An Afghan man carries a bundle of balloons as he walks along a street on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, June 27, 2008.
Rio Remembrance
A man runs next to balloons placed at Copacabana beach, in Rio de Janeiro, Friday, June 27, 2008. Demonstrators released around 4,000 red balloons during an event remembering the city's victims of violence in the last 6 months.
United Front
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., right, and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., wave as they step off a plane in Manchester, N.H., Friday, June 27, 2008. Rivals turned allies, Obama and Clinton made a show of unity Friday in a hamlet named for it, Unity, N.H., in their first joint public appearance since the divisive Democratic primary race ended.
Cascades Kayak
Mark Wells, 48, left, and Scott Seelye, 35, both of Bend, Ore., glide across the glassy waters of Elk Lake during an early paddle, near the Cascade Lakes Highway in central Oregon, Thursday, June 26, 2008. Wells and Seelye, braved the brisk conditions to complete final testing on two ultra-light wooden kayak models. In the distance is South Sister, the youngest and tallest in a trio of Cascade Range volcanos.
Sow Down
Women sow paddy in a field at Sherpur village, about 35 miles north of Allahabad, India, Friday, June 27, 2008. Sowing has begun earlier than usual this year due to the early onset of the annual monsoon rains that feed the farms which provide a livelihood for more than 60 percent of India's 1.1 billion people.
Reactor Razed
The ruins of the Yongbyon nuclear complex's cooling tower are seen in Yongbyon, North Korea, Friday, June 27, 2008. North Korea destroyed the most visible symbol of its nuclear weapons program Friday, blasting apart the cooling tower at its main atomic reactor in a sign of its commitment to stop making plutonium for atomic bombs.
One-Candidate Runoff
A woman shows her ink-stained finger after voting in the country's presidential election, in Harare, Zimbabwe, Friday, June, 27, 2008. Zimbabwe's one-candidate presidential runoff got off to a slow start Friday, with the vote seen as an exercise that won't solve the country's political crisis, and may even deepen it.