ru24.pro
News in English
Сентябрь
2024

Новости за 04.09.2024

Jack Draper and Aryna Sabalenka both chase US Open titles after day eight

1newsday.com 

The US Open quarter-finals begin on Tuesday with Aryna Sabalenka hoping to continue her pursuit of a first US Open title while Taylor Fritz and Frances Tiafoe fly the flag for the United States. On Monday, Jack Draper reached his first career grand slam quarter-final with a straight-sets win in the quarter-final while big names […]

Man Utd chief executive Omar Berrada says Erik ten Hag has club’s full backing

1newsday.com 

Manchester United chief executive Omar Berrada has insisted Erik ten Hag has his and the club’s full backing and remains the right man to take the club forward. United triggered a one-year contract extension for Ten Hag in the summer, but only after considering alternatives in the wake of an eighth-placed finish in the Premier […]

NASA admits tension with Boeing over space rescue plan

Phys.org 

NASA admitted on Wednesday there was "tension" during meetings with Boeing executives about how to bring home two astronauts stranded on the International Space Station, but denied reports of shouting matches.

SDA demos laser links crucial for future SATCOM, missile tracking network

Breaking Defense 

Tournear said that the optical intersatellite link demonstration was final success in a trifecta of baseline challenges to SDA’s plan to network hundreds of military satellites in LEO, as well as to eventually to integrate commercial satellites into the mix. 

Mets Beat Threshers 4-3 in Rain-Shortened Game

OurSports Central 

CLEARWATER, Fla. - The St. Lucie Mets defeated the Clearwater Threshers 4-3 in a rain-shortened game on Wednesday evening at BayCare Ballpark.The ... - FSL St. Lucie Mets

Heavy Rain and Lightning Stalls Game in Seventh

OurSports Central 

CLEARWATER, FL - Despite a game-tying home run by Avery Owusu-Asiedu, the Clearwater Threshers (61-62, 18-39) fell 4-3 in seven innings to the St. Luc... - FSL Clearwater Threshers

The U.S. Military Leads Climate Change, the Rest of Society Should Follow

The National Interest 

When a giant heat dome hovered over the U.S. Southwest last summer, temperatures in Phoenix topped 110 degrees for fifty-five consecutive days. It was often too hot at the nearby Luke Air Force Base (AFB) for airmen to conduct training exercises. As the planet heats up, there’s more where that came from: this summer saw the hottest day ever recorded. 

Читать дальше...