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  • Charly Triballeau / AFP - Getty Images

    Canadian veterans take part in the 70th anniversary ceremony of the Dieppe Raid on Aug. 19, in Dieppe, France, in memory of the Second World War Allied attack on the German-occupied port of Dieppe on August 19, 1942.

    Canadian veterans remember WWII Dieppe Raid

    The Raid on Dieppe, France, on August 19, 1942, was a crucial moment during World War II. Of the 4,963 Canadian soldiers who embarked from England for the operation, only 2,210 returned, and many of them never even landed in France, making the Dieppe Raid one of the most devastating and bloody chapters in Canadian military history. More than 900 Canadians were ultimately killed in action, died of wounds or died as prisoners of war.

    The Dieppe Raid holds a prominent place in Canadian military history as it helped shape the Allied landings at Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944.

    Read more from the CBC.

    Show more
  • Tungurahua volcano erupts in Ecuador

    Jaime Echeverria / EPA

    The Tungurahua volcano is seen from Juive Grande, Ecuador, early Aug. 19. The Tungurahua volcano erupted with explosions and tremblings described as volcanic activity in the range between moderate and high. Reportedly the region was put on an orange alert.

    Carlos Campana / Reuters

    Ecuador's Tungurahua volcano spews large clouds of gas and ash near Banos, about 110 miles south of Quito Aug. 19. The authorities are encouraging residents living near the volcano to evacuate due to increased activity of the volcano. The Tungurahua volcano has been in an active state since October 1999.

    Carlos Campana / Reuters

    A cow covered with ashes is seen in the skirts of the Tungurahua volcano after it began spewing large clouds of gas and ash.

    Carlos Campana / Reuters

    A house covered with ashes is seen in the skirts of the Tungurahua volcano.

  • Alabama man fights to keep wife buried in front yard

    Jay Reeves / AP

    James Davis, 73, stands over the grave of his wife, Patsy, in the front yard of the home they shared in Stevenson, Ala. The city sued to make Davis move his wife's remains from the residential tract, and Davis is asking the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals to block an order requiring him to disinter her remains.

    Davis, 73, said he never expected such a fight.

    "Good Lord, they've raised pigs in their yard, there's horses out the road here in a corral in the city limits, they've got other gravesites here all over the place," said Davis. "And there shouldn't have been a problem."

    While state health officials say family burial plots aren't uncommon in Alabama, city officials worry about the precedent set by allowing a grave on a residential lot on one of the main streets through town. They say state law gives the city some control over where people bury their loved ones and have cited concerns about long-term care, appearance, property values and the complaints of some neighbors.

    -- Reported by the Associated Press

    Read the full story

    Jay Reeves / AP

    James Davis holds a photo of his late wife, Patsy Davis.

     

  • Ramadan comes to an end as Muslims celebrate Eid al-Fitr around the world

    Diego Azubel / EPA

    A Muslim woman is seen at the female prayer hall following prayers for Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan at the Niujie Mosque in Beijing, China, Aug. 19.

    Kevin Frayer / AP

    An Indian Muslim woman prays after breaking fast on the last day of the holy month of Ramadan before the Eid holiday, at the Jama Masjid in New Delhi, India, Aug. 19.

    Mohamed Al-sayaghi / Reuters

    Men shower in a traditional Turkish bath to prepare for the Eid al-Fitr festival, in Sanaa, Yemen, Aug. 18.

    Mohamed Al-sayaghi / Reuters

    People shower in a traditional Turkish bath to prepare for the Eid al-Fitr festival, in Sanaa, Yemen, Aug. 18.

    Tsering Topgyal / AP

    An Indian Muslim woman offers prayers before breaking her Ramadan fast in New Delhi, India, Aug.18.

    Nasser Ishtayeh / AP

    A Palestinian vendor displays shoes on a car in the middle of the market during preparations for the Eid al-Fitr feast, which marks the end of the Muslim month of Ramadan, in the city of Nablus, West Bank, Aug. 18. Traditionally Muslims buy new clothes and shoes for the Eid al-Fitr, which is the culmination of the month-long period of fasting during which practicing Muslims around the world abstain from food and water from dawn to dusk.

    Majdi Mohammed / AP

    A Palestinian boy sells balloons in preparation for the Eid al-Fitr festival, on the last day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Aug. 18.

    Mast Irham / EPA

    Indonesian Muslims cross a bridge as they unboard from a traditional boat to attend Eid al-Fitr prayers at Sunda Kelapa port in Jakarta, Indonesia, Aug. 19.

    Supri / Reuters

    Muslims gather for mass prayers to celebrate Eid al-Fitr in Jakarta, Indonesia, Aug. 19.

    Dinuka Liyanawatte / Reuters

    A Muslim devotee sleeps as others pray at a mosque in Kandy, Sri Lanka, Aug. 18.

     

  • Christi Barli / AFP - Getty Images

    Endurance swimmer Diana Nyad jumps into the water in Havana, Cuba, Aug. 18, to start a more-than-100-mile trip across the Florida Straits to the Florida Keys. Nyad, who turns 63 on August 22, set off on her fourth attempt to swim the treacherous waters from Cuba to Florida without a shark cage.

    Nyad back in water in Cuba-Florida record swim try

    In the summer of 2010, unfavorable weather kept her from even setting out. Last year, first a debilitating asthma attack and then painful, dangerous jellyfish stings forced her from the water on two separate attempts.

    This time Nyad is banking on a custom-made swimsuit to protect her from the jellyfish. It covers her head-to-toe with a pantyhose face and holes only for the eyes, nose and mouth.

    -- Reported by the Associated Press

    Read the full story.

    See more PhotoBlog entries from Diana Nyad's attempts to swim from Cuba to Florida.

  • Sale of Niger nomad's last camel is sign of hunger

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Helpers prepare just-purchased camels for their new owners to take with them at the livestock market in the desert village of Sakabal, Niger. Eighty percent of Niger's people and 100 percent of the landlocked nation's rural population depend on livestock, including camel, cows, sheep and goats, for some part of their income. For generations, nomads have lived in a precarious equilibrium with the sky above them. When the first rains come, they head north toward the Sahara desert, where the grass is said to be saltier, packed with minerals. They time their movements according to the clouds, waiting for the second major downpour, before making a U-turn to head back to the greener south. If they miscalculate, they can end up stranded. As the grass turns yellow, their animals become too weak to walk.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    A Tuareg man smiles as his camel rises from lying down at the livestock market in the desert village of Sakabal, Niger.

    In a part of the world where the worth of a man is measured by his animals, Tuareg nomad Soumaila Wantala has come to this market to do the unthinkable: Sell his last camel.

    He crouches in the shade of a thorn tree as traders haggle over the 4-year-old male animal, Yedi. When the sale is complete, Yedi rears his enormous neck and lets out a cry, like the deep, subterranean call of a whale. It takes three men to drag the camel out of the arena, as if he understands the fate that has just befallen his master.

    -- Reported by the Associated Press

    Read the full story.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Herdsmen gather at the livestock market.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Tuareg nomads arrive at the market to trade livestock in Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    A Tuareg nomad carrying his traditional sword has a hook fit to his camel at the market in Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    A Peul merchant relaxes on his stick by the door of a house while attending the livestock market in Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Men walk through the grain market in the desert village of Sakabal, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Tuareg nomads carrying their traditional swords and good luck amulets around their neck, shop for fabric and other goods while attending the livestock market in Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    A Nigerian taxman records the sale of a camel at the market in Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    A rare vehicle carries villagers back to Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    A Tuareg nomad, carrying his traditional sword, walks past a handler pulling just-purchased sheep to their new owner at the livestock market in Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Sold goats are loaded on the rooftop of a truck in the desert village of Sakabal, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    A herdsman's family heats up water for dinner in the fields near Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    A young herdsman walks through his cattle outside Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Birds fly over grazing cows in the green sandy plains near Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Young herdsmen show their henna stained hands, sign of a recent wedding celebration, as they gather at the livestock market in the desert village of Sakabal, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    A Tuareg nomad, carrying his traditional sword, rides his camel as he leaves the livestock market in Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Livestock merchants leave Bermo, Niger.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    In this picture taken Monday, July 16, 2012, nomads stop for the night between Dakoro and Bermo, Niger.

     

  • Mars rover has summit in its sights

    NASA / JPL-Caltech / Doug Ellison

    This view of the Curiosity rover's surroundings on Mars was assembled from black-and-white photos sent back by the navigation camera on Sol 2 and Sol 12 of the mission. Doug Ellison of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory filled out the Martian sky artificially, using the lighting values from the pictures that were acquired.


    NASA's Curiosity rover has sent back its sharpest image of the 3-mile-high (5-kilometer-high) mountain it will climb on Mars.

    The mountain, known as Mount Sharp or Aeolis Mons, towers right in front of the rover in the middle of 96-mile-wide Gale Crater, where Curiosity landed two weeks ago. The shadow of the rover's mast is visible in the picture, which incorporates fresh imagery from the six-wheeled robot's navigation camera system. The high country of the crater's rim rises to the left and the right of the mountain.

    Black-and-white frames showing Mount Sharp's summit in all its glory were received overnight. Doug Ellison, a visualization producer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, added the mountain vista to a 360-degree panorama of the rover's surroundings, and filled in the rest of the sky based on the lighting data he had at hand.


    The earlier Navcam panorama showed the crater's towering rim, but did not take in the upper reaches of the mountainside. A separate color panorama, provided by the rover's Mastcam system, is being filled out but does not yet include pictures of Mount Sharp's peak.

    The main objective of Curiosity's two-year, $2.5 billion primary mission is to make its way to Mount Sharp and document billions of years of the Red Planet's geological history by analyzing the different layers of rock along the mountainside. Studying the geology and chemistry of Mount Sharp's various strata could tell scientists how habitable the planet was in earlier epochs, and how Mars has changed since then.

    Project scientist John Grotzinger said on Friday that Curiosity would study its relatively nearby surroundings during the first few months of the mission, then start out in earnest for Mount Sharp by the end of the calendar year. It may take one Earth year for Curiosity to get to the foot of the mountain, and the trek to the higher elevations may well require extending the mission beyond its primary phase.

    Grotzinger and his colleagues are hoping that extension will happen: The primary missions for Curiosity's older, smaller siblings — NASA's Spirit and Opportunity rovers — were set to last 90 days, but both of those solar-powered rovers lasted years longer. Opportunity is still at work, more than eight and a half years after its landing on Mars. The 1-ton, car-sized Curiosity is a much more capable rover, and it has a nuclear power source that could continue to generate electricity for decades.

    Mount Sharp is the name commonly used by the Curiosity team, to honor the late Caltech geologist Robert Sharp, but the mountain's formal name is Aeolis Mons, according to the International Astronomical Union. For extra perspective on the mountain, check out this 3-D view produced by Ellison, as well as a newly released picture of Mount Sharp's central mound, taken from above by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The viewing angle for the orbital image is 45 degrees from the side, as if it were being seen from an airplane window.

    NASA / JPL-Caltech / Doug Ellison

    Doug Ellison of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory assembled this stereo view of the Curiosity rover's surroundings on Mars using imagery from two of the imagers that are part of the rover's navigation camera system. Red-blue glasses are required to get the stereo effect.

    NASA / JPL-Caltech / Univ. of Ariz.

    A long strip of imagery from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter shows the central mound of Mount Sharp, as well as the sand dunes surrounding the mountain. The colors have been stretched to emphasize differences in surface composition. (That means the sand dunes are not really blue.) Although this image was acquired after the Curiosity's landing, the viewing angle is such that none of the spacecraft's hardware is visible in this image.

    More about Mars:


    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

  • Drug dealers say no to crack in Rio

    Felipe Dana / AP

    A man smokes crack in the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Aug. 7. Some drug bosses say they have stopped selling crack because it destabilizes their communities, making it harder to control areas long abandoned by the government. City authorities take credit for the change, arguing that drug gangs are trying to create a distraction and make police back off their offensive to take back the slums.

    Business was brisk in the Mandela shantytown on a recent night. In the glow of a weak light bulb, customers pawed through packets of powdered cocaine and marijuana priced at $5, $10, $25. Teenage boys with semiautomatic weapons took in money and made change while flirting with girls in belly-baring tops lounging nearby.

    Next to them, a gaggle of kids jumped on a trampoline, oblivious to the guns and drug-running that are part of everyday life in this and hundreds of other slums, known as favelas, across this metropolitan area of 12 million people. Conspicuously absent from the scene was crack, the most addictive and destructive drug in the triad that fuels Rio's lucrative narcotics trade.

    -- Reported by the Associated Press

    Read the full story.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Traffickers and users gather at a drug selling point in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Traffickers sell drugs in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    People gather in an area known as "Crackland" inside the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    A trafficker test fires a riffle in the Mandela slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Traffickers sell drugs in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    A trafficker stands at a drug selling point that stopped selling crack in the Mandela slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    A masked and armed trafficker at a drug selling point that no longer sells crack in the Mandela slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Crack users gather under a bridge in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    A crack user leaves a crack house near the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

     

  • Russia's Pussy Riot jailed for two years, sparking worldwide protests

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Supporters of Russian punk-rock group Pussy Riot rally in Times Square on Friday.

    Michelle Siu / AP

    A supporter of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot is reflected off a wall during a protest outside the Russian consulate in Toronto on Friday.

    Reuters reports: Three women from the Russian punk band Pussy Riot were sentenced to two years in jail on Friday for staging a protest against President Vladimir Putin in a church, a ruling supporters described as his "personal revenge".

    The group's backers burst into chants of "Shame" outside the Moscow courthouse and said the case showed Putin was cracking down on dissent in his new six-year term as president. Dozens were detained by police when scuffles broke out. Read the full story.

    Sergei Karpukhin / Reuters

    Police detain a supporter of the female punk band "Pussy Riot" members for violation of law and order outside a court building in Moscow on Friday.

    Critics say the arrest was Putin's personal revenge, raising questions about justice in Russia. NBC's Duncan Golestani reports.

     

  • Home run celebration, Little League World Series style

    Matt Slocum / AP

    Nuevo Laredo, Mexico players celebrate after a home run by Ramon Ballina as Vancouver, British Columbia's Ataru Yamaguchi, left, looks away in the fourth inning of a pool play baseball game against  at the Little League World Series, Friday, Aug. 17, 2012, in South Williamsport, Pa. Canada won 13-9.

     

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  • Racy photo may get Michael Phelps in hot water

    Louis Vuitton

    This advertising image of Michael Phelps, shot by famed photographer Annie Leibovitz, leaked out early in violation of an Olympic regulation known as Rule 40.

    The mysterious release of a photo of Michael Phelps in a bathtub, shot for a Louis Vuitton ad campaign, threatens to cause a splash of a different kind. Everyone involved in creating the photo denies having released it early, perhaps because it may put Phelps in hot water with the International Olympic Committee.

    A new IOC regulation, called Rule 40, prohibits athletes from appearing in ads for non-Olympic sponsors from July 18 to Aug. 15. According to the IOC’s 19 page explainer, Rule 40 is designed to prevent ambush marketing, defined as non-Olympic sponsors trying to associate themselves with the Olympic brand.

    Yet two photos of the Olympic swimmer, shot by the photographer Annie Leibovitz, began circulating during the time period in which athletes are prohibited from appearing in advertisements. A website in Barcelona called elperiodico.com printed the bathtub photo on Aug. 7 and announced that Phelps was the new face of Louis Vuitton. Then the Daily Mail in Britain followed up on Monday, Aug. 13, with two photos and the headline “Let the fashion endorsements begin, Michael Phelps announced as latest face of Louis Vuitton core values campaign.”

    The second photo shows Phelps in a three-piece suit sitting on a couch next to Larisa Latynina of Russia, 77, who is the previous holder of the title “most-decorated Olympic athlete.” In both photos, there is a strategically placed Louis Vuitton bag.

    A quick Google search shows the photos went viral and appeared on dozens if not hundreds of websites on Aug. 13 and 14.

    An agent for Leibovitz confirmed to CNBC that she shot the photos, and that a Louis Vuitton campaign with Phelps was supposed to begin sometime this week.

    The release of these photos before Aug. 16 raises the thorny question of whether the world’s most decorated athlete is in violation of rule with sanctions that could include fines and the stripping of medals.

    Thus far, answers are not forthcoming from either the U.S. Olympic Committee, the International Olympic Committee or the London Olympic Committee. None of the organizations responded to attempts for comment. In fairness, many people involved in the Olympics have gone on vacation or are still traveling back from London.

    Louis Vuitton representatives will say only that they did not release the photos. Leibovitz’s press agent says her office did not release the photos. Yet, the Daily Mail contained a quote from a Vuitton representative about the campaign. (That page has since been removed from the newspaper’s website.)

    Previously: Michael Phelps hops in the tub with Louis Vuitton

    If the photos were leaked intentionally, “it is probably a violation of Rule 40,” said Sekou Campbell, an intellectual property attorney at Fox Rothschild, who has written about Rule 40.

    Just because the photos were part of a news story and not an official advertisement doesn’t mean they can’t violate the regulation. The rule was designed expressly to combat forms of marketing that aren’t official advertisements, Campbell said.

    “That’s the point of ambush marketing,” he said. “There’s no formal ad, but they somehow generate coverage.”

    The imposition of Rule 40 for London 2012 angered many athletes because it prevented them from monetizing their brand at the precise moment when it was most valuable. Most Olympic athletes are not household names like Phelps and are far less likely to garner lucrative sponsorship deals.

    The U.S. Track and Field team began a Twitter campaign to end the regulation, with two hash tags: #rule40 & #wedemandchange. Gold medalist Dawn Harper tweeted out two photos mocking Rule 40. One was a self-portrait with a white tape covering her mouth; the words “rule 40” written on the tape. Olympic runner Nick Symmonds, who specializes in the 800m, was especially vociferous on Twitter. In a conversation with me Wednesday, he expressed frustration that he was unable to thank his sponsors, Nike and the Orgeon Track Club, during the Olympics. “It’s about being able to give them a return on their investment.”

    His agent Chris Layne told CNBC if the IOC is going to continue with Rule 40, the athletes should be compensated monetarily for their participation in the Games. An example he cites is the Track and Field World Championships, where the top performers receive prize money. Layne said he believes Rule 40 emanates from antiquated thinking about the Games—that the athletes are amateurs but not professionals. But “the Olympics have changed,” and now, “It is truly a professional, commercial event from start to finish.”

    Neither he, nor his client Symmonds, thinks Phelps should be sanctioned for the photos because it is unlikely that Phelps himself released them. Layne points out that, if anything, the situation highlights the difficulties of enforcement. “If this photo shoot were prior to Rule 40, how you can enforce that?”

    Sanctions can range from removal of accreditation (not relevant once an athlete is finished competing), financial penalties, disqualification from the games, and according to the Olympic charter “a competitor or a team may lose the benefit of any ranking obtained in relation to other events at the Olympic Games at which he or it was disqualified or excluded; in such case the medals and diplomas won by him or it shall be returned to the IOC.”

    Campbell said, “I imagine there is a negotiation going on behind closed doors to settle this without much fanfare.”

    Sports law attorney Joe Baghat thinks the Olympic Committee will do nothing to Phelps because “it would be a public relations nightmare to come down on him because he is so well loved.”

    Peter Carlisle, Phelps' longtime agent, told The Associated Press on Friday there's no issue with the IOC because Phelps did not authorize use of the pictures. In fact, Carlisle says there are dozens of unauthorized uses involving most of the top athletes during any Olympics. 

    More from CNBC:

    10 Most Marketable Summer Olympians

    Top Athletes and Their Endorsements

    Meb Keflezighi Runs His Way Into a Perfect Sponsor

    Missy Franklin: Soon to Be the ‘Female Michael Phelps’

  • Lighter moment for Syrian rebels during break in fighting in Aleppo

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    Free Syrian Army fighters dress a mannequin to looks like a fighter during clashes in the Salaheddine neighborhood of central Aleppo on Aug. 17.

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    Free Syrian Army fighters take a break from the clashes in the Salaheddine neighborhood of central Aleppo on Aug. 17.

    After all the recent gruesome images of violence, fighting and death coming out of Syria, it is nice seeing a lighter moment as rebels enjoy a laugh dressing up a mannequin during a break in fighting.

    Related links:

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    After months of protests and violent crackdowns, a look back at the violence that has overtaken the country.

     

  • San Salvador combats dengue fever

    Luis Romero / AP

    A San Salvador government worker fumigates houses in the northern area of the capital city, to eliminate mosquitos, transmitters of the dengue disease in San Salvador, El Salvador, Aug. 17, 2012.

    From the Pan American Health Organization website:

    In Key West, there's talk of releasing genetically-modified mosquitoes to fight dengue fever, a mosquito-borne illness. WFLA's Brooks Garner reports.

    In recent months dengue has gotten worse in El Salvador, a trend that has turned combating the disease into a national priority. According to a World Health Organization Representative in El Salvador, by June 15, the number of clinical cases of Dengue reached 1301.Children between the ages of 5 and 9 years are most affected.

    In light of this situation, the President of El Salvador has declared a state of emergency in the departments of San Salvador, Libertad, Santa Ana, and Cabañas, and a yellow alert in the rest of the country. Activities aimed at control include day and night sprayings, which are being intensified by army personnel, while brigades from schools, universities and communities help with the mechanical destruction of larval breeding sites. Additional activities have focused on the dissemination of information, increased communication, and face to face education, with the participation of radio and television networks.

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  • Wounded warriors show grit, determination on journey to recovery

    John Moore / Getty Images

    Sgt. JD Williams, 25, and a triple amputee, flowboards on a wave machine at the Center for the Intrepid on Aug. 7. The wave therapy is designed to improve balance, coordination and strength for injured soldiers, most of whom have lost limbs in combat. Williams lost his legs and right arm in October 2010 when he stepped on an improvised explosive device while his unit was on a foot patrol in the Arghandab Valley of southern Afghanistan.

    Lieutenant Colonel Donald Gajewski swears he has the best job in the military.

    As an orthopedic surgeon and chief of the Center for the Intrepid at the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas, Dr. Gajewski oversees the care of soldiers who return from combat with the most severe wounds.

    The center, which opened in 2007, is one of three military facilities in the country for amputees, and it also rehabilitates soldiers with serious burns and injured limbs that were not amputated. More than 1,000 service members have been treated at the Center for the Intrepid in the past five years, many of them for lost limbs.


    The joy in Gajewski's work comes from watching these soldiers confront the reality of their injuries with the same drive and determination that characterized their military service.

    Sgt. JD Williams, 25, (above) lost his legs and right arm in October 2010 when he stepped on an improvised explosive device while his unit was on foot patrol in the Arghandab Valley of southern Afghanistan. Gajewski calls Williams a "superstar" whose nearly two-year-long stay at the center has been defined by his leadership.

    "The inspiring thing about JD," Gajewski says, "is that he comes in here and he knows that there are other (amputees) that will look up to him."

    One of Williams' goals was to hunt by himself again. Now, Williams not only dresses deer in the field by himself, but he recently took other triple amputees into the woods too. He also has taken up bow hunting.

    There is grief and pain, though, as soldiers work to meet their ambitious goals.

    Gajewski says they often arrive at Brooke Army Medical Center devastated after three or four days of being evacuated from the front lines to the U.S. hospital. They've spent the time thinking: "My military career is over, my girlfriend is going to leave me, I won’t be able to fly-fish with my dad," Gajewski says.

    John Moore / Getty Images

    A U.S. Army soldier and leg amputee scales a two-story climbing wall at the Center for the Intrepid on Aug. 7.

    John Moore / Getty Images

    At the Center for the Intrepid at the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas, soldiers confront the reality of their injuries with the same drive and determination that characterized their military service.

    The center tries to show patients a different future by matching them with a soldier in rehabilitation, who might walk through the door on two prosthetic legs. "That’s when it clicks," Gajewski says. 

    A soldier with a single below-the-knee amputation might stay at the center for six months, receiving a prosthetic and physical and occupational therapy. The timeline lengthens with the severity and number of amputations; for those who lost both legs above the knee, a stay at the center might last as long as two years.

    Among the amputees treated at the center, 17 percent have returned to active duty once recovered, and some eventually deploy again, often in support roles. A handful have even returned to combat. Of the 49,000 Iraq and Afghanistan casualties, more than 1,400 have been amputees. 

    "These guys have a lifetime of adversity in front of them, but from what they show us," Gajewski says, "I think they’re going to do pretty well."

    Rebecca Ruiz is a reporter at NBC News. Follow her on Twitter here.

    John Moore / Getty Images

    Certified prosthetist Robert Kuenzi holds a life-like sleeve for a prosthetic arm at the Center for the Intrepid on Aug. 7. Artists paint the rubber covers, complete with custom tattoos, which slide over prosthetic arms and legs made at the center for military amputees.

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  • Sloth bear cub plays with family like a dog

     

    Biswaranjan Rout / AP

    One-and-a-half-year-old sloth bear Buddu plays with Juli Kisan outside her family's home in Lakhapada, India.

    Is there anything better on a Friday than adorable photos of a sloth bear acting like a dog? We don't think so!

    Check out these pictures of the playful Buddu below.

    Biswaranjan Rout / AP

    Buddu wandered into the village following a herd of goats, and ended up staying with the Kisan family.

    Biswaranjan Rout / AP

    If you're concerned about Buddu's fate, worry no more. The cub, seen here getting his hair combed by Juli, was taken from the family by wildlife officials Friday.

    Biswaranjan Rout / AP

    Faithful companion: Ghasiram Kisan rests next to the young sloth bear.

    More:

     

  • South African women protest police shooting of striking miners

    Themba Hadebe / AP

    An unidentified woman cries as women protest against the police near the scene of the shooting of miners on Thursday at the Lonmin mine near Rustenburg, South Africa, on Aug. 17. Police chief Mangwashi Victoria Phiyega says 34 miners died and another 78 were wounded when police opened fire on strikers in one of the worst police shootings in South Africa since apartheid.

    Denis Farrell / AP

    An unidentified woman cries on Aug. 17, as she protests against the police opening fire Thursday and killing and injuring striking mine workers at the Lonmin Platinum Mine near Rustenburg, South Africa.

    Reuters -- MARIKANA, South Africa -- The police killing of 34 striking platinum miners in the bloodiest security operation since the end of white rule cut to the quick of South Africa's psyche on Friday, with searching questions asked of its post-apartheid soul.

    Newspaper headlines screamed "Bloodbath", "Killing Field" and "Mine Slaughter", with graphic photographs of heavily armed white and black police officers walking casually past the bloodied corpses of black men lying crumpled in the dust.

    The images, along with Reuters television footage of a phalanx of officers opening up with automatic weapons on a small group of men in blankets and t-shirts, rekindled uncomfortable memories of South Africa's racist past.

    Police chief Riah Phiyega confirmed 34 dead and 78 injured after officers moved in against 3,000 striking drill operators armed with machetes and sticks and massed on a rocky outcrop at the mine, 100 km (60 miles) northwest of Johannesburg.

    Continue reading: Mine "bloodbath" shocks post-apartheid South Africa

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    Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

    Policemen look on as women carrying placards chant slogans in protest against the killing of miners by South African police on Thursday, outside a South African mine in Rustenburg, 62 miles northwest of Johannesburg, on Aug. 17. South African Police were forced to open fire to protect themselves from charging armed protesters at the Marikana mine, and 34 of the protesters were killed, Police Commissioner Riah Phiyega said on Friday. She told a news conference that 78 people were injured and 259 arrested in Thursday's violence.

    After a violent pay dispute left 34 dead and 78 injured in South Africa, Police say they were "forced to use maximum force to defend themselves." ITN's Neil Connery reports.

     

  • Razing dozens of trees to save property, as Washington wildfire nears

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    Felled in hopes of saving the property, a massive tree lies on the ground near the Huntley Lodge in Cle Elum, Wash., Thursday, Aug. 16. The owners of the lodge, Greg and Christi Huntley, decided to take the trees down to keep them from acting as fuel for the Taylor Bridge fire that was threatening their property.

    "We've probably cut down a hundred trees," said Greg Huntley as he looked off the deck of one of the cabins that make up Huntley Lodge and Retreat. Huntley and his wife, Christi, bought the vacation getaway five years ago. "We just want to be as ready as we can," said Huntley about preparing for the approach of the Taylor Bridge Fire, a 23,000 acre wildfire in central Washington that has already claimed about 60 homes.

    As fire fighting helicopters roared overhead, the Huntleys and some hired help were setting up a 15,000 gallon above-ground pool, one of two they planned to fill with water from a small pond on their property below. They wanted as much water as possible on hand to douse everything before the fire, burning just up the hill, reached their property. But water being the hot commodity it is in an event like this, the helicopters, too, were drawing from the pond, coming in low and dipping their huge red buckets into the shallow water, taking advantage of the water's close proximity to the flames. Christi stopped working long enough to take pictures of the helicopters at work with her iPad. "This is the only time I've actually been scared," she said.

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    The Huntleys and employees of Huntley Lodge pitch in to assemble a 15,000 gallon above-ground pool at the lodge in Cle Elum, Wash., Thursday, Aug. 16, 2012. They planned to fill the pool and use the water in defense of the Taylor Bridge Fire, a 23,000 acre wildfire in central Washington.

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    As a last-ditch effort, a sprinkler is placed on the roof of one of the cabins at Huntley Lodge in Cle Elum, Wash. The sprinkler is intended to wet the roof as a last line of defense agains the Taylor Bridge Fire.

    The owner of a successful auto repair business in Seattle, Greg, sprung into action when he heard about the fire. "We're trying to be proactive rather than reactive," he said.  He bought pools, chain saws, hoses and pumps.  One pump is strong enough to necessitate the use of a two-inch fire hose. "It does huge volumes with lots of pressure so I can spray the trees," he said.  He even placed a sprinkler on the roof of each building. "That's the last thing we do before we leave, is turn on all the sprinklers," he said. Then he added, "I"m gonna stay here until they force me off the property."

    Even with all the activity, the helicopters, the pools, the sprinklers and the frenetic feel of getting ready for a fire, the jagged stumps of trees really stand out. Scores of trees were cut and dragged far enough away from the structures so as not to add additional fuel to the fire. Though, many of the biggest ones were still standing. "I hate to drop the trees directly around the lodge because those are 150 to 200-year-old trees," Greg said. "It would be a long time before they'd be back again."

    The Huntleys bought the lodge and its eight cabins five years ago to rent out to wedding parties and weekenders. At the time, the structures were in a state of neglect. "We've got over a million dollars invested in it, and that's after I bought the property," Greg said. "We absolutely love this place. We put our heart and soul into it over the last five years."

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    Blazes in multiple states threaten houses and cause evacuations.

  • Good Samaritans rescue two from burning car in Mississippi

    Gerald Herbert / AP

    Passers-by rescue a woman pinned in a burning car on Interstate 10 in Hancock County, Miss., Thursday, Aug. 16.

    Gerald Herbert / AP

    Passers-by rescue a woman pinned in a burning car on Interstate 10 in Hancock County, Miss., Thursday, Aug. 16.

    Gerald Herbert / AP

    Passers-by hold a woman after they rescued her from being pinned in a burning car on Interstate 10 in Hancock County, Miss., Thursday, Aug. 16.

    Gerald Herbert / AP

    A firefighter comforts a handicapped girl who was rescued from a burning car, as others stabilize the driver in the background, after passers-by rescued the driver pinned in a burning car on Interstate 10 in Hancock County, Miss., Thursday, Aug. 16.

    Two people were rescued by passers-by from a burning car in Mississippi following an accident on Thursday and AP photographer Gerald Herbert was there to capture it.  The fire was extinguished by the hose of a cement mixer and fire extinguishers from nearby truckers. The driver was then extracted from the wreckage by civilians as rescue personnel arrived.  She and her handicapped sister, who was removed from the wreckage earlier, were airlifted from the scene.  

    "We were all sure she was going to perish. The sounds of her screams and the sight of the fire inching closer to her, that was the most horrible and helpless feeling I've ever felt in my life," Herbert told the AP.

    Full story

    Moments after an SUV careened out of control, struck a tree and caught fire on a Mississippi highway median strip, dozens of fellow motorists rushed to help, saving the lives of two women.

  • Prayers on the last Friday of Ramadan

    Munir Uz Zaman / AFP - Getty Images

    Bangladeshi Muslims offer prayers on the last Friday of Ramadan at the National Mosque of Bangladesh, Baitul Mukarram in Dhaka on Aug. 17, 2012 ahead of the Eid al-Fitr festival.

    Andrew Biraj / Reuters

    A Muslim worshipper cries as he prays in front of the national mosque on the last Friday of the holy month of Ramadan in Dhaka, Bangladesh Aug.17.

    Aamir Qureshi / AFP - Getty Images

    Pakistani Muslims offer Jummat-ul-Vida, last Friday prayers during the holy month of Ramadan at the grand Faisal Mosque in Islamabad on Aug. 17.

    Abir Sultan / EPA

    Israeli border police officers on duty stand by as female Palestinian worshippers cross from the Kalandia checkpoint outside Ramallah into Jerusalem to attend the last Friday prayer of Ramadan in the Al-Aqsa Mosque, Aug. 17.

    Muslim devotees took part in the last Friday prayers ahead of the Eid al-Fitr festival marking the end of the month of Ramadan. The three-day festival, which begins after the sighting of a new crescent moon, marks the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, during which devout Muslims abstain from food, drink, smoking and sex from dawn to dusk. 

    Millions make a crowded (sometimes dangerous) journey home for Eid al-Fitr

    More photos from Ramadan on PhotoBlog

  • Pussy Riot readies for verdict in Moscow court

    Natalia Kolesnikova / AFP - Getty Images

    Members of the all-girl punk band "Pussy Riot" (left to right)Yekaterina Samutsevich, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alyokhina, are escorted by policewomen in Moscow on Agust 17.

    Sergey Ponomarev / AP

    Feminist punk group Pussy Riot members, from left, Yekaterina Samutsevich, Maria Alekhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova sit in a glass cage at a court room in Moscow, Russia on Friday, Aug 17.

    Update: 10:03 am ET: The three band members were found guilty and sentenced to two years in prison

    Today a Moscow court will pass judgement on the three women from a punk band called, Pussy Riot, who captured the world's attention by defying the Russian authorities and ridiculing President Vladimir Putin in a church. Pussy Riot release rallies have stretched from Sydney to New York as a growing list of celebrities joined ex-Beatle Paul McCartney and pop icon Madonna in a campaign directed against Putin's crackdown on dissent. The women, two of whom have young children, are charged with hooliganism connected to religious hatred but the case is widely seen as a warning that authorities will only tolerate opposition under tightly controlled conditions. T-shirt on right worn by Tolokonnikova is Spanish and translates to "They shall not pass", a slogan often used to express determination to defend a position against an enemy.

    Full story.

    Three members of the Russian feminist punk band Pussy Riot remain in jail after a performance in protest of Vladimir Putin in a Moscow cathedral. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

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