to Alaska Airlines. Read the full story here.

    Shawn Thew / EPA

    Photographers surround the damaged fuselage skin section from Southwest Airlines Flight 812 Boeing 737 in the materials labratory at NTSB Headquarters in Washington, DC April 5. Cracks have been found in five Southwest planes after an emergency inspection was carried out on the airline's fleet when a five-foot hole 'exploded' in the roof of Flight 812 on April 1.

    Go behind the scenes at the Boeing 737 factory in Renton, WA in this slideshow.

    While most manufacturing is done overseas, the 737 is still made in Washington. Find out why.

     

  • Russian spy Anna Chapman debuts at Moscow Fashion Week

    Victor Boyko / Getty Images

    Anna Chapman poses on the runway during the Shiyan & Rudkovskaya show at Moscow Fashion Week on April 4 in Moscow, Russia. While living in the United Sates, Anna Chapman was exposed as a Russian spy and arrested along with nine other Russian nationals. The group were accused of running a spy ring for the Russian intelligence agency and were deported back to Russia in July 2010.

    The intersection of spy and celebrity is an intriguing one, leaving more questions than answers.

    Sporting knee-high boots, a corset and leather leggings, Anna Chapman strutted down the runway for Moscow Fashion Week.

    The Daily Mail described the appearance as distasteful tongue-in-cheek choreography, in which Chapman confidently held a gun to a male model's head. More photos / continue reading...

    Related content:
    Russian spy Anna Chapman in from cold, out on web
    Russian spy Chapman launches weekly TV show
    Anna Chapman on msnbc.com

  • Outside the frame: Protest and prayer in Yemen

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    A Yemeni boy prays with female anti-government protestors during a demonstration demanding the resignation of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, in Sanaa, Yemen, Monday, April 4.

    Muhammed Muheisen of the Associated Press writes:

    SANAA, Yemen — It’s not usually easy to take pictures of women in Yemen. It’s very different from other places where I’ve worked — places like Jerusalem and Pakistan, where people understand the news media and are used to photographers. Here, photographers are viewed with suspicion, and taking pictures of women, in particular, can get you yelled at. But in covering the anti-government protests here every day, we’ve learned to blend in, which makes it easier to capture images like this one. The women in this picture were praying during a protest they were attending; the men at the protest were on the other side of the blue fabric you see in the background. The boy in the photo, who was there with a female relative, noticed me taking his picture for a moment, then carried on.

    More photos from our continuing coverage of the conflict in Yemen.

  • '...I come here every day trying to spend time with my wife who I couldn't save'

    Kuni Takahashi

    Shiro Yuyama, 69, looks for his belongings where his house used to be in Onagawa, Miyagi prefecture on April 2. His wife, Takako, was in the house at the time the earthquake and tsunami struck on March 11 and died.

    Kuni Takahashi, a photojournalist based in Mumbai, returned to his native Japan after the earthquake and tsunami. He was born in Sendai, one of the most devastated towns on the northern coast.

    “When I realized the ship was only several meters away, I was chased by the water and debris up the hill. My wife was still in the house," Shiro Yuyama, 69, told me in a very gentle voice. I saw him digging through the debris where his house used to be in Onagawa, Miyagi prefecture, trying to find any of their belongings. He was outside the house working in the garden when he saw the massive tsunami moving toward him, pushing with it a ship and debris from the port, almost one kilometer (0.6 miles) away. He knew his wife, Tamako, 67, was in the kitchen, but the wave was rolling so fast that he couldn’t do anything but run up the hill next to his house.

    Now he sleeps on the floor in a space just wide enough for himself at the evacuation center in town. On both sides of him are families that survived the tsunami intact.

    “It’s very difficult for me to see the families laughing and eating together. So I come here every day trying to spend time with my wife who I couldn’t save.”

     

    More photos from Kuni Takahashi on photoblog.

    'The Gods may have punished us,' Japanese woman worries

    'I still keep calling my sister's phone, hoping she may pick it up'

     

  • Ivory Coast: Laurent Gbagbo under fire

    AFP - Getty Images

    A pro-Ouattara fighter of the FRCI (Republican Force of Ivory Coast), wearing a gas mask, prepares for the so-called "final assault" in front of the Golf Hotel in Abidjan on April 5. Ivory Coast strongman Laurent Gbagbo is hunkered down in a bunker at his residence in Abidjan, after calling for a ceasefire as rival forces cornered him, the UN mission said.

     

    Emmanuel Braun / Reuters

    A soldier loyal to Alassane Ouattara moves along a road as fighting flares across Abidjan on April 4. Forces loyal to Ouattara streamed into the city from the north on Monday.

    Luc Gnago / Reuters

    Explosions are seen at a camp of soldiers loyal to Laurent Gbagbo during an attack by U.N. and French armed forces in Treichville in Abidjan on April 4.

    Jane Hahn / AP

    In this photo taken on Sunday, April 3, and made available on April 5, a UN peacekeeper from Jordan looks up as he and others return fire on troops supporting Ivory Coast strongman Laurent Gbagbo during a patrol in the streets of Abidjan.

    Follow the latest developments in Ivory Coast, take a look at a timeline of the country's turbulent history and see more images on PhotoBlog.

  • Yemeni protesters rush wounded to field hospital during clashes in Sanaa

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    An anti-government protestor displays bullet shells during clashes in Sanaa,Yemen on Tuesday, April 5. Opposition parties in Yemen have urged the international community, regional powers and human rights groups to help stop the bloodshed in their country.

    Mohammed Huweiss/ AFP - Getty Images

    Anti-government demonstraters carry a wounded protestor to a field hospital during clashes in Sanaa on April 5, as two dissident soldiers and three other people were killed in a firefight between troops and tribesmen close to President Ali Abdullah Saleh. Five people were shot dead and four wounded in the clash near a square where anti-regime protesters have been staging a sit-in for the past two months.

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    An injured anti-government protestor reacts from pain as he carried by other demonstrators to a field hospital during clashes in Sanaa,Yemen.

     For the full report of developments in Yemen click here.

  • Holding on to hope in Japan: 'I still keep calling my sister's phone, hoping she may pick it up'

    Kuni Takahashi

    Fumie Sato, 62, stands on her mother and sister's building in MInamisanriku in Miyagi, Japan on Thursday. Sato's younger sister, Yukie, was killed as she was trying to save her mother-in-law. Neither survived.

    Kuni Takahashi, a photojournalist based in Mumbai, returned to his native Japan after the earthquake and tsunami. He was born in Sendai, one of the most devastated towns on the northern coast.

    I approached Fumie Sato as she stood and stared at the foundation of the house in Minamisanriku-cho in Miyagi prefecture where her mother and sister ran a hair salon. They all survived except for her younger sister, Yukie, who on the way to the evacuation center swung by another house to try to save her mother-in-law. Neither made it back.

    “I survived and my sister didn’t. I feel very guilty somehow. It’s hell when you die but also, it’s hell when you survive,” she said.

    I noticed that Sato was holding a mobile phone.

    “I still keep calling my sister’s phone, hoping she may pick it up,” she says.

     

    More photos from Kuni Takahashi on photoblog.

    'The Gods may have punished us,' Japanese woman worries

    ‘I come here every day trying to spend time with my wife who I couldn't save'

  • Protests at US military presence in the Philippines

    Ted Aljibe / AFP - Getty Images

    US embassy security guards clash with protesters during an anti-Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) rally in front of the US embassy in Manila on April 5 to coincide with start of an annual Philippines-US military exercise. Since 2002, the US has stationed hundreds of troops in Mindanao to help train local forces as they fight Islamic militants who are blamed for the country's worst terrorist attacks. About 500 US Special Forces troops train Filipino soldiers in Mindanao to combat militants from the Al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group, which the United States lists as a terrorist organisation. The US troops are not allowed to take part in combat operations in the Philippines.

    AP reports: Students protesting the participation of American troops in military exercises in the Philippines have smeared paint on a seal of the U.S. Embassy in Manila.

    Protesters from the left-wing League of Filipino Students scuffled Tuesday with security guards and police while a few demonstrators hurled plastic bags with yellow and blue paint at the embassy seal at the main entrance to the compound. They later dispersed.

    Rolex Dela Pena / EPA

    (L-R) US Lt.Gen. Francis Wiercinski, Philippine Air Force chief Lt.Gen. Oscar Rabena, Philippines Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Erlinda Basilio, US Ambassador Harry Thomas and Armed Forces of the Philippines Rear Admiral Victor Martir conduct a ceremonial linking of arms during opening rites of the Philippines-US Balikatan Exercises at a military camp in Quezon City on April 5.

    About 3,000 U.S. and 2,000 Filipino troops are taking part in 10 days of exercises that have been scaled down because of relief work in Japan following the deadly earthquake and tsunami.

    Leftist groups in the Philippines say the U.S. presence is an affront to the country's sovereignty.

    Francis R. Malasig / EPA

    Filipino demonstrators march during a protest rally in front of the US embassy in Manila on April 5, opposing joint military exercises.

    Adrienne Mong of NBC News reported on the US presence in the Philippines in October 2010:

    In a fight that's lasted almost as long as the one in Afghanistan, U.S. Special Forces have been helping to wage a battle against Islamic militants in Southeast Asia. NBC's Adrienne Mong reports.

     

  • A bicycle accident in Beijing

    Frederic J. Brown / AFP - Getty Images

    Bystanders gather to watch as a policeman takes a closer look at an injured man lying on the road beside his electric bicycle in Beijing on April 5. It was not known whether the cyclist was hit by a vehicle which fled the scene, or if he collapsed on his own, but an ambulance arrived moments later to take the injured man away.

    Frederic J. Brown / AFP - Getty Images

    An injured cyclist is taken away by paramedics in Beijing on April 5.

    China's roads are among the world's most dangerous, with widespread flouting of traffic laws leaving almost 70,000 people dead from road accidents in 2009, or around 190 fatalities a day, according to police statistics cited by AFP.

    As long ago as 2001, Philip Pan of the Washington Post declared that the bicycle was no longer king of the road in China. Pan recounted how "China's fascination with the bicycle began in the late 19th century, when two Americans pedaled from Constantinople to Peking on a pair of Humber bicycles with diamond-pattern frames. Crowds greeted them in village after village, describing the strange vehicle as 'a foreign horse' and 'a little mule that you drive by the ears and kick in the sides to make him go'."

    A few weeks ago, Evan Osnos of the New Yorker revisited Pan's analysis in a blog post on his own experiences riding the bike lanes of Beijing.

  • Airstrike hits Libyan military convoy as rebels regroup

    Nasser Nasser / AP

    A Libyan rebel inspects one of two destroyed military vehicles of pro-Gadhafi forces that rebels claim were targeted by a NATO strike along the front line near Brega on April 5.

    BREGA, Libya — An airstrike hit a convoy of Libyan military vehicles moving toward rebel lines outside the eastern oil port of Brega on Tuesday, rebels said as they regrouped outside the city. The regime, meanwhile, insisted Moammar Gadhafi won't step down but said it is ready to discuss changes in how the country is governed.

    Nasser Nasser / AP

    Libyan rebels inspect two destroyed military vehicles of pro-Gadhafi forces that rebels claim were targeted by a NATO strike along the front line near Brega on April 5. Libya's rebel forces are looking more effective on the front and even scrapping back some of the territory lost to Moammar Gadhafi's army, but the ragtag fighters are still a long way from being able to march to Tripoli.

    Backed by an international air campaign, the rebels have made inroads in recent days in eastern Libya. They advanced under artillery fire Monday and took part of Brega, an oil town that has changed hands several times since the fighting began last month.

    Rebel officer Abdel-Bast Abibi said the two sides battled inside the city until nightfall, then the rebels moved back to the outskirts. It was a quiet night, but an airstrike struck early Tuesday as a convoy of eight Libyan military vehicles advancing toward the rebel positions, he said.

    Mahmud Hams / AFP - Getty Images

    Libyan rebels clean the road after moving one of two loyalist pick-up trucks destroyed by a NATO airstrike on April 5 near Brega.

    The strike hit two of the vehicles, prompting the others to turn around and race back into the city, carrying the bodies of slain pro-Gadhafi troops, Abibi said, citing surveillance teams.

    Mahmud Hams / AFP - Getty Images

    Libyan rebels look at one of two loyalist pick-up trucks destroyed by a NATO airstrike on April 5 near Brega

     Read the full story and see more images in our slideshow.

  • The cow jumped over the...

    AP's Veronika Oleksyn reports from Laufen, Germany: When Regina Mayer's parents dashed her hopes of getting a horse, the resourceful 15-year-old didn't sit in her room and sulk. Instead, she turned to a cow called Luna to make her riding dreams come true.

    Hours of training, and tons of treats, cajoling and caresses later, the results are impressive: not only do the two regularly go on long rides through the southern German countryside, they do jumps over a makeshift hurdle of beer crates and painted logs.

    Kerstin Joensson / AP

    Regina Mayer jumps with her cow Luna over a hurdle in Laufen, southern Germany, on March 29.

    "She thinks she's a horse," the golden-haired Mayer joked on a recent sunny afternoon as she sat atop the impassive brown-and-white, grass-munching cow.

    It all started about two years ago, shortly after Luna was born on the Mayers' sprawling farm in the hamlet of Laufen, just minutes from the Austrian border.

    They started off with walks in the woods during which Luna wore a halter. Then Mayer slowly got her cow more accustomed to human contact and riding equipment.

    About six months later, it was time to see how Luna would respond to a rider on her back. Mayer sat in the saddle, and all went as planned — at least at first.

    "She was really well behaved and walked normally," said Mayer, decked out in riding gear. "But after a couple of meters, she wanted me to get off! You could see that she got a bit peeved."

    Kerstin Joensson / AP

    Regina Mayer gives her cow Luna a treat.

    Luna and Mayer are now soul mates, spending most afternoons together once the teen — who aspires to become a nurse one day — comes home from school.

    Their extensive routine involves grooming, petting, jumps and a roughly one-hour ride. That's also the case in winter, when Mayer lovingly drapes a blanket over Luna to keep her warm.

    It's a lot of work "but I enjoy it," Mayer said.

    Her efforts have paid off.

    Now, Luna understands commands such as "go," "stand" and "gallop." If she feels like it, that is.

    "When she wants to do something she does it, when she doesn't, she doesn't," said Mayer, who proudly says Luna thinks of her as her mother. "And she's often very headstrong but can also be really adorable."

    Luna's stubborn streak meant that teaching her pony tricks wasn't always easy, Mayer noted, saying she sought tips from a cow expert in Switzerland on how to deal with "steering" problems.

    Anne Wiltafsky, who trains cows near the Swiss city of Zurich, said Luna's talents are not particularly surprising and that, historically, it was quite common to ride cows and use them as workhorses.

    "Especially younger ones can jump really well," Wiltafsky said in a telephone interview, adding that cows are lovable companions because they're easygoing, have strong nerves and are "unbelievably devoted" to people they like.

    Kerstin Joensson / AP

    Regina Mayer walks with her cow Luna.

    Being — and owning — a cow-turned-pony isn't always easy.

    Take the somewhat skeptical neighbors, such as Martin Putzhammer, who had to be won over.

    "At first I thought it was kind of weird — a kid on a cow?" the 17-year-old said during a break from repairing his moped. "Had to get used to it but once I did I thought it was pretty funny."

    While Mayer's friends quickly warmed to her passion after laughing at her, Luna's fellow cows weren't so open-minded.

    "Cows don't really like her ... they're jealous because she always gets goodies," Mayer said.

    And horses? Many run away in fright, but others often join Luna on rides.

    "She really enjoys that and gets totally into it," Mayer said.

    Mayer hasn't given up her hopes of having a horse and may soon get one. But she says Luna will always have a special place in her heart.

    "She'll stay my darling," she said.

    Denied a horse to show jump, a 15-year-old in Germany teaches her farm cow to jump instead. TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

  • Andy Wong / AP

    A Chinese man repaints the characters on a tomb of his relative at a cemetery on the Qingming Festival in Beijing, China Tuesday, April 5. Qingming festival, also known as the Grave Sweeping Day is a day when Chinese around the world remember their dearly departed and take time off to clean up the tombs and place flowers and offerings.

    Chinese honor dead on Grave Sweeping Day

    Sometimes less is more. The hand is just enough to convey the presence of the painter.

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