american john isner and nicolas mahut played and played and played and played for ten hours straight at wimbledon. by the way, that s more than enough time to fly from new york to london. still in a little more than an hour from now, isner and mahut will play again to finally decide the winner of the longest match in wimbledon history. play was suspended for a second day in a row yesterday when darkness fell. the fifth and final match stands tied, 59-59. on center court at the all england club, queen elizabeth ii took her seat in the royal box. it was her majesty s first visit to wimbledon in 33 years. she was greeted by a lineup of past wimbledon champs including serena williams, billy jean
center court where most of the high-frofile matches are carried out. it s court number 18 ands as you can see, as i was saying before, look at the crowds of people that have crowded over here just to get one glimpse of this particular match and the players because, of course, they re becoming celebrities here in britain. and joe mcenroe saying good thing, though, the queen is at center court and not on court 18 because the first time in 33 years and the players would have to bow to her and he s questioning whether they would be able to get up again. thank you. and there are some things that are considered news in this world but around this time of the morning there are some stories that make us say no way! a glass in california is getting worldwide attention for discovering something out of this world. the students at evergreen middle school found a cave on mars. they pinpointed a hole by looking at images taken by
inside information about the tom cruise/katie holmes divorce. what attorneys are apparently discussing behind closed doors and how it impacts their young daughter suri. maybe a good thing it will play out at the negotiating table instead of court. you have a child involved. you don t want that mess coming out in court. it s good maybe they will handle it quietly. before all of that, the computer threat that could cause a monday morning meltdown. unsuspecting folks around the country and around the world in fact who have infected computers might find themselves unable to get online today. abc s matt gutman explains this problem and how time has run out for the fbi s solution. reporter: the doomsday drum beat sounds an awful lot like the y-2-k panic. y-2-k failed to boot up. but this virus, called simply