Rzvo Photos of the week
Updated 6:52 p.m. ETA man upset with the Discovery Channel s environmental programming who took three people hostage at gunpoint at the company s headquarters Wednesday has been shot and killed by police, officials said.All three hostages are safe, police said.CBS News reports that the gunman has died, according to a law enforcement source. A source at the Discovery Channel building told CBS News that SWAT personnel fired the shots that killed the suspect.The gunman was identified as 43-year-old James Lee, CBS News Correspondent Wyatt Andrews reports. For several hours Lee held his hostages while police tried to learn in telephone negotiations what he really wanted. But police also had a camera on Lee, and when he drew a handgun, they moved in. Discovery Channel Suspect ShotPictures: James Lee, Hostage SuspectWho is James Lee Daniel Quinn, Muse of James LeeDiscovery HQ Hostage StandoffPolice Respond to Discovery Channel Hostage CrisisHostage Situation, Evacuation at Discovery HQPolice Negotiating with Hostage TakerLive coverage from CBS affiliate WUSA in Washington This is a scary event; it really is, Discovery spokesman David Levy
stanley cup told reporters after the hostages escaped.Lee was a man with a lo
stanley tumblers ng and quirky history of protests against the Discovery network, Andrews reports. In an anti-corporate protest two years ago, Lee was arrested while throwing cash outside Discovery s offices. He said in court he had been moved to save the planet partly by former Vice
stanley cup President Uahj This Star Is Surrounded By Swarms Of Pluto-Like Objects
After 14 months at Vesta, the Dawn spacecraft swung around for its second mission target: Ceres. After a rogue cosmic ray jumbling the best laid plans in September, the spacecraft is in its approach phase to slip into orbit around Ceres on March 6, 2015 just a half-day behind schedule. Top image: Artist concept of Dawn approaching Ceres. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech After leaving Earth, Dawn flew past Mars, spent 14 months at Vest, and is en route to Ceres. Image credit: JPL/NASA The Dawn spacecraft has a split objective: visiting the biggest and second biggest objects in the main asteroid belt. The debate on what to call Ceres and Vesta is ongoing 鈥?are they dwarf p
water bottle stanley lanet, asteroids, comets, protoplanets, or some confusing combination depending on the context ! 鈥?but their rank as the biggest objects in the asteroid belt is undisputed. Dawn launched on September 27th, 2007. Image credit: KSC/NASA Measuring in at an average diameter of 950 kilometers 590 miles , Ceres is thea monster, with Vesta a relative pint-sized 525 kilometer 326 mile average diameter. Ceres is als
stanley cup o the heftiest chunk of rock and ice in the ring, accumulating roughly 30% of the mass of the entire asteroid belt in one lumpy spheroid. Vesta is again a distant second, at 8% of the mass, leaving the remaining 60% of the asteroid belt distributed amongst literally millions of rocks. Vesta! Imag
stanley cups e credit: NASA/JPL Arriving at Vesta in 2011, the spacecraft spent just over a year photographing the rock