
Week in Pictures
The Week in Pictures: March 31 - April 7
NBC News Clone summarizes the latest on: Week Pictures March 31 April 7 N744046 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone. This article is rewritten and presented in a simplified tone for a better reader experience.
Mudslides hit Colombia, gruesome attack in Syria, John Glenn laid to rest, March Madness wraps up and more.


John Glenn's widow, Annie, receives a folded-up American flag at his funeral on April 6, which would have marked their 74th wedding anniversary.
John Glenn, who died Dec. 8 at age 95, was laid to rest Thursday in a private burial at Arlington National Cemetery. After the public memorials for the first American to orbit the earth, this service was intended as a more personal mourning.
Annie Glenn, 97, wore a red dress and held a single red rose as she sat under a tent at the gravesite, next to the couple's two children, John David and Carolyn. She spoke with apparent warmth to the Marine who presented her the flag, and their faces nearly touched before planting a kiss on him.


Jamil Hunt shares a saddle with his six-year-old son Jamil Hunt Jr. as they prepare to ride into the arena for the start of competition at the Bill Pickett Invitational Rodeo in Memphis, Tennessee on April 1.
The Bill Pickett Rodeo is the nation's only touring black rodeo competition. The rodeo celebrates western heritage and the contributions that black cowboys and cowgirls have made to the sport of rodeo.

A Syrian child receives treatment after an alleged chemical attack at a field hospital in Saraqib, Idlib province, northern Syria on April 4. A suspected chemical attack in Khan Sheikhoun killed dozens of people, with victims showing symptoms of nerve agent exposure.

The guided-missile destroyer USS Porter (DDG 78) launches a tomahawk land attack missile in the Mediterranean Sea on April 7.
The United States blasted a Syrian air base with a barrage of cruise missiles in fiery retaliation for this week's gruesome chemical weapons attack against civilians.
It was the first direct American assault on the Syrian government and President Donald Trump's most dramatic military order since becoming president just over two months ago. The strikes also risk thrusting the U.S. deeper into an intractable conflict that his predecessor spent years trying to avoid.

A family starts to clean up after the home they had just returned to was damaged by a car bomb used by ISIS militants in the Jidedeh neighborhood of western Mosul, Iraq on March 25. Even with fighting all around them, many Mosul residents have heeded the government's requests to stay home as long they can hold out. Most are in dire need of food and water.
This image was released this week.

People protect themselves during clashes between opposition activists and riot police agents during a demonstration against Nicolas Maduro's government in Caracas on April 4.
Protesters clashed with police in Venezuela Tuesday as the opposition mobilized against moves to tighten Maduro's grip on power. Protesters hurled stones at riot police who fired tear gas as they blocked the demonstrators from advancing through central Caracas, where pro-government activists were also planning to march.

Zoologist Marta Llanes caresses baby chimpanzee Anuma II, left, while Ada hangs on to her leg, at Llanes' apartment in Havana on April 4. She has forgiven them every transgression. It's hard to stay angry at a baby chimpanzee when it clambers up your leg and into your arms and plants a kiss on your cheek in a plea for forgiveness.




A demonstrator protects himself after a tear gas canister fired by riot police crashed against his skateboard during a protest in Caracas, Venezuela on April 6.
Tens of thousands of demonstrators shut down Venezuela's capital, blocking the city's main artery to protest what they call an attempted coup by the socialist administration. It was the largest opposition demonstration the country has seen in half a year.

A woman pauses at a memorial at Technologicheskiy Institute subway station in St. Petersburg, Russia on April 5. An explosion tore through a subway train in the Russian city of St. Petersburg on Monday, killing at least 14 people, officials said.
Investigators searched for possible accomplices of a 22-year-old native of the Central Asian country of Kyrgyzstan identified as the suicide bomber in the St. Petersburg subway, as residents came to grips with the first major terrorist attack in Russia's second-largest city since the Soviet collapse.
PHOTOS: Explosion Rocks Russian Subway


A relocated rhino charges a Nepalese forestry and technical team after being released as part of a relocation project in Chitwan National Park some of 155 miles south of Kathmandu on April 3.
Conservationists captured the rare one-horned rhinoceros in Nepal as part of an attempt to increase the number of the vulnerable animals, which are prized by wildlife poachers. Five rhinos -- one male and four female -- will be released into a national park in Nepal's far west over the coming week in the hope of establishing a new breeding group.

A man wears the traditional 'Tora' outfit used during the carnival while posing for a picture at a gathering of different villages' carnival masks and characters in the small village of Casavieja, Spain on April 1. These festivals, held across central and northwestern Spain, most often coincide with festivities celebrating the advent of spring, mixing Carnival and bizarre pagan-like rituals with mock battles between good and evil.


Colombian civil defense workers bury the coffin of Jesus Diago, 33, who died rescuing his family during a mudslide caused by heavy rains, in the cemetery in Mocoa on April 4.

Nigel Williams-Goss #5 of the Gonzaga Bulldogs drives to the basket against Theo Pinson #1 of the North Carolina Tar Heels in the first half during the 2017 NCAA Men's Final Four National Championship game at University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona on April 3.
An unwatchable game turned into a beautiful night for the Tar Heels, who turned a free-throw contest into a championship they've been waiting an entire year to celebrate.
Justin Jackson delivered the go-ahead 3-point play with 1:40 left Monday and North Carolina pulled away for a 71-65 win over Gonzaga that washed away a year's worth of heartache.
It was, in North Carolina's words, a redemption tour -- filled with extra time on the practice court and the weight room, all fueled by a devastating loss in last year's title game on Kris Jenkins' 3-point dagger at the buzzer for Villanova.

