Jump to July 2011 archive page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 18
  • Fashion photographer fights breast cancer with his camera

    Graphic Warning: This post contains images which some viewers may find disturbing.

    Life.com reports: SCAR Project - Breast Cancer Exposed

    What started out as an effort aimed at raising awareness about young women with breast cancer has turned into something more beautiful, more provocative and more revealing than fashion photographer David Jay could have imagined. By taking portraits of his subjects and their scarred chests, Jay unlocked a visual world few have seen where grace, guts, pain, and femininity all cross paths to expose a deeply moving side of humanity. LIFE.com spoke to Jay about the culmination of his work -- a book called The SCAR Project -- and about the raw, hard-hitting images that reveal another side of this national epidemic. Editor's note: The pictures on Life.com contain nudity.

     

    David Jay / LIFE.com

    Jill, 28 years old
    "Breast cancer changed me, but it did not make me a better or worse person. I will never know who I might have been had I not gone through this experience. All I know is that the person that I have become has amazing strength and courage mixed with heartfelt sadness and fear."

    David Jay / LIFE.com

    Cary, 33 years old
    "I participated in The SCAR Project because I believe that these powerful images can reach people in a way that words cannot. If one young woman does a self-exam after looking at my photo or one doctor sends a patient for a "just to be sure" scan, then exposing myself for art becomes a life-saving proposition," she says in the book.

    Related links:

  • Toledo Zoo via AP

    Elvira, one of the Toledo Zoo's Masai giraffes, cares for her newborn calf at the The Toledo Zoo, July 23. Elvira gave birth to a female calf late Saturday after a 15-month pregnancy. The yet-unnamed calf stood nearly six feet tall and weighed about 160 pounds at birth.

    Baby giraffe born at Toledo Zoo

    An Ohio zoo welcomed a baby Masai giraffe this weekend. Mother and daughter are doing well, Toledo Zoo representative Andi Norman told msnbc.com.

    Animal care staff are monitoring the two, ensuring they continue to bond before they make their debut to the public, hopefully in about a week.

    "Both mother and daughter are doing well, with Elvira exhibiting good maternal behavior and the calf nursing without assistance," Norman said.

    As the newborn gets used to her surroundings, zookeepers will begin picking names. Soon, Elvira and her calf will be available for public viewing in the Africa! exhibit.

    Masai giraffes are the tallest animals on the planet, standing an average of 16 to 18 feet when fully grown, according to the zoo. Despite their size, they can run at speeds up to 35 mph. They can be identified by their irregularly shaped spots, which are as unique and identifiable as human fingerprints.

  • ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images

    People mourn for victims in the Wenzhou train collision at Century Square on July 25, 2011 in Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. At least 39 have died in the train collision and derailment that occurred July 23.

    Mourning the victims of the train crash in China

    More photos of the crash on PhotoBlog.

    NBC's Adrienne Mong on the anger around the accident.

  • Kirsty Wigglesworth / AP

    Two unidentified mourners embrace as they leave Edgwarebury Cemetery, in London, Tuesday July 26, 2011, after attending the funeral of singer Amy Winehouse. The soul diva, who had battled alcohol and drug addiction, was found dead Saturday at her London home. She was 27.

    Mourners at the funeral for Amy Winehouse in London

    The singer's father, Mitch Winehouse, apparently closed the memorial service by saying "good night, my angel, sleep tight" to his daughter. Full story.

  • Schalk Van Zuydam / AP

    A doctor examines Mihag Gedi Farah, a seven-month-old child with a weight of 7.5lbs (3.4kg), in a field hospital of the International Rescue Committee, IRC, in the town of Dadaab, Kenya, Tuesday, July 26, 2011. The U.N. will airlift emergency rations this week to parts of drought-ravaged Somalia to keep hungry refugees from dying along what an official calls the "roads of death." Tens of thousands already have trekked to neighboring Kenya and Ethiopia, hoping to get aid in refugee camps.

    Heart-wrenching photo of a starving child in Dadaab, Kenya

    Do photos like this have any effect?

  • Horn of Africa aid caravan too late, again

    Barry Malone / Reuters

    An aid worker using an iPad films the rotting carcass of a cow in Wajir, near the Kenya-Somalia border, on July 23.

    Barry Malone of Reuters reports from El Adow, Kenya:

    A besuited U.N. official wearing well-buffed shoes crouches in the orange dust near a cluster of huts in northern Kenyan, and, as his tie wafts in the breeze, raises an iPad and carefully films the rotting carcass of a cow.

    Since drought gripped the Horn of Africa, and especially since famine was declared in parts of Somalia, the international aid industry has swept in and out of refugee camps and remote hamlets in branded planes and snaking lines of white 4X4s.

     

    Barry Malone / Reuters

    A television crew conducts an interview beside a malnourished child at a hospital at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya on July 23.

    This humanitarian, diplomatic and media circus is necessary every time people go hungry in Africa, analysts say, because governments -- both African and foreign -- rarely respond early enough to looming catastrophes.

    Combine that with an often simplistic explanation of the causes of famine, and a growing band of aid critics say parts of Africa are doomed to a never-ending cycle of ignored early warnings, media appeals and emergency U.N. feeding -- rather than a transition to lasting self-sufficiency.

    "Although humanitarian agencies are gearing themselves up to mount a response, it is far too late to address anything but the worst symptoms," Simon Levine, an analyst at the Overseas Development Institute think-tank, wrote on its website.

    "Measures that could have kept animals alive -- and providing milk, and income to buy food -- would have been much cheaper than feeding malnourished children, but the time for those passed with very little investment," Levine said.

     

    Schalk Van Zuydam / AP

    Used food tins are stacked at a field hospital of the International Rescue Committee in the town of Dadaab, Kenya, on July 26.

    The drought gripping the region straddling Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia is the worst for 60 years, some aid groups say, and is affecting more than 12 million people. In the worst-hit area in Somalia, 3.7 million people are at risk of starvation.

    "It seems once again that slow onset disasters don't get attention until they become critical," said a senior humanitarian adviser at a U.N agency in the region

    "One can understand this with rapid onset disasters as they come out of the blue, but drought ... we've seen it before and we will again," said the official, who declined to be named. Continue reading.

     

    Feisal Omar / Reuters

    A Somali doctor treats a malnourished child, as the child's mother, left, looks on at Banadir hospital in Mogadishu, Somalia, on July 21. The mother's faint smile of hope was extinguished as doctors were unable to save her child.

     

    Reuters photo editor Gilraj Singh wrote a moving article about a series of photos Feisal Omar took of the mother and child pictured above. Read it here.

  • From Atlanta to Boston to Los Angeles, all eyes are on the ball

    John Amis / AP

    Pittsburgh Pirates catcher Michael McKenry catches a pop fly off the bat of Atlanta Braves Nate McLouth with bases loaded against the Atlanta Braves during the sixth inning of a baseball game on July 25 in Atlanta.

    Chris Carlson / AP

    Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Dioner Navarro watches as fans try to catch a foul ball hit by Colorado Rockies' Ty Wigginton during the sixth inning of a baseball game in Los Angeles on 2011.

    Elsa / Getty Images

    Carl Crawford of the Boston Red Sox makes the catch for the out against the Kansas City Royals on July 26 at Fenway Park in Boston.

    For all last night's results as well as the latest news and gossip, visit NBC Sports' baseball home page.

    See more great sporting images in The Week in Sports Pictures slideshow.

  • Taliban graffiti decorates a US Marines Battalion Command Headquarters in Afghanistan

    Interesting.  It reminds me of cave paintings that date back to 30,000 BCE, in the Upper Paleolithic era, according to Wikipedia.  Read more about the ancient art.

    David Goldman / AP

    Taliban graffiti shows an AK-47 assault rifle and the word 'Allah' at left, along with Taliban fighters at right, decorating a wall in the Musa Qala district center and the current Battalion Command Headquarters for the U.S. Marine 3rd Battalion 2nd Marines based out of Camp Lejeune, N.C., Monday, July 25, 2011 in Helmand province, Afghanistan. The district center, once a large opium market under Taliban control also served as sleeping quarters for opium addicts. The graffiti, from that period, depicts Taliban fighters shooting down Russian, American or coalition planes, blowing up their tanks and taking their prisoners. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

    David Goldman / AP

    Taliban graffiti shows an injured enemy soldier at right being carried away during an attack decorating a wall.

  • Video documents photojournalism 'machine's' coverage of East Jerusalem and West Bank protests

    Here on PhotoBlog, we've posted quite a few pictures of protests in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, including at least one where a reporter became part of the story.

    In a video posted on the Columbia Journalism Review today, documentary filmmaker Andrew Lampard focuses on the ways that photojournalists are really always part of the story of repetitive protests: Protesters, Israeli security forces, and photographers all regularly repeat a Friday ritual--what one photographer calls "an ongoing story performing itself every week."

     

    More:

    from the Columbia Journalism Review.

    from the filmmaker, Andrew Lampard.

    pictures from the West Bank on PhotoBlog.

     


     

  • Denver teenager heals after bear attack in Alaskan wilderness

    Loren Holmes / AP

    Samuel Gottsegen, 17, recounts his experiences as one of the victims of a bear attack that occurred Saturday evening near Talkeenta, Alaska, as he recovers in an Anchorage, Alaska hospital on Monday, July 25. Gottsegen was taking part in an outdoor education course from the National Outdoor Leadership School.

    Several teenagers were mauled by a bear in the Alaska wilderness over the weekend before being rescued on Sunday. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

     More news on the bear attack.

     


  • Players vote to OK deal to end NFL lockout

    To paraphrase a pundit: "Greedy owners and out-of-touch athletes were able to compromise on their economy before Washington politicians."  Full story.

    Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

    Executive director of the NFL Players Association DeMaurice Smith (L) and NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell (R) speak outside the NFL Players Association Headquarters in Washington July 25. The NFL and players have agreed to terms to end their four-month lockout and ensure America's most professional sport will go ahead as planned next season.

    Rob Carr / Getty Images

    New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft (L) is embraced by Indianapolis Colts center Jeff Saturday during a news conference on July 25 in Washington, DC. The NFL players and owners are set to agree on a labor deal and end the current lockout.

  • Iraqis deal with electricity shortage with generators, improvised wiring

    This sight is becoming common in countries with weak power infrastructure.

    Related: Albanians tap into power grid

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    People pass a generator store on a street on July 25, 2011 in Baghdad, Iraq. Despite a recent doubling of the megawatts of electricity available to Iraqis, many people still only receive a few hours of electricity a day from the national grid and therefore have to depend on generators and other private sources of electricity. With more homes owning computers, televisions, refrigerators and air conditioners there is an increased demand for electricity, especially in the scorching summers. The lack of dependable electricity has been one of the main sources of demonstrations against the government. As the deadline for the departure of the remaining American forces in Iraq approaches, Iraqi politicians have been increasingly pressured to  give a final decision about extending the mandate for a small U.S. military presence beyond the end of the 2011 deadline.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Over 100 electric boxes connect homes in a building to a collective generator in a poor neighborhood on July 25, in Baghdad, Iraq.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    A man walks under a tangle of wires connecting homes to a collective generator in a poor neighborhood on July 25 in Baghdad, Iraq.

  • Team aims to score cosmic goal

    Gemini Observatory / AURA

    The Gemini Observatory's image of Kronberger 61 shows the shell of ionized gas surrounding a dying star.

    Professional and amateur astronomers are teaming up to study a cosmic "soccer ball" with a tricky goal in mind: understanding how the death throes of a star are affected by the company it keeps.

    The focus of this game is Kronberger 61, a planetary nebula discovered several months ago by Austrian amateur astronomer (and professional physicist) Matthias Kronberger. He belongs to a group called the "Deep Sky Hunters," which combs through imagery from the Digital Sky Survey and other sources looking for celestial objects worthy of further study. The hunters have found about 100 faint planetary nebulae, shells of glowing ionized gas that are thrown off by sunlike stars in the waning years of their lives.


    Kronberger 61 is worth noting for aesthetic reasons alone: The image above, captured by the Gemini North telescope in Hawaii, highlights the nebula's emissions from twice-ionized oxygen. The dying star can be seen as a point of bluish light close to the center of the ball-shaped nebula.

    But this soccer ball, also known as Kn 61, is also notable because of its location. It happens to be within the Kepler planet-hunting probe's field of view, an 105-square-degree area that takes up about as much of the sky as your hand held at arm's length. There's a chance that Kepler could determine whether there are planets or faint companion stars circling Kn 61's main star.

    "Kn 61 is among a rather small collection of planetary nebulae that are strategically placed within Kepler's gaze," Orsola De Marco of Australia's Macquarie University said in the Gemini Observatory's news release about the find. "Explaining the puffs left behind when medium-sized stars like our sun expel their last breaths is a source of heated debate among astronomers, especially the part that companions might play. It literally keeps us up at night!"

    The Kepler science team has now added Kn 61 to its target list of more than 150,000 stars, and within months, astronomers might be able to determine whether the star has companions, said George Jacoby of the Giant Magellan Telescope Organization and the Carnegie Observatories (Pasadena). "This was not an object that was known by Kepler to be valuable early on," Jacoby told me.

    Jacoby serves as principal investigator for the program to get follow-up observations of Kn 61 with Kepler, and also acts as the liaison with the Deep Sky Hunters.

    "Without this close collaboration with amateurs, this discovery would probably not have been made before the end of the Kepler mission," Jacoby said in today's news release. "Professionals, using precious telescope time, aren't as flexible as amateurs who did this using existing data and in their spare time. This was a fantastic pro-am collaboration of discovery."

    The Deep Sky Hunters have identified yet another planetary nebula in the Kepler field, and possibly a third prospect. Jacoby said astronomers would be playing an "odds game," hoping that one of the nebulae will reveal something interesting about the effects of companion objects on a dying star's gaseous shell. If the gamble pays off, the scientific payoff could be significant.

    De Marco said that planetary nebula present a "profound mystery."

    "Some recent theories suggest that planetary nebulae form only in close binary or even planetary systems — on the other hand, the conventional textbook explanation is that most stars, even solo stars like our sun, will meet this fate," she said. "That might just be too simple."

    Will this pro-am team hit the goal, or will luck be against them? The project has already produced a beautiful image of a ghostly planetary nebula, and it's sparked some intriguing scientific questions. So the way I see it, they've already scored.

    Update for 3 p.m. ET: Jacoby sent along further information about Kronberger 61: The star is located in the constellation Lyra, very close to the western edge of Cygnus. Determining its distance "is a very difficult question, because these kinds of objects (planetary nebulae) have been very resistant to having their distances measured accurately." Jacoby's rough estimate is 13,000 light-years, "but it could be half that or twice that." He says Kronberger discovered the nebula in January, using data from the Digital Sky Survey.

    "The star is very likely to have a mass about 60 percent that of the sun," Jacoby wrote in his email. "The age of the star is much harder to estimate, but it is likely between 2 billion and 8 billion years old. The nebula around the star was probably blown off about 15,000 to 30,000 years ago (after accounting for the time delay due to the distance of 13,000 light years, or 28,000 to 43,000 years ago if you include that light travel time)."

    More about planetary nebulae:


    The discovery and the new Gemini images were presented today at "Planetary Nebulae: An Eye to the Future," an International Astronomical Union symposium in Puerto de la Cruz in the Canary Islands.

    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. 

  • Biswaranjan Rout / AP

    Indian women stand near the stems of trees chopped for the proposed $12 billion steel plant by South Korean conglomerate Posco at Noliashai in Jagatsinghpur district of Orissa state, India, on Monday, July 25.

    Trees chopped for proposed steel plant in India

    AP reports:

    NEW DELHIIndia's government will set up a new environmental regulator to review investment projects, the prime minister said, freeing politicians from making unpopular decisions to protect ecology at the cost of development.

    India has been embroiled in fierce debate over how to protect the environment while also lifting hundreds of millions of people from poverty through investment and infrastructure. Continue reading.

  • Norway mourns after shooting spree, bombing

    Matt Dunham / AP

    People, including relatives of a victim in the center of the picture, gather to observe a minute's silence on a campsite jetty on the Norwegian mainland, across the water from Utoya island, where people have been placing floral tributes in memory of those killed in the shooting massacre on the island in Norway on Monday.

    Emilio Morenatti / AP

    A boy lights a candle to pay tribute to victims of Friday's twin attacks in central Oslo on Monday, July 25.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    Friends and loved ones gather at the Oslo cathedral to mourn the victims killed in twin terror attacks from a bombing in downtown Oslo and a mass shooting on Utoya island on Sunday in Oslo.

    Related content:

  • Cool underwater views from the FINA championships

    Like a lot of photography, making great photos at a swimming event takes the right mixture of skill and luck. But coming away with a unique underwater image is far more difficult, especially if the camera is unmanned, triggered remotely.

    While we don't know whether these images were taken through an underwater observation window or fired remotely, we do know they turned out really well.

    Christinne Muschi / Reuters

    Ye Shiwen of China competes during the women's 200m individual medley final at the 14th FINA World Championships in Shanghai July 25.

    Adam Pretty / Getty Images

    Vitaly Borisov of Russia (from top), Hayden Stoeckel of Australia, Camille Lacourt of France and David Plummer of the United States compete in heat seven of the Men's 100m Backstroke heats during Day Ten of the 14th FINA World Championships at the Oriental Sports Center on July 25.

    Francois Xavier Marit / AFP - Getty Images

    France's Yannick Agnel competes in the semi-finals of the men's 100-meter freestyle swimming event in the FINA World Championships at the indoor stadium of the Oriental Sports Center in Shanghai on July 25.

     See more great images in the Week in Sports slideshow.

  • Arif Ali / AFP - Getty Images

    Pakistani shoe maker maker Abdul Hameed, center, works on a giant shoe at his shop in Lahore on Monday, July 25. Hameed made the six-foot shoe with gold thread to attract his customers for an upcoming Muslim festival known as 'Eid.' The selling price of the shoe is approximately $350. The Eid festival usually takes place at the end of the fasting month of Ramadan, which begins in August this year.

    Giant shoe made for Eid festival in Pakistan

    More photos from Pakistan here.

  • Libyan rebels battle for control of Qawalish

    Colin Summers / AFP - Getty Images

    Rebel fighters run for cover at the front line near the southwest desert hamlet of Qawalish on July 24 as forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi start attacking them.

    Colin Summers / AFP - Getty Images

    Rebel fighters launch a rocket at the front line near Qawalish on July 24.

    Colin Summers / AFP - Getty Images

    A rebel fighter carries a rocket at the front line near Qawalish on July 24.

    See more images of the conflict in Libya in our slideshow.

  • Amanda Knox back in court for appeal trial

    Alberto Pizzoli / AFP - Getty Images

    Amanda Knox reacts in court before the start of a session of her appeal trial in Perugia, Italy, on July 25. Knox was sentenced in December 2009 to 26 years in prison for the 2007 killing of British student Meredith Kercher.

    Keith Miller of NBC News reports from Perugia, Italy:

    American college student Amanda Knox was convicted of murder based on DNA evidence, which is now being questioned by experts. NBC's Keith Miller reports.

  • Juan Mabromata / AFP - Getty Images

    Uruguayan players raise the trophy at the end of the 2011 Copa America soccer tournament final against Paraguay held at the Monumental stadium in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on July 24. Uruguay won 3-0.

    Uruguay routs Paraguay to win Copa America

    Uruguay's soccer team followed up its success in reaching the semifinal of last year's World Cup with a record-breaking 15th victory in the Copa America. Read more at NBC Sports.

  • Anger builds over deadly Chinese train crash

    As Adrienne Mong and Bo Gu report on our Behind the Wall blog today, Chinese netizens have reacted with shock and anger to Saturday's deadly train crash in Wenzhou. 

    "Thunder makes two trains collide.  A truck drives past a bridge, then the bridge collapses.  You get kidney stones by drinking milk.  None of us is exempted.  Today's China is a train running in the thunderstorm, and we are not outsiders.  We are all passengers," said one Chinese comment on Twitter.

    Amid the outrage and sorrow, there was a glimmer of hope as a 2-year-old girl was pulled alive from the wreckage 21 hours after the crash.

    ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images

    A two-and-a-half year old girl is carried on a stretcher from the scene of the crash involving two trains on July 24 in Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province, China. The accident occurred on the evening of July 23 when the D301 train, travelling from Beijing to Fuzhou, collided with the D3115 train, travelling from Hangzhou to Fuzhou, which had stalled on the line after a suspected lightning strike.

    AP

    A wrecked passenger carriage is lifted off the bridge on July 24.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Two-year-old old Xiang Weiyi lies in a hospital bed after she was the last survivor rescued, some 21 hours after a high-speed train crash on July 23. There are fears her mother and father may be among the dead.

    ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images

    An aerial view of rescuers working around the accident site on July 24.

    Aly Song / Reuters

    Women cry inside a morgue where people had gathered to search for their missing kin on July 25.

    Related content:

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