The major storm moving east tonight. Whiteout conditions, heavy rain. Rob marciano on when this hits major travel hubs, new york, philadelphia and boston. The chilling audio tonight. Never heard before. In the case of chris watts, the father and husband who killed his wife and two girls. The interview with interrogators. What his daughter said to him. Just in tonight, the alarming images. The officer trying to stop this driver. The car reported stolen. Taking a dangerous turn. The major headline tonight on gas prices. Goodbye to 2 a gallon . And the baseball star who just revealed his very personal battle. Good evening. And its great to have you with us here on a thursday night. And we begin tonight with the breaking news. That urgent manhunt for the suspect who shot and killed a deputy, working with u. S. Marshals. That suspect was surrounded and weve just learned moments ago, hes now under arrest. He was taken into custody a short time ago. This all began in rockford, illinois. Dozen
Women in Space: The Sky s the Limit—or Is It? stuyspec.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from stuyspec.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
April 5th, 2021, 4:15PM / BY Emily A. Margolis
Christina Koch (left) poses for a portrait with Jessica Meir while preparing for their first spacewalk together. (Image courtesy of NASA)
Much has changed since the first American spaceflight in 1961: NASA has explored new places with new programs, new people, and new technologies. Yet some of the language popularly used to describe these activities has not kept pace with the evolution of America’s space program. Specifically, the adjectives “manned” and “unmanned,” early NASA mission classifications that designated the participation or absence of astronauts (at first, only men), persist in writing and discussions of spaceflight today. What’s the problem with using this outdated terminology?