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  • Black Friday shoppers pass Walmart picket

    Noah Berger / Reuters

    Anthony Trujillo pickets outside a Walmart store as holiday sales commence in San Leandro, California on November 22, 2012. Calling on Walmart to treat workers with more respect, a group of about 30 demonstrators spent several hours standing outside the store, Reuters reported. 

    The group behind the protest actions, OUR Walmart, told TODAY on Wednesday that they are striking to protest what they say is manager retaliation against employees who complain about working conditionsWal-Mart said they were "really confident" that Black Friday would go off without a hitch.

    See more images of Black Friday in our slideshow:

    C Michael Bergen / Zuma Press

    Eager holiday shoppers forego an after Thanksgiving nap to wait in line for door busting bargains.

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  • Congo army fights back, rebels hold Goma

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    M23 rebel fighters rush from Goma to the town of Sake to reinforce positions as residents of Sake flee with their belongings on the road between Goma and Sake in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, Nov. 22, 2012. Many of the fleeing residents stopped at an internally displaced person camp between Sake and Goma.

    Reuters reports — Congolese troops fought back on Thursday against rebels who rejected calls from African leaders to quit the eastern city of Goma, captured earlier this week in a major upset that forced U.N. troops to withdraw.

    Thousands of people fled the area of clashes around the town of Sake, as M23 rebel fighters rushed from Goma to reinforce their positions against an army counter-offensive.

    Both sides claimed control of Sake as night fell on the troubled eastern area. There was no independent verification of who was holding the town.

    The M23 rebel movement, widely believed to be backed by Rwanda, has vowed to "liberate" all of the vast, resource-rich country after taking Goma, a provincial capital on the Rwandan border, ramping up tensions in a fragile region. Full story…

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Women run after Congolese soldiers and rebel fighters battle over the eastern Congolese town of Sake, Nov. 22. The woman in orange, identified as Mamou, said she lost her husband by a fatal wound to the head from incoming mortar rounds. Thousands fled the M23 controlled town as the militants seeking to overthrow the government vowed to push forward despite mounting international pressure.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Thousands of Congolese flee the town of Sake, about 16 miles west of Goma, following fresh fighting in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nov. 22.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Congolese children sit on a step in front of M23 rebels in Sake, Nov. 22, 2012. Rebels took the town yesterday, but were engaged in heavy gunfighting this afternoon as government-allied militia tried to retake it.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    A woman who fled her home in Sake emerges from a shelter at an internally displaced person camp in Mugunga, between Goma and Sake, in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, Nov. 22.

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  • Cooking a Thanksgiving feast in Breezy Point

    John Makely / NBC News

    Thanksgiving on Breezy Point: Terri Dodge and her fiancee Steve Peterson drove from Portland, Maine to Breezy Point, NY on Wednesday to cook Thanksgiving dinner for up to 30 people.

    In the weeks since Superstorm Sandy sent a wall of water through Breezy Point and more than 100 homes burned to the ground, the battered neighborhood in Queens, N.Y., has seen a flurry of activity with relief workers, volunteers and utility crews creating traffic jams on the one road into town.

    Thanksgiving Day in Breezy Point started with a few residents still cleaning up and dozens of crews working on the natural gas lines, but little else happening -- except over by the Point Breeze Volunteer Fire Department where Terri Dodge and her fiancee Steve Peterson were in high gear cooking dinner in the parking lot.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Steve Peterson adjusts the heat under a deep fryer as a large turkey cooks.

    Dodge and Peterson, who were recently engaged, drove from Portland, Maine, to Breezy Point on Wednesday and slept in their rented van next to the canned vegetables and coolers in the fire department's parking lot.

    Thursday morning they started cooking for a guest list that kept getting longer. "First it was seven people, then we added 17 and now we're up over 30," Terri said as she carved one of eight turkeys. 

    John Makely / NBC News

    A deep-fried turkey is placed in a cooler to keep it warm until dinner is served.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Terri Dodge served up Turkey, mashed potatoes, green beens, yams, stuffing, gravy and a canned pork item grilled with maple syrup dubbed "Hurricane Ham"

    Improvisation and outdoor cooking is not new for Terri and Steve. The couple run "A Lobster Affair" catering company in Portland, but cooking next to a flooded car in the middle of a town recently devastated by Sandy has offered some challenges. "We had to use bottle water to cook the potatoes - that was fun." The biggest challenge? "We need more side dishes, " she said as she mashed a pot full of steaming potatoes.

    John Makely / NBC News

    About 60 volunteers, police and firefighters enjoy a Thanksgiving meal prepared by Teri Dodge and her fiancé Steve Peterson at the Point Breeze Fire Department in Breezy Point, New York, Nov. 22.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Teri Dodge shows off the company patch she was given from Firefighter Sebastian Danese as she receives a round of applause for cooking Thanksgiving dinner at the Point Breeze Fire Department, Breezy Point, New York, Nov. 22.

    Nearby, Mathew Bruno and Ryan Pascuzzi of the Westchester Fire Academy handed out turkey sandwiches to whoever was hungry.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Ryan Pascuzzi, left, a cadet with the New Rochelle Fire Department, hands out turkey sandwiches to Finbar Devine, center, Tim O'Malley and Tom Ball on 216th Street in Breezy Point.

    "You've got to do your part" Pascuzzi said. "We're going to be devoting our lives to helping other people, we might as well start with a tragedy down here."

    "This is my community," Bruno added. "I've been down here every weekend doing what I can, pumping out people's basements. It makes your day when someone gives you a hotdog, a hamburger or a sandwich while you're working trying to do your part. I've been on that side of working and doing the construction and now it's time for me to come down here and do what I can."

    John Makely / NBC News

    John Dalton, left, and his nephew Al Dalton salvage items from a neighbor's house before the home is razed. The second floor furniture was moved to Dalton's house at the owner's request.

    Elsewhere in Breezy Point, John Dalton was salvaging bedroom furniture for a neighbor whose house will be razed. "I'm thankful that no one got killed in this area," Dalton said. 

    In a neighborhood hard-hit by Sandy, even people who are storm victims themselves find ways to bring Thanksgiving to others. NBC's Kate Snow reports.

  • After 8 days of violence, a chance to draw breath in Gaza and Israel

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    A Palestinian baby wears a Hamas bandana during a rally to celebrate the Israel-Hamas cease-fire in the Jebaliya refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip on Nov. 22, 2012. Gaza residents cleared rubble and claimed victory on Thursday, just hours after an Egyptian-brokered truce between Israel and Gaza's Hamas rulers ended the worst cross-border fighting in four years.

    Lefteris Pitarakis / AP

    An Israeli soldier, left, hugs a comrade, center, to congratulate him for his birthday at a staging area in southern Israel near the Gaza Strip border on Nov. 22, 2012. A cease-fire agreement between Israel and the Gaza Strip's Hamas rulers took effect Wednesday night, bringing an end to eight days of the fiercest fighting in years.

    Read more about the end of the conflict and the prospects for a lasting peace:

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Israel's military said it had accomplished its objectives while Hamas claimed victory after the two sides exchanged deadly airstrikes and rocket attacks for over a week.

    Shops and stores are reopening and a semblance of normalcy is returning to Gaza's streets after a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas is put into effect. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports from Gaza.

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  • An RV fit for a queen? Elizabeth II tries out motor home for size

    Carl Court / WPA Pool via Getty Images

    Not quite as big as Buckingham Palace: Queen Elizabeth II views the interior of a recreational vehicle during a visit to the Bailey caravan factory in Bristol, England as part of her Jubilee tour on November 22, 2012.

    Carl Court / Pool via AFP - Getty Images

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  • Parade over, confetti and memories remain

    Carlo Allegri / Reuters

    Confetti is left on a utility access cover after the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York on November 22, 2012.

    Take a look at some more traditional pictures of the parade (and parades past) in the slideshows below:

    Louis Lanzano / AP

    See images of the giant balloons and festivities at the 86th annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.

    Yana Paskova / Getty Images

    Since 1924, the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade has been an annual holiday tradition. See some of the attractions that have delighted spectators young and old over the decades.

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  • Japanese mascots go beyond cute to master trade

    Reuters

    An instructor teaches a trainee dressed as a character mascot at the Choko Group mascot school in Tokyo, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2012. Choko Oohira, a 20-year veteran of the mascot arts, founded the school - the only one of its kind in Japan and, quite possibly, the world - in 1985. Her goal: to help mascot wannabes perfect the art of moving and playing the characters. Students are taught everything from traditional dance to different walking styles that illustrate different ages while wearing costumes. Read the full story.

    Reuters

    Choko Oohira (R) teaches trainees in character mascots on Wednesday.

     

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  • Mexican army shuts down three narco-laboratories in Jalisco

    Hector Guerrero / AFP - Getty Images

    A Mexican soldier stands guard next in a clandestine chemical drug processing laboratory discovered in a cave in the mountains of Yahualica, Jalisco State, on Wednesday, Nov. 21, 2012. More than 70,000 people have been killed in rising drug-related violence in Mexico since December 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed soldiers and federal police to take on organized crime. 

    Reuters

     

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  • Overcrowded South Sudan prisons lack basic health care, sanitation and nutrition

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    An inmate sits in his cell in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 25, 2012.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    A female inmate looks out the prison door at Juba Central Prison in Juba, South Sudan, Oct. 23.

    European Pressphoto Agency reports — Built in 1948 by the British colonial government, Rumbek Central Prison houses some 600 prisoners who live in overcrowded cells with virtually no access to basic health care, sanitation, as well as adequate food and nutrition.

    Arbitrary detention is rife in South Sudan, says a 2012 report by Human Rights Watch. Several inmates interviewed, some of them on death row, said they had no access to lawyers or any form of legal aid. But it is merely just one of several human rights laws being broken at the prisons in South Sudan. Conditions in the country's prisons 'clearly do not comply with international or domestic law and standards on prisoners' welfare', the report continues. Those who are accused of or convicted of murder are often shackled for extended periods of time, if not permanently. And corporal punishment is often used to 'discipline' inmates such as being beaten with a stick or whip for fighting or disobeying prison officers.

    Smile Tombek, 33, an inmate in Juba Central Prison, says he was sentenced to 14 years in jail without a trial along with his three sisters, for killing a man, but no one told them who is accused of the killing. 'Someone was murdered and our whole family was accused so we were arrested, and then taken directly to this prison from the police station. Since then, I have never had a chance to talk to anyone, like a lawyer'.

    The prison director at the Rumbek Central Prison says that he acknowledges the poor conditions at his prison but there have been some improvements over the past year, although the government needs more funding. South Sudan's economy has been seriously damaged following the halting of its oil production after a border dispute with its northern neighbor Sudan. The world's newest nation still has a lot of work to do for its citizens - whether they are guilty of a crime or not.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Text and images made available to NBC News on Nov. 21

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Shackled inmates sit in the yard in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 24.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Inmates line up bowls of food for dinner in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 25.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    An elderly inmate leans against a cross at a yard inside the Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 25.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Shackled inmates wash their hands and feet at a yard in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 24.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Shackled inmates play cards in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 25.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    A female inmate, said to be mentally ill, lies down in her cell, soiled with her own urine and feces, in Juba Central Prison in Juba, South Sudan, Oct. 23.

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  • Palestinians take to the streets to celebrate cease-fire with Israel

    Suhaib Salem / Reuters

    Palestinians celebrate a cease-fire with Israel on Nov. 21 in Gaza City.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports:

    Israel and Hamas agreed to a cease-fire Wednesday, ending eight days of fighting that killed more than 140 Palestinians and five Israelis.

    Hundreds took to the streets of Gaza City to celebrate the cease-fire, NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reported. Celebratory gun fire erupted across the city, whose streets gradually filled with crowds waving Palestinian flags. Ululating women leaned out of windows and fireworks lit up the sky. Full Story

    Mohammed Salem / Reuters

    Palestinians celebrate in Gaza City.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Palestinians celebrate the Israel-Hamas cease-fire in Gaza City.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Armed Palestinians celebrate the cease-fire.

    /

    Two sides exchange deadly airstrikes, rocket attacks.

     

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  • Cobbler lives! Obama gives a turkey something to be thankful for

    Alex Wong / Getty Images

    President Barack Obama and daughters Sasha and Malia, right, with Cobbler the turkey at the White House on Wednesday.

    Mandel Ngan / AFP - Getty Images

    Cobbler is seen before being pardoned by President Obama at the White House.

    AP reports: President Barack Obama pardoned two turkeys in an annual Thanksgiving rite on Wednesday, saying he wanted to offer the birds a second chance.

    "They say life is full of second chances, and this November I couldn't agree more with that sentiment," a smiling Obama said in one of several lighthearted references to his re-election this month to a second term.

    Cobbler, the newly designated national turkey, and his alternate, Gobbler, received a reprieve. Full Story

    The tradition of pardoning a Thanksgiving turkey at the White House started with President John F. Kennedy in 1963.

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    Mandel Ngan / AFP - Getty Images

    President Obama waves his hand as he pardons Cobbler. At left is National Turkey Federation Chairman Steve Willardsen.

     

  • In the market for a camel? Pushkar fair has up to 20,000 animals for sale & trade

    Kevin Frayer / AP

    An Indian camel herder leads his herd at the annual camel & livestock fair in Pushkar, India., on Nov. 20.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP - Getty Images

    An owner ties a string of bells to the foot of his camel to make it more appealing for sale at the camel fair grounds on Nov. 21.

     

    The annual five-day camel and livestock fair in Pushkar, India, is one of the world's largest camel fairs and, in addition to the buying and selling of livestock, it has become an important tourist attraction. According to the fair's website, up to 20,000 camels, horses & cattle will be at the event.

    Editor's note: All images made available Nov. 21.

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    Rajesh Kumar Singh / AP

    Indian camel herders walk with their herd as they arrive to sell their camels at the fair on Nov. 21.

    Kevin Frayer / AP

    Indian camel herders sit next to their herd on Nov. 20.

    Lam Yik Fei / Getty Images

    Two boys walk past camels at the fair on Nov. 21.

    Kevin Frayer / AP

    An Indian camel herder pulls a reluctant camel at the fair on Nov. 20.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP - Getty Images

    A group of camel traders sit around a fire in the early morning hours at the camel fair grounds on the outskirts of Pushkar on Nov. 21, 2012.

    Kevin Frayer / AP

    An Indian man rides a camel as he pursues another during a camel race at the fair on Nov. 21.

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  • Piecing together a fractured Afghanistan one limb at a time

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Ehsamullah, 30, left, who lost his leg after being shot with an AK-47 and Hassibullah, 30, right, who lost his after stepping on a mine, practice walking with their prosthetic limbs at the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) orthopedic center on Nov. 20 in Kabul.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Afghan National Army commando, Khairuddin Sultan, 21, is helped up by his friend Ala Mohamed who joined the army with him 18 months ago, as an orthopedic specialist molds a cast for his prosthetic legs on Nov. 19. Khairuddin, a double amputee, lost his legs when an IED exploded during a joint operation against the Taliban with U.S. special forces. The IED exploded while he was using a mine detector, sending shrapnel into his outstretched hand and blowing up his legs.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Orthopedic components hang on a wall in a workshop at the ICRC orthopedic center on Nov. 19 in Kabul.

    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) rehabilitation center works to educate and rehabilitate land-mine victims and those with limb related deformities in Kabul, Afghanistan. The center helps its patients transition back into society and assists them in finding employment by offering micro-credit financing, home schooling and vocational training. The clinic itself is unique in that all of the workers are handicapped. The Kabul center has registered over 57,000 patients, with more than 114,000 registered country-wide in all of their centers since its inception 25 years ago.

    -- Getty Images

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Bismillah Gul, 12, suffering from poliomyelitis, is helped by his father Masta Gul, after having traveled from Khost province to get treatment on Nov. 19 in Kabul.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Khairullah, 10, watches as his brother Zainullah, 18, has a mold cast for a prosthetic arm on Nov. 20 in Kabul. Zainullah, a brick worker, lost his hand six months ago, shaping a brick from mud that contained a mine.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    An orthopedic technician works on a prosthetic arm on Nov. 20 in Kabul, Afghanistan.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    An orthopedic specialist checks the mobility of new prosthetic limbs being fitted on a patient on Nov. 20 in Kabul.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    An orthopedic specialist fits a new prosthetic limb onto a patient on Nov. 20 in Kabul.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    An orthopedic technician walks past prosthetic limbs being stored for patients on Nov. 20 in Kabul, Afghanistan.

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    Aref Karimi / AFP - Getty Images

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

  • Don't look down! Mechanics inspect sky-high cable car system

    Christof Stache / AFP - Getty Images

    Herzogstand cable car mechanics inspect parts of the lift during the annual safety revision in front of the small village Walchensee, southern Germany on Nov. 21.

    Herzogstand cable car mechanics inspect parts of the lift during the annual safety revision above the small village Walchensee, southern Germany on Nov. 21. The inspection continues until Dec. 21. The cable car begins around 2,600 feet above sea level at the small village of Walchensee and ends in Fahrenberg around 5,300 feet. Cable cars are prepared for the upcoming skiing season all over the Bavarian mountains.

    Christof Stache / AFP - Getty Images

    Herzogstand cable car mechanics inspect parts of the lift during the annual safety revision in front of the small village Walchensee, southern Germany on Nov. 21.

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  • Congo police surrender, hand in weapons as rebels take control of Goma

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Surrendered police officers hand in their weapons at the Volcanoes Stadium in Goma, in the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, on November 21, 2012. M23 rebels, who took the city yesterday, called on any remaining policemen and army soldiers to assemble at the stadium this morning to officially surrender.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Residents of Goma react as they listen to a M23 rebel group spokesman speak at the Volcanoes Stadium in Goma on November 21, 2012.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Spokesman of the M23 rebel group Lieutenant-Colonel Vianney Kazarama arrives at the Volcanoes Stadium in Goma on November 21, 2012. Kazarama addressed the population of Goma in an attempt to calm and reassure the civilians following the fall of Goma to M23 rebels yesterday.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    A surrendered police officer stands at the Volcanoes Stadium in Goma on November 21, 2012.

    Rebel forces in the Congolese city of Goma called on any remaining policemen and government soldiers to surrender and hand in their weapons Wednesday, Agence France-Presse reported, a day after the city fell to the rebels.

    "The journey to liberate Congo has started now ... We're going to move on to Bukavu and then to Kinshasa. Are you ready to join us?" Vianney Kazarama, spokesman for the M23 rebels, told a crowd of more than 1,000 in a stadium in Goma.

    "Its a problem of governance; there no food, there's no money," Rashidi Benshulungu, a captain in military intelligence who had changed sides, told Reuters. "I'm not a politician, that's a problem for [Congo's President] Kabila. But we're following the ARC," he added, using an acronym used by the M23's combat force.

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  • Volcano erupts in New Zealand's 'Lord of the Rings' park

    Stefan Keller / Reuters

    A massive plume of ash billows up into the sky as Mount Tongariro erupts in Tongariro National Park, New Zealand on November 21, 2012. The volcano previously erupted in August this year, the first time in more than a century.

    The Associated Press reports — A New Zealand volcano erupted with a brief blast of dark ash Wednesday, canceling flights but causing no significant damage. Schoolchildren and dozens of other hikers who were walking on trails along the mountain's base were safe.

    The eruption of Mount Tongariro, its second in less than four months, sent a dark ash plume about 1.9 miles into the sky. Authorities issued a no-fly alert above the mountain located in the sparsely populated area of central North Island.

    Tongariro National Park, which has three active volcanoes, was the backdrop for many scenes in "The Lord of the Rings" movies. Read the full story.

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    Park visitors were evacuated and flights were cancelled near New Zealand's Mount Tongariro after the volcano erupted without warning. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

     

  • Yemeni military plane crashes near Sanaa airport, killing 10

    Khaled Abdullah / Reuters

    Army and police officers examine the wreckage of a plane after it crashed in Sanaa, Yemen on November 21, 2012.

    Khaled Abdullah / Reuters

    Army and police officers examine the wreckage of a plane after it crashed in Sanaa on November 21, 2012.

    Yahya Arhab / EPA

    Yemeni soldiers inspect the site of a military plane crash in Sanaa on November 21, 2012.

    Khaled Abdullah / Reuters

    Police officers inspect the wreckage of a plane after it crashed in Sanaa November 21, 2012.

    Reuters reports — A Yemeni military transport plane crashed near Sanaa airport and burst into flames on Wednesday, killing all ten people onboard, an airport official said.

    The plane came down in an abandoned produce market in the Hasaba district near the Yemeni capital's airport after suffering a technical problem, the official said. Read the full story.

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    A military plane crashed near Sanaa airport, killing all ten people onboard, according to an airport official. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

  • Explosion hits bus in Tel Aviv

    Oded Balilty / AP

    Police and security personnel rush to the site of a bombing on a bus in Tel Aviv, Israel on Nov. 21, 2012.

    Oded Balilty / AP

    Rescue workers and paramedics carry a wounded person from the site of a bus bombing in Tel Aviv on Nov. 21, 2012.

    Oded Balilty / AP

    Police officers examine a blown up bus at the site of a bombing in Tel Aviv on Nov. 21, 2012.

    Oded Balilty / AP

    A wounded person is taken away from the site of a bus bombing in Tel Aviv on Nov. 21, 2012.

     

    /

    Two sides exchange deadly airstrikes, rocket attacks.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports — An explosion on a bus in Tel Aviv Wednesday injured 10 people, three seriously, a medical official told NBC News as the deadly Gaza crisis continued.

    The blast happened as Israeli airstrikes continued to shake the Gaza Strip and Palestinian rockets were fired into Israel, amid negotiations about a possible truce.

    "This was a terrorist attack," Ofir Gendelman, a spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told Reuters.

    Click here for updates on this developing story.

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  • Tent, Sleeping Bag, Xbox: Gamer goes camping

    John Brecher / NBC News

    Fletcher Jones, 17, plays Borderlands on his Xbox at a campsite in Cape Hillsborough National Park on Australia's east coast on Wednesday, Nov. 21. Jones came to the park for a week's camping and fishing following his graduation from high school. When his friend Josh, background, mentioned that the campsite would have a power outlet, Jones decided to bring along the gaming console.

     

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  • Guinea-Bissau endeavors for autonomy under weight of history

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    Mohamed Daciro Djalo exits the abandoned colonial governor's mansion on the island of Bolama, Guinea-Bissau, Nov. 5, 2012. Established in 1890, Bolama was the first Portuguese colonial capital of Guinea-Bissau.

    Reuters reports — Since Guinea-Bissau switched to a multiparty system in 1995, no president has completed a full term. Before that, the country had a long history of coping with violence: it took 14 years of fighting for Guinea-Bissau to free itself from its brutal Portuguese rulers, who themselves had inflicted a 49-year war of pacification against the local African communities who resisted their rule. In total, the country has been officially at war for 65 out of the 122 years since its colonial creation. The extreme violence has scarred every citizen.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Image made available to NBC News on Nov. 20

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    People leave the colonial-era dock on the island of Bolama by pirogue, Guinea-Bissau, Nov. 6. Established in 1890, Bolama was the first Portuguese colonial capital of Guinea-Bissau. In 1941 the Portuguese moved to the present capital, Bissau.

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    A farmer, carrying wheat on his head, poses for a picture as he walks home after a day's work in Guiledge, Guinea-Bissau, Nov. 3. Guiledge was a stronghold of the Portuguese army and its fall to anti-colonial rebels in early 1973 marked the final stages of Portuguese rule.

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    A woman washes clothes in front of a colonial-era building on the island of Bolama, Guinea-Bissau, Nov. 5.

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    A man puts together Guinea-Bissau's state newspaper at a printing press in the capital Bissau, Oct. 30. During colonialism, the printers produced Portuguese colonial newsletters. After independence the papers printed the state newspaper and official bulletins.

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    Former independence fighters receive monthly pension payments in the capital Bissau, Oct. 29. Pensions range from $30 to $400 per month.

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    Former independence fighter Samba Diakite, 69, shows his prosthetic leg in his bedroom in Gabu, Guinea-Bissau, Nov. 3. In 1969, Diakite lost his leg in a mine blast set by the Portuguese army. Today there are still live mines in Guinea-Bissau's countryside, planted by the Portuguese during the independence war.

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    A statue of Portuguese explorer Nuno Tristao leans against a wall at a former Portuguese slave fort in Cacheu, Guinea-Bissau, Oct. 27. Tristao became the first European to set foot in what is now Guinea-Bissau when he arrived in 1446.

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    Former independence fighter Mamadu Sonaco Diallo, 80, gives a salute in Gabu, Guinea-Bissau, Nov. 3. Diallo joined the anti-colonial rebels to escape a life of raising cattle and became a specialist in clearing mines.

     

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  • Yemenis make mud bricks for unique architecture

    Mohamed Al-sayaghi / Reuters

    A boy arranges dried mud blocks at a traditional brick manufacturing site in San'a, Yemen, Nov. 20, 2012. The bricks are made from clay and straw and widely used in the construction of houses due to its low cost.

    Mohamed Al-sayaghi / Reuters

    People work near a kiln at a traditional brick-manufacturing site in San'a, Yemen, Nov. 20.

    Mohamed Al-sayaghi / Reuters

    A worker adds water to clay mixed with straw at a traditional brick-manufacturing site in San'a, Yemen, Nov. 20.

    Mohamed Al-sayaghi / Reuters

    Workers carry dried mud bricks to a kiln at a traditional brick-manufacturing site in San'a, Yemen, Nov. 20.

    Mohamed Al-sayaghi / Reuters

    Workers stack dried mud bricks inside a kiln to be fired at a traditional brick manufacturing site in San'a, Yemen, Nov. 20.

    Khaled Fazaa / AFP - Getty Images file

    A file photo reveals the traditional mud-brick architecture used at the historical city of Shibam in eastern Yemen's Hadramaut province on Oct. 28, 2008.

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  • Spanish gypsies watch as their homes of 50 years are demolished

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Saul Gabarri Valdes, 7, cries amidst the remains of his home after it was demolished at the Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierro, on the outskirts of Madrid on Nov. 20.

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Carmina Gabarri and her husband Victor Valdes watch as a bulldozer demolishes the small school, where they were living at after their own house was demolished, at the Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierro, on the outskirts of Madrid on Nov. 20.

    Reuters -- Fifty-four families have been living in the Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierro, on the outskirts of Madrid, for over 50 years. Since the summer of 2010, the community on the banks of the Manzanares River has been subject to evictions on the grounds that the dwellings are illegal. Families, whose homes have been demolished, move in with relatives whose houses still remain while the debris keeps piling up around them as more demolitions take place.

    Reuters' photographer Susana Vera has been documenting the demolition of homes in Puerta de Hierro. View before and after photos of the homes and read more about the people who live in the settlement.

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Teresa Echevarria holds her son Ezequiel next to her daughter Maria, left, as they wait for a bulldozer to demolish two homes on Nov. 20.

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Members of the Gabarri-Valdes family distribute their belongings to different cars after a bulldozer demolished their home in the Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierro, on the outskirts of Madrid on Nov. 20.

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Saray Armendia uses a broom to sweep outside her caravan after a bulldozer demolished the former school, where her in-laws lived at, in the Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierro, on the outskirts of Madrid on Nov. 20.

  • Catalans eye independence from Spain ahead of elections

    David Ramos / Getty Images

    Men chat underneath a Catalonia Pro-Independence banner on Nov. 20 in Vic, Spain. Over 5 million Catalans will be voting in Parliamentary elections on Nov. 25.

    Reuters -- Spain's wealthy but financially troubled region of Catalonia chooses a new government on Sunday in an election that could trigger a constitutional crisis over a resurgent Catalan breakaway movement.

    Opinion polls show most Catalans will vote for pro-independence parties, either from the left or right, handing their leader a mandate to hold a referendum on succession, despite strong resistance from the Spanish government.

    The secessionist threat is a major problem for Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy who is trying to show stability and fiscal responsibility in his fight to keep Spain in the euro currency zone and avoid an international bailout, despite a savage recession. Read the full story.

    Related content:

  • Clown doctors bring levity to serious situations

    Srdjan Zivulovic / Reuters

    Professional performers 'Doctor E.K.' and 'Dr. Mafalda,' members of the Red Noses clown doctors, perform in the pediatric clinic in Novo Mesto, Slovenia on Nov. 7.

    Srdjan Zivulovic / Reuters

    'Doctor Sfrckljana' performs with a doll in a clinic for infectious diseases in Ljubljana on Nov. 7.

    Since 2004 15 clown doctors, inspired by the U.S. Doctor 'Patch' Adams, visit different hospitals throughout Slovenia 2-3 times a week, using laughter to help aid the recovery of young and elderly patients suffering from serious illness or injury.

    Editor's note: Reuters made these pictures available to NBC News on Nov. 20.

    Srdjan Zivulovic / Reuters

    Members of the Red Noses clown doctors on Nov. 7.

    Srdjan Zivulovic / Reuters

    'Doctor E.K.' performs in the pediatric clinic in Novo Mesto, on Nov. 7.

    Srdjan Zivulovic / Reuters

    'Doctor Obizek Cvilka' and 'Doctor Zena' perform at a home for the elderly in Ljubljana on Nov. 19.

    Srdjan Zivulovic / Reuters

    'Doctor Mally' dances with a nurse as an elderly patient watches at a care home in Izola, on Nov. 16.

    Srdjan Zivulovic / Reuters

    'Doctor Zivalski' shows a mirror to an elderly woman as he performs at a care home in Izola, on Nov. 13.

    Srdjan Zivulovic / Reuters

    'Doctor Zen' sings to boys in the hospital for disabled youth in Stara Gora on Nov. 5.

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