Jump to January 2012 archive page: 1 2 3 4 ... 20
  • Indian holy man shakes water from his dreadlocks at sacred river confluence

    Rajesh Kumar Singh / AP

    A Sadhu, or a Hindu holy man, takes a dip at Sangam, confluence of the Rivers Ganges, Yamuna and mythical Saraswati, during the annual traditional fair of Magh Mela in Allahabad, India, Monday, Jan. 30, 2012. Hundreds of thousands of devout Hindus bathe at the confluence during the astronomically auspicious period of over 45 days celebrated as Magh Mela.

    Rajesh Kumar Singh / AP

    Indian Hindu holy men perform rituals inside a circle made of dried cow dung cakes at Sangam.

    According to the Wikipedia article for Sadhu (the holy men pictured here):

    Becoming a sadhu is a difficult lifestyle. Sadhus are considered to be dead unto themselves, and legally dead to the country of India. They may be required ritually to attend their own funeral before following a guru for many years, serving him by doing menial tasks until acquiring the necessary experience to leave his leadership.

    
    Show more
  • Check out how sake is made at a brewery in Japan

    EPA photographer Everett Kennedy Brown offers a look at how sake is produced from rice:

    Everett Kennedy Brown / EPA

    Workers prepare vessels for washing rice at Terada Honke sake brewery in Kozaki city, Chiba province, Japan, on Jan. 19. Sake is made through a fermentation process using a mold called Koji in Japanese that is found throughout South and East Asia.

    Everett Kennedy Brown / EPA

    Makoto Ohashi shovels steamed rice into buckets for sake making.

    Everett Kennedy Brown / EPA

    Sake makers sing traditional songs while crushing freshly steamed rice.

    Everett Kennedy Brown / EPA

    Tomoyuki Minami stirs fermenting sake at Terada Honke sake brewery.

    Everett Kennedy Brown / EPA

    A close-up view showing rice used for making sake.

  • The Week in Sports Pictures: Jan. 23 - Jan. 29

    Daniel Munoz / Reuters

    Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates after defeating Rafael Nadal of Spain in the men's singles final at the Australian Open on Monday, Jan. 30, 2012. It was the longest grand slam final ever, lasting nearly six hours.

    Patrick Smith / Getty Images

    Sue Paterno, widow of Joe Paterno, consoles her grandson following a public memorial for former Penn State football coach Joe Paterno on Thursday, Jan. 26 in State College, Pa. Paterno, who was 85, died due to complications from lung cancer on Jan. 22, 2012.

    Many of our readers already know “The Week in Pictures”, but how many of you know we also produce “The Week in Sports Pictures” each Monday morning on NBC Sports.com? We have a couple goals for our weekly gathering of sports images.

    1. To let sports fans catch up to the big events they may have missed over the weekend.
    2. To show some of the lesser known sports and meaningful moments that happen during sports-related events.

    This week’s slideshow include images of the Australian Open moment of victory, the Winter X Games in Aspen, Colo., The Tough Guy Challenge in Telford, England and the grief of Joe Paterno’s family at Thursday’s public memorial for the former Penn State football coach.

  • Harrowing cross-section of collapsed building in Rio

    Associated Press reports --Firefighters pulled more bodies from the rubble of three collapsed buildings in downtown Rio de Janeiro on Saturday, raising the death toll to at least 17 as hopes faded for finding anyone alive almost three days after the disaster.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Kitchen appliances are surrounded by rubble on the site of collapsed buildings in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Monday, Jan. 30.

    A Rio de Janeiro fire department official said the search for survivors would continue at least through Sunday, but the chances of finding anyone alive are "practically nonexistent."

    Felipe Dana / AP

    People look up at a trio of collapsed buildings in Rio de Janeiro on Monday.

    The official, who declined to be named because he was not authorized to speak to the press, said rescuers pulled five more bodies from the debris overnight and early Saturday morning. The death toll had been 12. Seven people are still missing.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    People take pictures of a trio of collapsed buildings in Rio de Janeiro on Monday.

     Full story...

  • Peter Rosen and about 100 other skywatchers congregated at the Aurora Sky Station in Sweden's Abisko National Park on Saturday. Check out Rosen's website.

    Afterglow from the solar storm

    Did you feel that magnetic breeze? Solar weather trackers say a "pulse" in the solar wind of electrically charged particles swept past monitoring satellites today, in the wake of last Friday's X-class solar flare and coronal mass ejection. But the main force of the blast was not pointing toward Earth, and thus no big impact on our planet's magnetic field is expected.

    "Another effect of Friday's eruption, a solar radiation storm, continues its leisurely decay and is nearing the end of the event," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Solar Weather Prediction Center reported on its website.

    The most significant effect of the past week's solar storming has been an upswing in spectacular pictures of the northern lights, as seen from Scandinavia and other high-latitude locales. Swedish photographer Peter Rosen got some great pictures over the weekend.

    "I live in Abisko, next to the Aurora Sky Station — a great place to see northern lights," Rosen told me in an email. "The Aurora Sky Station has become a very nice tourist attraction. ... I was there last Saturday and almost 100 people from all over the world were on the mountain. We had a great aurora from 9 p.m. to 12:30 due to another geomagnetic storm."

    For more of the latest and greatest pictures of the northern lights, check out the selection on Rosen's website, Rosenmedia.se, as well as on SpaceWeather.com. Stay tuned for further auroral updates as the sun's 11-year activity cycle heads toward an expected peak in 2013.

    More auroral glories:


    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

  • Enthusiasm and skepticism ahead of Florida primary

    Republican candidates Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum and Ron Paul are down to the wire fighting for a victory in Florida's primary on Tuesday.

    By nearly all counts, Romney will emerge a victor; many polls including the latest released by NBC-Marist show Romney with a 15 point lead.

    Buckle up for the long haul - it's a long road to November. Fortunately the pictures from the campaign trail are still as fascinating as ever.

     

    Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

    Supporters of Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich cheer as he arrives for a campaign rally at the Hyatt Regency in Jacksonville, Fla., on Monday, Jan. 30.

    Emmanuel Dunand / AFP - Getty Images

    Mitt Romney supporters attend a rally at Ring Power Lift Trucks in Jacksonville on Jan. 30.

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    People listen to Mitt Romney during a rally at Ring Power Lift Trucks in Jacksonville on Jan. 30.

    Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

    Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich and his wife, Callista Gingrich, listen as Michael Reagan, son of President Ronald Reagan, during a campaign rally on Monday in Jacksonville.

    Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

    Mackenzie Tuttle, 8, sits with her family during a rally for Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich on Monday.

    Brian Snyder / Reuters

    Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney presents Los Angeles Times reporter Maeve Reston with a birthday cake on his campaign plane in Jacksonville on Monday.

    See more images of the candidates' lives in politics: Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum, Ron Paul

    More from the campaign trail:

    First Thoughts: Writing on the wall
    Gingrich: I wouldn't accept debate versus Obama moderated by reporters
    Gingrich super PAC figure crashes Romney rally
    Obama agenda: One nation, divisible?
    Santorum resumes campaign as daughter's condition improves in hospital

  • Kim Jong Un: A dictator in the grip of his people?

    KCNA - KNS via Reuters, AP & AFP - Getty Images

    Photographs of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un released by the official Korean Central News Agency. Clockwise from top left: With members of the Western Area Aviation Club after watching a demonstration (picture released Jan. 28); With soldiers of the Seoul Ryu Kyong Su 105 Guards Tank Division of the Korean People's Army (released Jan. 1); Visiting a KPA unit at an undisclosed location (released Jan. 23); Inspecting a military unit at an undisclosed location (released Jan. 19).

    As all politicians know, images matter. The way they look and the way they are seen to interact with the so-called ordinary people can make or break a politician's reputation.

    KNS via AFP - Getty Images

    Kim Jong Un greeting students during his visit to the Mangyongdae Revolutionary School in Pyongyang. Picture released Jan. 23.

    In the case of North Korea's fledgling dictator, Kim Jong Un, the imagery that has emerged in his first weeks in the job is notable for a change in mood. Photos show him displaying a warmth that was not often associated with his father and predecessor, the late Kim Jong Il.

    As he tours facilities and poses for photographs, the younger Kim is often seen holding hands with - or being firmly gripped by - soldiers, generals and other people. In a report today, The Associated Press notes Kim's tactility and associates it with a desire to be seen as a man of the people:

    While the late Kim Jong Il mostly stayed aloof in dark shades, his son holds hands and hugs his soldiers.

    The style harkens back to Kim Il Sung, his grandfather and revered founder of the country and ruling dynasty, and may reflect an attempt to turn a corner on the periods of hardship and famine under Kim Jong Il, analysts say.

    "He'll try to look comfortable among the masses. He'll try to form an intimacy with the people, perhaps more than his father did," said Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea professor at Seoul's Dongguk University. Read the full story.

    Related content:

  • Chilly weather frosts trees in Germany

    Uwe Zucchi / AFP - Getty Images

    Frost-covered trees can be seen at the Essigberg near Kassel, Germamy on Jan. 30. The Siberian cold front "Cooper" brings icy temperatures dropping to 14 degrees Fahrenheit in some parts of the country.

    Patrick Semansky / AP

    Winter has arrived in the Northern hemisphere. Take in the sights from North America, Europe and Asia.

     

  • Snowboarder Shaun White wins fifth superpipe gold with perfect run

    Doug Pensinger / Getty Images

    Shaun White soars above the pipe on his final run as he won the goal medal in the men's snowboard superpipe final during Winter X Games 2012 at Buttermilk Mountain on Jan. 29, 2012 in Aspen, Colorado.

    The Associated Press reports:

    With the gold medal already his, Shaun White laid down a victory lap to remember — a perfect one.

    White earned his fifth consecutive superpipe gold Sunday night, earning a perfect 100 on his third and final run.

     Says White: "It's unreal. I've been wanting that 100 forever." Read more.

    See more great sporting photography from the past 7 days in The Week in Sports Pictures.

     

  • Deadline looms for Occupy DC protesters

    Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

    Occupy DC demonstrator Brian Eister of Colorado packs up his camping gear, in compliance with new restrictions, at McPherson Square in Washington Jan. 30. At noon today, the National Park Service will ban Occupy DC protesters from camping overnight here and in Freedom Plaza where have they been living since October, in a blow to one of the highest-profile chapters of the movement denouncing economic inequality.

    Occupy protesters in the nation's capital were preparing for a noon Monday deadline set by federal park authorities to end camping at some of the movement's last remaining large encampments, with some "surprises" in store, one of the activists said.

    Brendan Hoffman / Getty Images

    Robert Dilley and Kevin Wiley carry belongings to a rental truck to be taken to storage before the Occupy DC encampment is shut down in McPherson Square on Jan. 30.

    Karen Bleier / AFP - Getty Images

    The McPherson Square Occupy encampment on K Street in Washington, DC on Jan. 30.

    The National Park Service said in a flier released Friday that it would begin enforcing regulations prohibiting camping and the use of temporary structures for camping at McPherson Square and Freedom Plaza. Individual violators may be subject to arrest and their property subject to seizure as evidence, the flier said.

    Karen Bleier / AFP - Getty Images

    An Occupy protester sits at the corner of the McPherson Square Occupy encampment on K Street in Washington, DC on Monday, Jan. 30. The National Park Service has warned the protesters at McPherson Square and at Freedom Plaza that those who violate the camping rule beginning Monday at noon will be subject to arrest. Protesters have stated they intend to stay at the two sites and defend their encampments. The Occupiers are referring to the action as the

    Justin Jacoby Smith, a 25-year-old activist with OccupyKSt, said the protesters at McPherson Square had plans for the deadline -- a "tent of dreams" was mentioned on their twitter feed, but he noted: “We’re still sorting of keeping the specifics under wraps … we like to have surprises when we can.” Full story...

    Brendan Hoffman / Getty Images

    James, who chose not to give his full name, smokes a cigarette after waking up in his tent at the Occupy DC encampment in McPherson Square on Jan. 30 in Washington, DC.

    
  • Sri Lankan President's Office via AFP - Getty Images

    Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa inspecting the ear of visiting U.S. boxer Evander Holyfield in Colombo on Jan. 30, 2012. Holyfield had part of his ear bitten off during an infamous boxing match with Mike Tyson in 1997. Rajapakse hosted Holyfield for breakfast at his "Temple Trees" residence.

    Sri Lankan president inspects Evander Holyfield's ear

    I reckon most of us would do the same, if we dared.

  • Altaf Qadri / AP

    Indian voters wait to cast their ballots at a polling station near the India-Pakistan border for the Punjab State Assembly elections in the village of Bachiwind, some 25 miles from Amritsar, India, on Jan. 30. More than 20 million people in two northern states went to the polls in key elections expected to reflect on the popularity of India's ruling Congress party.

    Punjab, bread basket of India, hungers for change

    While much of India has galloped ahead in recent years on the back of a reform drive that began two decades ago, Punjab has been left straggling behind, Reuters reports.

    The state of 27 million people offers a snapshot of the ills that are putting the brakes on India's economic expansion, from chronic power shortages to tussles between industry and farmers over land and policy decisions held hostage by political compulsions. Read the full story.

  • Egyptians move to reclaim streets through graffiti

    Graffiti has turned into perhaps the most fertile artistic expression of Egypt's uprising, The Associated Press reports, as street artists duel it out to shift public opinion for or against the ruling military council:

    During the regime of Hosni Mubarak, Egypt had almost no graffiti on the walls of its cities. But when the uprising against Mubarak's rule erupted a year ago, there was an explosion of the art.

    Taking control of the streets was critical for the thousands of Egyptians who eventually overthrew the country's authoritarian leader. The battle continues to be fought by graffiti artists who support the country's military rulers and those who want them to relinquish power. Read the full story.

    Nasser Nasser / AP, file

    Two women walk by a mural depicting faces of Egyptians killed before and after the revolution, in Tahrir Square in Cairo on Dec. 20, 2011. The slogans read "No conciliation" and #NOSCAF, referring to the ruling Supreme Council of the Army Forces.

    Nariman El-Mofty / AP, file

    A girl, left, posts an art piece made by Sad Panda, unseen, on a wall as flower vendors prepare a bouquet outside their shop in Cairo on Jan. 19.

    Nasser Nasser / AP

    A man walks by a graffiti that reads "Pride and dignity, No SCAF," on a road that leads to Tahrir Square on Jan. 29.

    Ahmed Ali / AP, file

    Soldiers beat a protester wearing a niqab during clashes near Tahrir Square on Dec. 16, 2011. Graffiti in the background depicts members of the military ruling council and reads "Killer".

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Graffiti written on the walls in Mohammed Mahmoud Street off Tahrir Square on Jan. 26.

    To see more examples of Cairo street art, take a look at the suzeeinthecity blog and a map of graffiti locations.

    Related content:

  • 'The Help' earns top honor at SAG Awards

    Mark J. Terrill / AP

    The cast of "The Help" accepts the award for outstanding performance by a cast in a motion picture at the 18th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards, Jan. 29, in Los Angeles, Calif. From left, Mike Vogel, Sissy Spacek, Ahna O'Reilly, Octavia Spencer, Emma Stone, Viola Davis, Cicely Tyson and Jessica Chastain are seen onstage.

     Reuters reports:

    The Screen Actors Guild on Sunday picked the actors in drama "The Help" as the top ensemble cast of 2011 and gave it two other awards for best lead actress and supporting actress, in a surprise over heavily favored silent movie romance "The Artist."

    "The Help" earned three awards overall and "The Artist" only one for French actor Jean Dujardin as best actor in a drama for his role as a fading actor at the end of the talkies.

    Full story: 'The Help' earns top honor at SAG Awards

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Stars of film and TV, including Brad Pitt, George Clooney, and Alec Baldwin are among the celebrities to attend the festivities in Los Angeles.

     

  • Joshua Trujillo / seattlepi.com

    Seattle activist Dorli Rainey, 84, reacts after being hit with pepper spray during an Occupy Seattle protest on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 at Westlake Park in Seattle, Wash. Protesters gathered in the intersection of 5th Avenue and Pine Street after marching from their camp at Seattle Central Community College in support of Occupy Wall Street. Many refused to move from the intersection after being ordered by police. Police then began spraying pepper spray into the gathered crowd hitting dozens of people. Rainey had a milky solution splashed in her face to help with the effect of the pepper spray.

    'The Image, Deconstructed' spotlights photographer Joshua Trujillo and his image from an Occupy Seattle protest

    Excerpted from 'The Image, Deconstructed':

    Photographer Joshua Trujillo:

    I am from a culture where elders are respected. So when I saw a woman who looked older than my own grandmother, yelling and choking from the pepper spray, my heart skipped a beat. I quickly gathered myself and walked toward her to document the aftermath.

    At that moment, the protesters were not thrilled that I was there. I was being yelled at, told to “get out of here,” and shoved. Ms. Rainey, who was choking from the effects of the spray, actually mustered up enough energy to swear at another reporter who was asking if she was okay. Ms. Rainey was a mess. She was coughing and having trouble opening her eyes. She had a milky solution splashed in her face and was now agitated, along with the rest of the crowd.

    Reading body language is important in situations like these. But in this case, words were also exchanged suggesting I was not welcome there. There was quite a bit a swearing and some shoving from the people escorting her away. The scene moved fast and emotions were high as people coughed and struggled to breathe. But as I see it, the potential news value and uniqueness of the situation overrode the subjects' desires at that moment.

    I keep a list in my head when making photos in sensitive situations, especially ones where I am not sure I am welcome. News value is at the top of that list. The unique nature of a scene is probably the second element I consider. Coming in third place is compassion for a subject. I always try to work with compassion. A subject's desire to control the situation, and in effect control me, is much farther down the list. So that never really factored into my decision-making that night. I knew I had something unique, but I didn't realize how the image would later explode.

    To learn more about Joshua Trujillo and his image of Dorli Rainey, visit 'The Image, Deconstructed'.

  • Michael Regan / Getty Images

    A competitor emerges from muddy water during the Tough Guy Challenge endurance race on Jan. 29, in Telford, England. Every year thousands of people run the 8 mile assault course which involves freezing temperatures, fire and ice.

    Tough Guys slog through shoe-sucking mud over course of 8-mile race

    I think that the Tough Guy site answers the question best as to what the race is all about:

    Tough Guy™ is the nightmare of being chased by a herd of stallions.

    Your only escape route is a mighty and revered obstacle course. Built from trees, 15 metres high with Tarzan ropes swinging. No hats and no hook ups. Just pure, organic grip strength from your cold and wet hands.

    Belly flop beneath razor wire, the stallions still snorting at your heels, matching your every step. Look deep into the flames before diving through them straight into shoe sucking mud. Then something wakes you, or does it? Were the stallions just a nightmare?

    No time to look back, the narrow tunnels beckon. You bravely enter to discover they're filled with murky water. You can't see. You can't breathe. What chance of survival? Grope around and grab that rope. Pull yourself lungs bursting, into the light! You see the sun, or is it just another cruel mirage?

    You are faced with a wall climb, as high as a mountain. No visibility again. Is that smoke, mist or cloud? How do you get down? Take the netting or dive into the freezing lake. You suddenly realise that the sound of stallions behind is fading. You must go on. The only route is through the Arctic water.

    A monkey rope, a barbed wire crawl, a rubber snake, a skin ripping snake, you can smell the finish. It's familiar.....you recognise.....it smells like.....cocoa! You know you've earned it!

  • Milk Truck provides haven for breastfeeding mothers

    Keith Srakocic / AP

    Jill Miller drives her Milk Truck, near her Pittsburgh home, Jan. 19. The truck is a vehicle she made for spreading the message that nursing mothers have the need and the right to feed their infants in public.

    AP reports:

    PITTSBURGH, Pa. -- It's the Milk Truck, spreading the message that nursing mothers have the need and the right to feed their infants in public.

    Jill Miller, an artist and mother, said she got the idea after the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh asked her to do a project of her choice last year.

    ...

    Keith Srakocic / AP

    Jill Miller talks about her Milk Truck.

    "I wouldn't say every woman in Pittsburgh has been asked to cover up — that would be totally overblowing it," Miller said. "But there were these stories I would hear that seemed almost like urban legends."

    The stories were noteworthy because Pennsylvania has a law guaranteeing women the right to breastfeed in public without harassment, she said.

    ...

    Miller estimates that the project cost about $16,000, most of it from Kickstarter, an online funding platform for artists, inventors, and explorers. People describe their projects and set a funding goal, and contributors get something in return, such as artwork and personal thank-you notes.

    Someone once described Miller's artwork as "very funny upfront, but very serious on the backside."

    "It opens up a conversation with a lightness to have a giant breast on a truck. For me, the humor is very important. I couldn't do the project without it," said Miller.

    Daisy Klaber Miksch, who runs a business that offers singing and music classes to children and families, recalled the first time she saw the truck.

    "It made me smile," she wrote in an email. "What it said, and says, to me is, 'Breasts are nice. Nursing is nice! Here's a friendly reminder. Take a moment to consider changing your negative reaction to a mom who's breastfeeding her kid. Lighten the mood!"

    Miksch isn't a mother, but said she has sisters and friends who've been given dirty looks for breastfeeding in public.

    "We all have our own hangups — about bodies, about sex, etc. ... Our culture very strongly associates breasts with sex. But the fact that it's cultural means it's changeable," she wrote.

    Some people complained, especially after local newspapers and TV stations did stories on the Milk Truck last year.

    One man sent an email saying that he could "donate money to your silly truck" or continue to give to the local food bank to help feed hungry children. He chose the food bank.

    "What an insane cause you chose to rally behind. ... Pointless!" he wrote.

    Miller found that people from all walks of life were willing to help the project, such as a local mechanic who donated his time fixing the 20-year-old truck because he thought it was so cool. He even start using her nickname for it: the boob truck.

    "He just loves telling people he works on the boob truck. He has a T-shirt and a picture," Miller said.

    ...

    The Warhol exhibit has closed, but Miller and McElfresh see new possibilities. Originally, they wanted the truck to be on call for mothers who get harassed in a public place, rushing to their aid with a comfortable, pink interior.

    Keith Srakocic / AP

    Jill Miller drives her Milk Truck, near her Pittsburgh home.

    Over time they realized the Milk Truck was a valuable educational tool, even without a crisis. Stores for mothers and babies have invited the truck to park out front to show their support for breastfeeding, and it's appeared at public libraries.

    "We have people all over the world who love the truck," Miller said. "We're now talking about having like a national tour. It would be like a rock band on a tour bus — but we are the tour bus," she said.

    Related content:

    Story: This truck brakes for nursing mamas 

    Site: The Milk Truck

    

  • Bikas Das / AP

    Underprivileged Indian children dressed to look like the late Mahatma Gandhi arrive on a bus in Kolkata, India, before attempting a world record for being the largest gathering of people dressed as Gandhi, Jan. 29. Local non-government organizations put on the event and a total of 485 children from the Training Resource and Care for Kids (T.R.A.C.K.S), a charity for single mothers and children living without support at railway stations took part in the rally promoting the Gandhian ideology of nonviolence ahead of the anniversary of Gandhi's death which falls on January 30th.

    Nonviolence promoted at rally on eve of anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi's death

    .

  • Ryan Pierse / Pool via Getty Images

    Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates winning championship point in his men's final match against Rafael Nadal at the Australian Open at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, Jan. 29.

    Djokovic outlasts Nadal in six-hour, five-set marathon Aussie Open final

    Novak Djokovic beat Rafael Nadal 5-7, 6-4, 2-6, 6-7 (5), 7-5 Sunday to win the Australian Open in the longest Grand Slam final in Open Era history.

    Full story: Djokovic wins longest slam final ever

  • Despite broken home, one Michigan teen overcomes odds and preps for college

    It's not every day that you read a story that inspires you, especially one that includes children facing violence and a broken home. But a story published this week in the Detroit Free Press does exactly that, telling the story of a teen boy who beat the odds. Photoblog brings you an excerpt of the compelling story including video, below.

    Eric Seals / Detroit Free Press

    Marcus Buggs, 18 of Ann Arbor, Michigan looks outside from a school bus.

    David Jesse of the Detroit Free Press reports:

    When he was just 9, Marcus Buggs became a man.
    It's not that he wanted to. He had to.
    Up until that point, he was living what he says was a typical childhood in Flint.
    It wasn't the best environment. There were drug dealers and thieves -- the kind of place where you can get into trouble easily.
    But Marcus had his family. Even if his father was dealing drugs and his mother had her own issues, they were around.
    And then everything changed. It happened on his ninth birthday, the day he became a man.
    Marcus watched his uncle shoot his dad, pumping a bullet into his chest.
    He lost his father.
    He lost his mother a few weeks later. Not to death, but to prison.
    And right then, he lost his childhood.

    Eric Seals/Detroit Free Press

    Marcus Buggs, 18 of Ann Arbor takes time out from doing homework to play and get Fruit Loops fed to him by his sister as a second sister waits her turn.

    The story describes how Marcus shouldered huge responsibility, caring for his four younger siblings while they bounced between foster homes and living with their grandparents. But he struggled too, acting up and getting kicked out of school. The Roberto Clemente Student Development Center in Ann Arbor, Mich., was his last chance at graduating, and that's where the downward spiral stopped with the help of school Principal Ben Edmondson who cared enough to get involved.

    After the story published in the Detroit Free Press on Jan. 24, the response from educators and the public was strong. Universities are encouraging Buggs to apply to their schools. Readers have stepped forward to help in many ways. Read the original story about Marcus Buggs and an update on the young man's eventful week since the story published.

  • Take your passion to the grave in a Crazy Coffin

    Justin Tallis / AFP - Getty Images

    Visitors photograph various custom designed coffins, during the "Death - Festival for the Living" exhibit, at the Royal Festival Hall in London, on Jan. 28. Crazy Coffins, an offshoot of a Nottingham-based traditional coffin and urn maker which took on a new identity in the 1990s when people began asking to customize their final resting places, presents uncanny coffins as part of the exhibit. The "Death - Festival for the Living" exhibit is open from Jan. 20-29.

    If you're wondering how much a Crazy Coffin will set you back, the Nottingham, England based company's site offers the following on their pricing:

    A coffin shaped like a particular motor car may set you back four or five thousand pounds. But a simplified football boot may cost you only eight hundred pounds.

    Crazy Coffins has yet to fill an order outside the United Kingdom, but waits in anticipation to do so:

    The time between death and the funeral is sometimes short and can prohibit an order from abroad. A better idea is to buy now and die later!

    Learn more about their work: Crazy Coffins

    Justin Tallis / AFP - Getty Images

    Visitors look at a sled coffin made for Richard Mullard. Mullard plans to be buried wearing his skis and commissioned this replica of a Laplanders sled, with boots to fit, so that his funeral resembles a final expedition to the frozen north.

    Justin Tallis / AFP - Getty Images

    Visitors listen to a talk by former Concord engineer Malcolm Brocklhurst, top right, as they look at his airplane coffin.

    Justin Tallis / AFP - Getty Images

    Railway enthusiast Brian Holden, 83, poses for a photograph with the Orient Express Railway Carriage coffin he commissioned.

    Justin Tallis / AFP - Getty Images

    Visitors look at a corkscrew shaped coffin.

    Justin Tallis / AFP - Getty Images

    Visitors look at a ballet shoe shaped coffin commissioned by ballet fan Pat Cox.

     

  • Lanterns light the sky for good fortune and prosperity in Taiwan

    Wally Santana / AP

    Hundreds of Taiwanese release "sky lanterns" in hopes of good fortune and prosperity in the new year and to celebrate the upcoming traditional Chinese Lantern Festival on Jan. 28, in the Pingxi district of New Taipei City, Taiwan. The start of the Chinese Lantern festival falls on Monday, Feb. 6.

    Related content:

    Peter Parks / AFP - Getty Images

    Millions around the world celebrate the Lunar New Year, which began on Jan. 23 and welcomes the year of the dragon.

     

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