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16.03.2018, 09:39 - kciksookk - Rank 6 - 563 Posts
In the Telegraph's 5x5 briefing for today,cheap jordan shoes, Monday 10 July, correspondents from around the newsroom report on a day of challenges for Theresa May, a new high court hearing for Charlie Gard's parents and a great day for the Brits at Wimbledon.
Five reporters, five stories,cheap retro jordans, five minutes. Listen to the day's essential stories from the Telegraph newsroom - everything you need to know, every day from 5pm.?



"No. We wouldn't have taken very much notice at all,cheap authentic jordans,http://users.atw.hu/finter-clan/index.php?site=forum_topic&topic=15866cheapjordanshoesfreeshipping.com/bolg. It really brings home that we have a UK astronaut going.
"Fantastic to have Italian astronauts and French ones and Israeli ones and American ones and all that but we have got our astronaut there and just the interest, the way that he has engaged with children and the press and the public to highlight the benefits of space exploration and living and working in space is immense."
• Tim Peake: 15 amazing ...ternational Space Station
Two of the four rockets sent up to the International Space Station this year from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, have failed, one exploding shortly after launch and the other burning up on re-entry.
But Major Peake's father, Nigel, said he was more nervous about his...s journey home on the M27 than his historic mission in space.

Prof Grady,Kicksokok.com, who was famously captured on TV celebrating euphorically last year when the robot probe Philae made history by landing on a comet, admitted that there were "always dangers" with space travel, noting that he would be sitting on top of a rocket full of explosives.
But she said blasting into space was actually less dangerous than sitting on an aeroplane, on top of "a whole load" of aviation fuel.
"On an aeroplane you are not encased with all the same safety stuff that there is on one of these Soyuz launch vehicles," she added.
"There is risk in whatever you do and Tim is trained for that risk and he's trained for this job."
Major Peake is hoping the mission, called Principia, will help catapult Britain to the centre of space research.
He has dedicated a huge amount of time to working with schoolchildren over the last two years and their input and involvment will play an integral role in the mission.
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/03524/peake-4_suit_3524332b.jpgMajor Tim Peake Photo: Victor Zelentsov Ten schools have been shortlisted to make contact with Major Peake via amateur radio during a ten minute window when the space station is flying over the UK.
However, they will not know which have been selected until much nearer the time due to location and timings.
Some of the software he will be using was designed by children. Two Astro Pi flight units, each one containing a Raspberry Pi, will be used to run experiments and applications designed by UK school students as part of the Astro Pi competition which ran earlier this year.



• When and what time doe...ernational Space Station?
His mission patch was also designed by a 13-year-old after a Blue Peter challenge received more than 3,000 entries.
The winning entry was designed by Troy, from Manchester, who said: "Principia refers to Isaac Newton’s principal laws of gravity and motion so I drew an apple because that is how he discovered gravity."
Heston Blumenthal has worked on some specially designed space food created with the help of British schoolchildren, who suggested a "rocket lolly" consisting of a three course meal of tomato soup, curry and an Eton mess.
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/03509/Heston-FatDuck-Mel_3509938b.jpgHeston Blumenthal at his pop-up Fat Duck restaurant in Melbourne this summer Photo: Rex Features Major Peake,http://leonardo.zsme.pl/forum/viewthread.php?thread_id=0cheapjordanshoesfreeshipping.com/bolg, a married father-of-two from Chichester, is Britain’s first official astronaut and the first to visit the ISS, where he will be joined by Nasa astronaut Tim Kopra and Russian commander Yuri Malenchenko.
During his time aboard the space station,http://siemprelucenacf.es/index.php/component/user/?option=com_content&view=article&id=115cheapjordanshoesfreeshipping.com/bolg, he will participate in 265 experiments, including growing blood vessels and protein crystals and melting metal alloys in a weightless environment, and observe the effects of microgravity on his own body.

He will also contribute to the day-to-day maintenance of the space station's life support,cheap jordans online, power and communications systems. This could involve taking space walks, as well as more down-to-Earth activities such as fixing the 15-year-old suction toilets.
In April, he will run the entire 26.2 mile London Marathon on a treadmill aboard the space station.
The launch into space from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, will take place at 11.03am (GMT) on December 15.
It will take six hours for the space capsule to catch up with the ISS, travelling at 17,500 mph.
Docking with the space station is one of the trickiest stages of the journey. The whole process is automatic, controlled by computer,cheap jordans, but can be carried out manually if required.
Major Peake graduated from Sandhurst in 1992 as an officer in the British Army Air Corps and served with the Royal Green Jackets as a Platoon Commander in Northern Ireland before gaining his wings and flying as a reconnaissance pilot and flight commander in Germany, the Former Republic of Yugoslavia,cheap jordans free shipping, Northern Ireland, Kenya and Canada.
He left the British Army in 2009 and in the same year was selected by the European Space Agency as Briton&#x2019,jordan shoes;s first official astronaut.