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  • Yellowstone's vibrant hot springs

    Mark Ralston / AFP - Getty Images

    View of the 'Morning Glory' hot spring with it's unique colors caused by brown, orange and yellow algae-like bacteria that thrive in the cooling water, turning the vivid aqua-blue to a murkier greenish brown, in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, on Thursday, June 2. Yellowstone National Park was established by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Grant on March 1, 1872. The park is located primarily in the U.S. state of Wyoming, though it also extends into Montana and Idaho and was the first national park in the world. It is known for its wildlife and its many geothermal features, especially the Old Faithful Geyser.

    Mark Ralston / AFP - Getty Images

    View of the 'Grand Prismatic' hot spring with it's unique colors caused by brown, orange and yellow algae-like bacteria called Thermophiles, that thrive in the cooling water turning the vivid aqua-blue to a murkier greenish brown, in Yellowstone National Park on Thursday.

    Mark Ralston / AFP - Getty Images

    Tourists walk beside a hot spring and the partially frozen Yellowstone Lake at the West Thumb Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park on Thursday.

    Check out more natural wonders in our national parks slideshow.

  • Ian Langsdon / EPA

    Roger Federer of Switzerland at the net with Novak Djokovic of Serbia whom he defeated in their semi final match for the French Open tennis tournament at Roland Garros in Paris, France, June 3.

    Federer stops Djokovic's win streak at 43

    It's great to see some real sportsmanship these days. I was looking for the great celebration shot, like the one of Nadal earlier today, but I think Federer was too tired to show much emotion. As AP reported:

    On Sunday, Nadal will try to beat Federer for the sixth time in eight Grand Slam finals.

    "Beating Novak today was maybe a good birthday gift for him because he lost his four previous matches against Novak," Federer said of Nadal, who turned 25 on Friday. "I'm going to play against Nadal, my main rival, in another Grand Slam final. We live for these moments."

  • Gerry Broome / AP

    Former presidential candidate John Edwards, center, is seen with his daughter Cate, right, as they peer out of the federal building following a court appearance in Winston-Salem, N.C., Friday, June 3. A grand jury indicted the two-time presidential candidate on Friday, accusing him of trying to protect his political ambitions by soliciting and secretly spending more than $925,000 to hide his mistress and their baby from the public. The person at left is unidentified.

    Edwards pleads not guilty to felony charges in NC

    Several wire photographers today picked on the distortion of the courthouse windows, but I think this frame is the best of the lot. The swirl of the reflection and the somber face of John Edwards tell quite a story. Full story.

  • Homemade rocket launched in Denmark, part of human spaceflight plans

    Bo Tornvig / EPA

    Danish amateur rocket, Heat-1X Tycho Brahe, a MSC (micro spacecraft), takes off from its launch pad in the Baltic Sea on June 3, 2011. The original plan for the Danish amateur rocket builders was to send the rocket about 10 miles up in the air, but the craft reached only 1.7 miles and flew a total of 5.3 miles. The spacecraft was carrying a human sized doll, and is part of a larger plan to send a human into space.

    Bo Tornvig / AP

    A vessel recovers the homemade 30-foot rocket after its flight over the Baltic Sea on June 3. Peter Madsen and Kristian von Bengtson used a barge near the Danish island of Bornholm as a launch pad for their 1.6 ton rocket.

    Related stories

  • Tippecanoe school buses destroyed in suspicious fire

    John Terhune / Journal & Courier via AP

    Karl Jero, medical officer for Wea Township Fire & Rescue, looks at four Tippecanoe School Corporation school buses that were destroyed by fire on June 3, 2011, at Wea Ridge Elementary School. Police believe the buses were intentionally set on fire.

    WLFI-TV reports:

    LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Officials are still investigating the cause of a fire that damaged four Tippecanoe School Corporation buses at Wea Ridge Elementary early Friday morning, and they are looking for the person or persons involved in the incident.

    "At a time when school corporations are already hurting this is sort of a kick in the teeth," said Tippecanoe County Sheriff Tracy Brown.

    Continue reading.

    John Terhune / Journal & Courier via AP

    The interior of one of four Tippecanoe School Corporation buses destroyed by a fire early Friday.

  • Scenes from Appleby Horse Fair in England

    Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

    A traveller washes his horse in the River Eden in preparation for selling at the Appleby Horse Fair on Friday, June 3, in Appleby, England.

    Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

    Romany caravans line up at the Appleby Horse Fair on Friday in Appleby.

    Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

    Travellers wash their horses in the River Eden in preparation for selling at the Appleby Horse Fair on Friday in Appleby.

    Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

    A gypsy girl looks out of the window of her Romany caravan at the Appleby Horse Fair on Friday in Appleby.

    Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

    Travellers wash their horses in the River Eden in preparation for selling at the Appleby Horse Fair on Friday in Appleby.

    According to Getty:

    Appleby Horse Fair has existed under the protection of a charter granted by James II since 1685. It is one of the key gathering points for the Romany, gypsy and traveling community. Appleby Horse Fair is attended by about 5,000 travellers who come to buy and sell horses. The animals are washed and groomed before being ridden at high speed along the 'mad mile' for the viewing of potential buyers.

  • 'Gunsmoke' star James Arness dies at 88

    Update: Brian William's Nightly News profile of James Arness added at the bottom of this post.

    Men of a certain age remember James Arness as the template of masculinity during their youth. The character of Marshal Matt Dillon became one of those male archetypes that we all measured ourselves against. It’s why I had a cowboy hat, boots and six-shooter cap guns as a small boy.  I even recall Johnny Cash talking about practicing his quick draw skills against TV’s Dodge City lawman. I think about that every time I hear Cash’s “Don’t Take Your Guns To Town”.

    AP file

    Actor James Arness, portrays Marshal Matt Dillon in a scene from the CBS-TV series "Gunsmoke" in 1967. CBS spokesman Chris Ender says former "Gunsmoke" star James Arness died June 3, 2011 of natural causes. He was 88.

    AP reports

    James Arness, the 6-foot-6 actor who towered over the television landscape for two decades as righteous Dodge City lawman Matt Dillon in "Gunsmoke," died Friday. He was 88.

    The actor died in his sleep at his home in Brentwood, Calif., according to his business manager, Ginny Fazer.

    Read the full story.

    Practice your quick draw skills against Marshal Matt Dillon with the video below.

    See the opening sequence of "Gunsmoke."

    James Arness, best known as the star of the long-running TV show "Gunsmoke," has died. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

     

  • 'Running of the Brides' kicks off in New York City

    Eric Feferberg / AFP - Getty Images

    Women run to find wedding dresses at the annual "Running of the Brides" sales event at Filene's Basement in New York on Friday, June 3. The annual sale is known for its long queues and frantic shopping among brides-to-be hoping to save hundreds or even thousands of dollars on designer wedding gowns.

    Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

    A shopper tries on bridal dresses during the Filene's Basement "Running of the Brides" bridal dress sale in New York on Friday.

    Eric Feferberg / AFP - Getty Images

    Women search for wedding dresses at the annual "Running of the Brides" sales event at Filene's Basement in New York on Friday.

    Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

    A shopper carries bridal dresses during the Filene's Basement "Running of the Brides" bridal dress sale in New York on Friday.

    Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

    A shopper tries on bridal dresses during the Filene's Basement "Running of the Brides" bridal dress sale in New York on Friday.

    Justin Lane / EPA

    Avernell Joseph, of Brooklyn, New York, has a moment of indecision while trying on a wedding gown in the men's shoe department during the 'Running of the Brides' at a Filene's Basement store in New York on Friday.

    Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

    Shannon Osborne carries a bridal dresses during the Filene's Basement "Running of the Brides" bridal dress sale in New York on Friday.

    It appears that wedding season is, well, off and running. Full story here.

  • Thierry Roge / Reuters

    Rafael Nadal of Spain reacts after winning his semi-final match against Andy Murray of Britain at the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris on June 3.

    Defending champ Nadal rolls past Murray into French final

    AP reports:

    PARIS - Rafael Nadal is still the "King of Clay" at the French Open, and he will be for at least another couple of days after beating Andy Murray 6-4, 7-5, 6-4 Friday to reach his sixth final in seven years at Roland Garros.

    The top-ranked Spaniard wasn't perfect against Murray, struggling at times with his serve and getting broken three times, but his play was consistent enough to take care of his opponent's defensive tactics.

    "The conditions today were not easy," said Nadal, who saved all six break points he faced in the third set. "Very, very difficult with the wind changing a lot." Continue reading.

  • Ulises Ruiz Basurto / EPA

    Popocatepetl volcano spits a plume of smoke and ash nearly 2 miles into the air above Puebla, Mexico, on Friday, June 3.

    Volcano blasts tower of ash near Mexico City

    AP reports -- Popocatepetl volcano that towers over Mexico City is rumbling again. The 17,886-foot mountain shot a blast of ash about 2 miles above its crater at dawn Friday. (full story)

    Related content:
    Iceland's Grimsvotn volcano erupts
    Indonesia's Mount Merapi, which means "Fire Mountain," erupts

  • Jack Kevorkian, convicted in assisted suicides, dies at 83

    Richard Sheinwald / AP

    Dr. Jack Kevorkian poses with his "suicide machine" in Michigan, Feb. 6, 1991.

    Richard Sheinwald / AP

    Dr. Jack Kevorkian, seated in a wheelchair, 65, of Royal Oak, Mich., rests his head on the defense table in Oakland County District court in Royal Oak, Michigan, Friday, Dec. 10, 1993. Kevorkian was in court for his preliminary hearing on charges he violated Michigan's ban on assisted suicide on Oct. 22, 1993, suicide death of Merian Fredrick of Ann Arbor, Mich. Kevorkian is in his 11th day of a hunger strike in jail.

    Carlos Osorio / AP

    Dr. Jack Kevorkian meets the press in homemade stocks before his arraignment on assisted suicide charges at the Oakland County courthouse in Pontiac, Mich., Thursday, Sept. 14, 1995. Kevorkian, a retired pathologist who advocates doctors helping the terminally ill who wish to commit suicide, was wearing the laminated cardboard stocks in apparent reference to a state Supreme Court ruling that said assisted suicide could be prosecuted in Michigan under common law.

    Rebecca Cook / Reuters

    Jack Kevorkian waits to announce he is running in the November election as an independent for a seat in the U.S. Congress in Southfield, Michigan in this March 24, 2008 file photo. Kevorkian, the Michigan pathologist who put assisted suicide on the world's medical ethics stage, died in the early morning hours of June 3, 2011, said his lawyer Mayer Morganroth. Kevorkian, 83, died at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, where he had been hospitalized for about two weeks with kidney and heart problems.

     

    'Dr. Death' put controversy of euthanasia on world stage; had been hospitalized for weeks. For more on this story click here.

  • Chinese drought turns lake into a dry ocean of green grass

    Eugene Hoshiko / AP

    A fishing boat is left abandoned in the bottom of the dried-up Poyang Lake, a vast wetland turned dry by China's worst drought in decades, in Xingzi, Jiangxi Province on June 2.

    The AP reports from XINGZI, China:

    Tao Jingun's graceful wooden fishing boat sits atop a vast, shell-studded basin that was the bottom of Poyang Lake just months ago but now is a dry ocean of green grass because of China's worst drought in decades.

    As Poyang shrinks to a tenth its usual size, crops wither and millions of people go thirsty, critics point to the gargantuan Three Gorges Dam as one cause, making it a symbol of the risks of the country's penchant for extreme engineering projects dating back to the Great Wall of China.

    "This is the least water I've seen in over 30 years. There's nothing we can do," said Tao, a thin, congenial man who usually makes up to about $6,000 selling his annual catch from Poyang but this year expects to earn "basically nothing." Continue reading.

  • Graying of AIDS: Older Americans at risk for HIV infection

    Anna Fowlkes, 64, didn't date for years after her husband, Sonny, died of a brain tumor. And after she finally did, she learned she’d become infected with HIV. She taught her son about safe sex, she says, but, like many other seniors, it didn’t occur to her that she needed to practice it too.

    “We are of a generation where that was not something we have to think about,” she says. “Now I know better.”

    Anna Fowlkes contracted HIV from a man she had a relationship with in her 50s. Now 64, she's found purpose doing HIV and AIDS outreach and education for other seniors.

    One in 10 people newly diagnosed with HIV are age 50 or older, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 2006 statistics, the last year for which there is data. Dr. Brad Hare, the medical director of San Francisco General Hospital’s HIV/AIDS clinic, Ward 86, says up to half of the new infections seen in San Francisco among that age group are in women. That’s far higher than the 27 percent of new infections that occur in women of all ages, according to the CDC’s 2006 statistics.
     
    Some, like Fowlkes, may be entering a new sexual relationship for the first time in decades after the death of a spouse and may not be aware of the risk, says Hare.  In other cases, women may have believed they were in a monogamous relationship with a husband or partner, who wasn’t monogamous with them.
     
    Today, Fowlkes, is an advocate for HIV prevention among her peers. “I don’t want [others] to have to go down the road I’ve gone down,” she says. “I want them to get tested.”

    Msnbc.com health editor Linda Dahlstrom teamed up with Katja Heinemann (Aurora Select), a freelance photojournalist who has been documenting the graying of AIDS since 2005, to report the video above and this story.

    See more of Heinemann's work on the subject at www.grayingofaids.org

     

  • The Shangri-La Dialogue

    Stephen Morrison / EPA

    Gurkha soldiers keep watch in front of the hotel where the Shangri-La Dialogue is being held in Singapore, June 3. The US is not trying to hold China down or block it as a global power, Defence Secretary Robert Gates said as he flew to an Asian security conference, the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) Asia Security Summit: The Shangri-La Dialogue, which will include a delegation led by China's Defence Minister, Liang Guanglie.

    The Shangri-La Dialogue! I have never heard a more intriguing title for a conference. If you'd like to find out whether or not the reality is living up to its tantalizing name, read our report.

  • Decoding the E. coli outbreak

    Marcus Brandt / AFP - Getty Images

    The decoded genetic code of the EHEC bacteria O104 on a computer screen at a laboratory of the Eppendorf University clinic (UKE) in the northern German city of Hamburg on June 2.

    AFP reports:

    The World Health Organisation warned Europe was seeing the first outbreak of a lethal new bacteria, as its death toll climbed to 18, all but one them in Germany. The WHO advisory came as German and Chinese researchers said they had cracked the genetic code of the E. coli strain, which they said in a preliminary analysis was resistant to antibiotics and extremely virulent.

    Read our report on the outbreak and an analysis of the risks to the U.S.

  • Shells explode, thousands evacuate as arsenal fire shakes Russia

    NTV via AFP - Getty Images

    A television grab shows balls of fire and columns of smoke rising above a burning arms depot in central Russia's Udmurtia region early on June 3. Fire raged through an arms depot where tonnes of artillery shells and rockets are stored, causing the mass evacuation of people and leaving dozens injured in the third such recent incident.

    The AP reports from MOSCOW:

    Shells are exploding and tens of thousands of people have been evacuated from their homes as fire blazes through an ammunition depot in central Russia.

    Russian news reports say at least 28 people have been injured in the blaze and explosions that started late Thursday at the arsenal in the republic of Udmurtia, some 900 kilometers (550 miles) east of Moscow. Continue reading.

  • Ratko Mladic salutes as he takes his seat in court

    Serge Ligtenberg / Getty Images

    Former Bosnian Serb General Ratko Mladic salutes as he takes his seat in the International Criminal Tribunal where he faces war crime charges on June 3 in The Hague, Netherlands.

    msnbc.com news services report: 

    THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Former Bosnian Serb military chief Gen. Ratko Mladic declined to enter a plea Friday as he appeared before the United Nations war crimes court and said that that he is "a gravely ill man."

    Mladic was arraigned on an 11-count indictment charging him with orchestrating the worst atrocities of a war that claimed 100,000 lives. Continue reading.

    Elvis Barukcic / AFP - Getty Images

    Bosnian Muslim women, survivors of the Srebrenica massacre, watch the live broadcast of Ratko Mladic's appearance before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, in Potocari, near Srebrenica, on June 3.

     See our slideshow: The charges against Ratko Mladic

  • Srebrenica: The story that will never end

    Former Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic appeared before a court in The Hague Friday to hear charges of genocide. Follow the latest developments in the case here, and read a story from a survivor of Bosnia's killing fields here. In the wake of Mladic's arrest, Reuters photographer Damir Sagolj, who served in the Bosnian army during the war of 1992-95, recounted his personal recollections of working in Srebrenica:

    "I've been to more than one hundred mass graves, mass funerals and witnessed the long, exhaustive process of victim identification. I've taken pictures of bones found in caves and rivers, dug from mud, recovered from woods and mines or just left by the road.

    "Most of these terrible assignments were around the small, end-of-the-road town of Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters, file

    One of hundreds of coffins with remains of Bosnian Muslims is taken to a cemetery near Srebrenica, late July 10, 2007. The mass burial of 465 victims of the 1995 massacre of up to 8,000 Muslim men and boys by Bosnian Serb forces was held the following day at a joint cemetery near Srebrenica.

    "The international criminal court says that a genocide was committed in Srebrenica in July of 1995 when Bosnian Serb forces massacred thousands of Muslims after the enclave, ironically under U.N. protection as a safe haven, was overrun by an army led by its ruthless commander.

    "Ratko Mladic, a typical officer from what used to be the Yugoslav people's army, was the commander of the forces that overran the enclave. He described it as revenge upon the Turks for the events of the early 19th century. Thousands of white Muslim gravestones at the terrifying and extremely sad Srebrenica memorial remain as a symbol of that 'revenge'. Thousands are still missing, their bones hidden in heavy Bosnian soil.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters, file

    A woman holds a photo of her missing son as Bosnian Muslim relatives of the victims and survivors of the Srebrenica massacre meet with ex-Dutch peacekeepers in a former U.N base in Potocari on October 17, 2007. A group of Dutch ex-peacekeepers whose mission was to protect civilians in the U.N. safe haven of Srebrenica visited the site and met with survivors and relatives of victims.

    "I was in Sarajevo when the news came to us, transmitted over a noisy, primitive radio system. Local reporters from Srebrenica - who would disappear themselves over the next few days - sent the dramatic message that Ratko's troops were entering the town. We all knew it was going to be bad, but still I had no idea of the scale of the tragedy. Yes, the enclave had fallen, but the U.N. were there, so the civilians and prisoners of war should be treated in accordance with the Geneva conventions. How wrong and naive I was!

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters, file

    A destroyed house is seen from inside a car on December 20, 2007 near the site where the Srebrenica massacre occurred.

    "I have never seen Ratko Mladic, I never photographed him, but his bloody signature is written all over my pictures. Every time I would go to another mass grave or a mass funeral of victims of his 'revenge', the face of a man confident he is doing the right thing would come into the frame. Sleeves rolled up, binoculars in his hands as he ordered his artillery 'Don't let them sleep. Make them lose their minds.'

    "I will carry the mud from mass graves and the smell of decomposing bodies on my shoes wherever I go. I will continue shooting my Srebrenica pictures on every story of crimes against humanity no matter how far away and how different they may be.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters, file

    Bosnian Muslim returnees to Srebrenica arrive for morning prayers on the first day of Eid al-Adha celebrations, December 20, 2007.

    "Last week, after more than 15 years on the run, Ratko Mladic was captured in a small village in Serbia. Looking at the pictures of an old man emerging from a Belgrade court – Mladic is almost seventy now – sends chills down my spine. I'm not even sure I want to see him any more, to hear what he has to say. His words from back then were enough, there is not much else to say.

    "All that is important can be understood from the pictures – a sea of coffins lined up for the funeral every 11th of July, a wrinkled face of a woman, the only survivor in her family, as she holds a photo of her dead son, bones bulldozed in the mass graves, the names on the memorial…

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters, file

    A Bosnian Muslim man searches for the name of a killed relative amongst gravestones of victims of the 1995 Srebrenica massacre, following morning prayers on the first day of Eid al-Fitr in Srebrenica on October 12, 2007.

    "Covering a story like this is not an easy thing to do, no matter how big and important it is. Fifteen years of the same – one could ask 'Does anyone care anymore? How many times can the same story be written?'

    "The threshold was raised as the years passed and questions were asked – How many at this mass grave, is it over one hundred? Anything special? A baby skull with a bullet hole, maybe a body impaled on the stake? Only thirty bodies?

    "As I went from one atrocity site to another Mladic was still in hiding, raising questions that made my head hurt like hell. He would only appear from time to time on the posters or T-shirts of his supporters – there are people still calling him a hero. That is where reality bites and the pictures get scary – ghosts of victims dancing between white grave marks in our photos are harmless.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters, file

    Bosnian Muslim women look through the bars as U.N. chief war crimes prosecutor Carla del Ponte arrives for a mass funeral at a cemetery near Srebrenica on July 11, 2007. Families of victims of the Srebrenica massacre gathered to bury more remains in an annual ceremony that has become the main event of their lives since the 1995 atrocity by Bosnian Serb forces.

    "The general is in custody now, but, just like these pictures, his 'revenge' remains imprinted in the sad history of a beautiful country.

    "Some of the best advice I've ever heard in our profession was to take every assignment as if it had never been done before and
    you were the only one to witness it. No matter what year it was – 1995 or 2005 – every time I went to Srebrenica, I had the feeling that I was doing something more that just a regular story.

    It is, simply, the biggest story of my life."

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters, file

    A flower is placed onto the names of the Srebrenica victims as relatives visit their memorial in Potocari, near Srebrenica on October 16, 2007.

    See our slideshow: The charges against Ratko Mladic

  • See the sun, the moon and the ISS

    Dani Caxete

    The International Space Station and the shuttle Endeavour pass over the sun's disk in a photograph taken by Spain's Dani Caxete through a telescope with a filter.

    The space shuttle Endeavour's last spaceflight is finished, but the memories — and the images — keep rolling in. Spanish photographer Dani Caxete captured this amazing picture of Endeavour hooked up to the International Space Station as the linked spaceships sped across the sun's disk, as seen from a spot in Spain's Madrid-Guadalajara corridor.


    Caxete had to be in just the right place at just the right time to catch the picture during a half-second opportunity. On his Paranoias Nocturnas blog, he notes that Pope Benedict XVI was in contact with the space crew on the same day. "Would it be the same hour? How curious...," Caxete wrote.

    You can see the space station as a buggy-looking speck near the center of the sun's disk. Of course, the station was nowhere near the sun: It was passing about 220 miles (350 kilometers) overhead, while the sun is about 93 million miles (150 million kilometers) farther away. Can you make out Endeavour? This labeled close-up shows you the shuttle's location:

    Dani Caxete

    A close-up of the sun's disk shows the International Space Station, with the position of the docked space shuttle Endeavour indicated by the label.

    Caxete's blog and his Flickr page offer a wealth of space images, including this multiple-exposure photo of the space station zooming past the moon's disk:

    Dani Caxete

    A multiple-exposure picture shows the International Space Station passing over the moon's disk.

    Caxete says the picture of the station and Endeavour was taken through a 5-inch Celestron C5 spotting scope, which goes for around $400, while the moon picture was made using a telescope that he says cost about $75 (50 euros). Caxete's experience demonstrates that you don't have to spend a fortune to get some great sky photos.

    And here's a free bonus: a view of Endeavour by its lonesome during its final minutes of flight, as captured on video by Noe Castillo from Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. The space shuttle lit up the sky on its way to its final landing at NASA's Kennedy Space Center early Wednesday. The bright streak is the ionization trail left behind as Endeavour plunged through the atmosphere at an altitude of 40 miles. For more from Castillo, check out his Facebook page and his YouTube video channel.

    Noe Castillo's video shows Endeavour lighting up the sky during atmospheric re-entry.

    More sky photos:


    Two big tips o' the Log to Bad Astronomy's Phil Plait and Discovery News' Ian O'Neill.

    You can connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page or following @b0yle on Twitter. Also, give a look to "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

  • Scenes from the National Spelling Bee in Maryland

    Molly Riley / Reuters

    Laura Newcombe of Toronto, asks a question about her word during the Scripps National Spelling Bee final round at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center at National Harbor, Maryland, June 2, 2011.

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    Spellers Katie Fo of Beaverton, Oregon reacts with Arvind Mahankali of Forest Hills, New York, after he spells a word in the semifinals of the 2011 Scripps National Spelling Bee contest at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland, June 2, 2011.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    David Phan of Boulder, Colorado, reacts after correctly spelling renminbi during the semifinals of the 2011 Scripps National Spelling Bee.

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    Nicolas B. Rushlow, 13, from Lancaster, Ohio is embraced by his mother Michelle after being eliminated during the semifinals of the 2011 Scripps National Spelling Bee at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in Oxon Hill, Thursday, June 2, 2011. Rushlow spelled 'drusy' incorrectly.

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    Sukanya Roy of South Abington Township, Pennsylvania holds up the trophy after winning the 2011 Scripps National Spelling Bee competition June 2, 2011 in National Harbor, Maryland. Roy wins National Spelling Bee with 'cymotrichous'

    From AP:

    OXON HILL, Md. — Sukanya Roy, 14, of South Abington Township, Pa., correctly spelled "cymotrichous," which means wavy hair, in the 20th round to win the 84th Scripps National Spelling Bee. Full story ...

  • World Barista Coffee Championship in Bogota, Colombia

    Eitan Abramovich / AFP - Getty Images

    A contestant pours coffee for the judges during the World Barista Coffee Championship in Bogota on June 2, 2011. The competition is taking place, for the first time, in a major coffee producing country, hosted by the Colombian Coffee Federation and the Speciality Coffee Association of Colombia and held within the 4th Annual Expoespeciales trade show.

    Eitan Abramovich / AFP - Getty Images

    A contestant pours coffee for the judges during the World Barista Coffee Championship in Bogota.

    Fernando Vergara / AP

    Pilly Pollen, a barista from Australia, prepares coffee during an exhibition as a part of the World Baristas Championship in Bogota, Colombia, Thursday, June 2, 2011.

    At a time of high coffee prices, Here's an article about Colombia hoping to steer Asian consumers from tea to coffee.

  • Marvel at the 'Midnight Sun' eclipse

    Bjornar G. Hansen

    Photographer Bjornar G. Hansen captured this view of Wednesday's partial solar eclipse from the island of Kvaloya in arctic Norway, using a Nikon D3 camera.

    A solar eclipse at midnight? Putting those two terms together doesn't normally compute, but this week's partial solar eclipse was a rare and lovely exception. The moon's shadow blotted out part of the sun's disk over far northern areas of the world, where the sun is above the horizon long into the night. The "midnight sun" wasn't the only weirdness about this eclipse: How many celestial events do you know that begin on a Thursday and end on the previous Wednesday?


    The image above was captured by Bjørnar G. Hansen from the island of Kvaløya, near Tromsø in the Norwegian Arctic, just before midnight. The sunbeams, clouds and the outstretched hand add to an already-charming image. Tony Phillips of SpaceWeather.com, which attracts a gold mine of pictures showing auroras, eclipses and other sky phenomena, rates it as one of his favorites.

    Bernt Olsen watched the eclipse from nearby, at Brensholmen, and got some good shots of the eclipse despite rain and clouds. "There are 73 years to next time we will experience something like this here up north in the Arctic," he said in his note to SpaceWeather.com. Three of his pictures are below, and you can see more of them at Olsen's Flickr and Facebook pages.

    Bernt Olsen

    The partially eclipsed sun shines through clouds over Brensholmen in the Norwegian Arctic, in a view captured by photographer Bernt Olsen.

    Clouds made for a challenging view of the partial solar eclipse from Brensholmen.

    Bernt Olsen

    Bernt Olsen says the partial solar eclipse finally peeked out from behind the clouds, allowing him to capture this view from Brensholmen in the Norwegian Arctic, using a Nikon D90 with a Sigma 70-300 lens and a "self-made" Baader film-filter.

    Svetlana Kulkova captured early-morning views of the eclipse from the Siberian city of Bratsk. On the night before the eclipse, the skies were obscured by clouds as well as smoke wafting over the city from nearby forest fires. "But the clouds dispersed during the night, and the sun only had to break through the fog and the smoke," she wrote on the Astro-Bratsk.ru website. Here's a picture of the sun glowing red over the city:

    Svetlana Kulkova

    Svetlana Kulkova took this picture of the eclipse through the smog and fog hanging over the Russian city of Bratsk, using a Canon EOS 500D with a 55-200mm lens.

    ChinaFotoPress sent along these views from Changchun in China's Jilin Province:

    Chinafotopress / Getty Images

    The partial solar eclipse looms over the landscape of Changchun in Cina's Jilin Province.

    Chinafotopress / Getty Images

    The partially eclipsed sun is partially obscured by haze at the horizon in this view from Changchun.

    One of the weirdest views of this weird eclipse was sent in to SpaceWeather.com by B. Art Braafhart from Salla in the Finnish region of Lapland. "Nice to get a reaction about this wonderful nature moment!" Braafhart told me in an email. "I have received many positive reactions already." Dutch National TV is featuring a selection of his images, which follow the sun all the way down to the horizon during the eclipse. My favorite of the bunch would have to be the picture below, which shows the sun's "cat eyes" just before the last wedges of sunlight blink out. What a way to finish up an eclipse gallery!

    B. Art Braafhart

    This is one of a series of pictures taken from Sallatunturi, a resort in the Finnish region of Lapland. "It was the first night to observe the midnight sun, and then there was also the eclipse!" photographer B. Art Braafhart said in a note to SpaceWeather.com. "Almost perfect circumstances with some clouds. The sun tipped the horizon at the moment that the moon was covering the sun for the maximum what could be seen from my observation point. With two beautiful 'cat eyes' just above the horizon as a result."

    More about eclipses:

    Update for 1 p.m. ET June 7: Check out this time-lapse video of the eclipse, as captured by Eivind Kolstad from Norway. "Most of the world will never experience the midnight sun eclipse," Kolstad writes. "Scandinavia is the only densely populated area in the world where the midnight sun eclipse can be experienced."


    To see the extent of this week's eclipse, and why it was so weird, check out this chart from Fred Espenak's NASA eclipse website, plus this animated image tracking the moon's shadow. We can look forward to four more eclipses this year — including similarly weird partial solar eclipses on July 1 and Nov. 25, and total lunar eclipses on June 15 and Dec. 10.

    You can connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page or following @b0yle on Twitter. Also, give a look to "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

  • Dan Bates / AP

    Sitting at his computer, Hans Lienesch aka "the Ramen Rater," tests a dish of Ramen he purchased at Ranch 99 Market, just down the street from his home in Edmonds, Wash. on May 31. Lienesch initially gave this ramen a score of 3.25 out of a possible 5. His reviews can be found on his web site, www.ramenrater.com.

    Ramen Rater seeks the top ramen

    I guess there's a web site for just about everything, including ratings of ramen noodles. Full story.

  • Bernard Madoff's possessions auctioned off in Florida

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    A person looks at some of the items from Bernard L. Madoff's estate that will be auctioned off on Saturday at the Miami Beach Convention Center on June 2, 2011 in Miami Beach, Florida. The auction held by the U.S. Marshals Service are items seized from Madoff's Palm Beach home after he was charged with his $65 billion Ponzi scheme. Madoff is serving a 150 year federal prison sentence.

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Shoes from Bernard L. Madoff's estate are seen on display.

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    A statue from Bernard L. Madoff's estate is seen before it is auctioned off.

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    People look at some of the items from Bernard L. Madoff's estate that will be auctioned off.

    Here's the full story about the auction, and here are the Wikipedia articles on Madoff and Ponzi scheme.

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