Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Multiplexes and single screen owners are hoping that the government will reopen the theatres by June 30 with new safety measures : Bollywood News – Bollywood Hungama

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It’s been over two months that the country is facing an indefinite lockdown due to Coronavirus. The entertainment industry has taken a massive hit because of the same. For the first time, the shoots and releases have been put on hold and the Multiplex Association of India along with the single screen owners are now getting restless. With some of the major releases being put on hold this year, they have suggested new safety measures and guidelines and are hoping that the theatres will reopen somewhere in between June 15 to June 30.

According to the new safety measures manual, the theatres might allow 50 percent occupancy. The food and beverages will be ordered through an app to avoid human contact along with online bookings of the tickets being encouraged. The staff will be geared with gloves and masks and the screens will be thoroughly cleaned. The Association is waiting for the government’s nod to the new guidelines.

Even though big-budget films like Akshay Kumar’s Sooryavanshi and Salman Khan’s Radhe are going to be among the first ones to release, the association feels that these films will pull the crowd back to the theatres.

Also Read: Maharashtra Government to help restart the entertainment industry

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Mega Millions results, numbers for 5/29/20: Did anyone win the $336 million jackpot on Friday (last) night?

Nobody has managed to win Friday’s Mega Millions jackpot as no ticket matched all five white balls and the one golden Mega Ball.

The grand prize for the May 29 draw stood at $336 million, with a cash option of $264 million. The winning numbers were 10, 13, 32, 41 and 51, with the Mega ball being 3. There was also a 2X Megaplier in play, doubling the amount players could win outside the main jackpot.

With no overall winner, the jackpot will rise to $356 million with a cash option of $280.5 million for next Tuesday night’s drawing.

Nobody has managed to win the Mega Millions grand prize winner since the $202 million jackpot was won by a player who bought a ticket in New Jersey in February in the draw for February 11.


A man walks past a newsstand with advertisements for the Mega Millions lottery, October 23, 2018 in New York City.
Drew Angerer/Getty Images

But on Friday night there were four winners of the second-place $1 million prize, with two of them playing the Megaplier allowing them to double their money to $2 million.

Meanwhile, 14 tickets sold nationwide which matched four of the five white balls and the Mega Ball for the $10,000 third prize. Of those, one was a Megaplier and managed to double their money to $20,000.

In the smaller prizes, there were over 500 players who won $500 by matching four numbers, 87 of whom won $1,000 using the Megaplier. Additionally, more than 1,400 people won $200 by matching three numbers and the Mega Ball, 306 of whom multiplied their prize to $400 using the Megaplier.

More than 32,000 players won $10 by either matching three numbers or two numbers and the Mega Ball and over 6,000 of these players won $20 using the Megaplier.

There are nine ways to win a prize, ranging from $2 to the jackpot, which increases with each draw that it is not won. The overall odds of winning a prize in the Mega Millions lottery are 1 in 24, however, the odds of winning $2 are 1 in 37 while the odds of winning the jackpot are 1 in 302,575,350.

A player will win if the numbers on one row of their ticket match the numbers of the balls drawn. Tickets cost $2 per play with the option of adding the Megaplier to a ticket for an additional $1 per play.

The Mega Millions lottery is played in 45 states, Washington, D.C. and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

For payment, money that is won can either come as an annuity, one immediate payment followed by 29 annual payments rising by five percent each payment, or cash, which is described online as a “one-time, lump-sum payment that is equal to all the cash in the jackpot prize pool.”

The next Mega Millions draw is scheduled for June 2 and will offer the 15th largest prize in the lottery’s history. The $356 million jackpot is the game’s largest since last December.

However there have been more than 14.7 million winning tickets since the last big payout in February, including 27 worth $1 million or more, according to the Mega Millions website.

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3 Dead, 25 Injured Due to Thunderstorm in Agra, Taj Mahal’s Marble Railing Damaged

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Metal detector gates installed at a monument in Agra damaged due to thunderstorm.

The thunderstorm barrelled through the city, unleashing rain and windstorm, damaging the marble railing of the main mausoleum at Taj Mahal, houses and uprooting more than 200 trees at different places.

  • News18.com Lucknow
  • Last Updated: May 30, 2020, 12:59 PM IST

Agra city on the banks of the Yamuna river in Uttar Pradesh was on Friday evening hit by a severe thunderstorm, which claimed the lives of three people, including a six-year-old girl, and left 25 others injured.

The thunderstorm barrelled through the city, unleashing rain and windstorm, damaging the marble railing of the main mausoleum at Taj Mahal, houses and uprooting more than 200 trees at different places.

Taking cognisance into the incidents, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath has announced Rs 4 lakh ex-gratia for kin of those who lost their lives in the thunderstorm related incidents in Agra last evening. The Chief Minister has also directed officials to ensure proper treatment to all those injured due to thunderstorm in the city.

Earlier in 2018, two pillars and stones had fallen in the Taj Mahal premises. While on April 11 and May 2 last year, the Royal Gate, the North-West Guldasta pillar of the South Gate collapsed, Guldasta pillars also had fallen in the tombs of Sirhindi Begum and Fatehpuri Begum. Hence, after the destruction took place, automatic gates were installed in Taj Mahal which opens with tokens. Metal detector machines installed on each gate have also collapsed.

Reacting on the same, sources from Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) has said that everything will be restored soon. The only concern, however, remains that a part of the railing which has fallen towards the Yamuna River will have to be remodelled with stones in the style of Mughal Era. Meanwhile, Agra district administration was assessing the damage caused due to the thunderstorm in the city.

Winds gushed at speed of around 123 kms per hour on Friday evening in Agra, a little less than the speed of cyclone ‘Amphan’ that recently hit West Bengal and caused massive destruction. Hundreds of birds were also reportedly died due to the thunderstorm in Agra.

Maximum damage was reported from Agra-Jaipur highway where several trees were seen uprooted. Areas like Jaipur House and Shahganj were also seen badly affected by the thunderstorm.

The casualties were reported due to a house collapse and other thunderstorm related incidents in Agra, which is already bearing the brunt of Covid-19.







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National Coronavirus Command Council to clarify Level 3

Various ministers serving in the National Coronavirus Command Council (NCCC) are expected to shed some light on regulations relating to the COVID-19 restrictions, which will be implemented for Level 3 of the lockdown – which the country enters on Monday, 1 June 2020.

The Ministers of Sports, Transport and Tourism will announce various details pertaining to restrictions in their respective portfolios on Saturday, 30 May 2020.

All of the country’s economic sectors will be reopened, however there will be restrictions.

What we know so far about Level 3:

A keen focus is also on the sale of alcohol – which will be permitted between Monday and Thursday between 09h00 – 17h00.

Smokers will unfortunately have to wait a bit longer as the sale of cigarettes will remain prohibited under the regulations. The controversial decision has prompted a court bid by British American Tobacco SA (BATSA), which wants government to lift the ban on the sale of tobacco products.

The company said with the ban still in place, smokers would continue turning to the black market, which has dreadful consequences for the economy.

Movement between provinces, metropolitan areas and districts

Transport Minister Fikile Mbalula will also clarify regulations over movement between provinces. Movement to and from work will be allowed as well as for buying essential goods. Limitations on movement across provinces, metropolitan areas, districts and hotspots will still be disallowed – except for people travelling to start work, moving to a new province or caring for an immediate family member.

Exercising

There will still be restricted times to exercise under level 3 – also under strict conditions including wearing a mask and not exercising in groups.

Under level 4, exercising was allowed between 06h00 and 09h00 and limited to a 5km radius.

Minister of Justice and Correctional Services Ronald Lamola has said it was up to South Africans to abide by the regulations accordingly, to further curb the spread of the virus.

“At this stage of level 3, the regulations place more responsibilities on individuals themselves and make sure that their family members also comply with health protocols”, Lamola said.

“It is not the responsibility of the police only to make sure that we are compliant. The police only comes in when there is clear non-compliance with the public and the first intervention of the police is to urge you to comply.”



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How this country of 97 million kept its coronavirus death toll at zero

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To skeptics, Vietnam’s official numbers may seem too good to be true. But Guy Thwaites, an infectious disease doctor who works in one of the main hospitals designated by the Vietnamese government to treat Covid-19 patients, said the numbers matched the reality on the ground.

“I go to the wards every day, I know the cases, I know there has been no death,” said Thwaites, who also heads the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit in Ho Chi Minh City.

“If you had unreported or uncontrolled community transmission, then we’ll be seeing cases in our hospital, people coming in with chest infections perhaps not diagnosed — that has never happened,” he said.

So how has Vietnam seemingly bucked the global trend and largely escaped the scourge of the coronavirus? The answer, according to public health experts, lies in a combination of factors, from the government’s swift, early response to prevent its spread, to rigorous contact-tracing and quarantining and effective public communication.

Acting early

Vietnam started preparing for a coronavirus outbreak weeks before its first case was detected.

At the time, the Chinese authorities and the World Health Organization had both maintained that there was no “clear evidence” for human-to-human transmission. But Vietnam was not taking any chances.

“We were not only waiting for guidelines from WHO. We used the data we gathered from outside and inside (the country to) decide to take action early,” said Pham Quang Thai, deputy head of the Infection Control Department at the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology in Hanoi.

By early January, temperature screening was already in place for passengers arriving from Wuhan at Hanoi’s international airport. Travelers found with a fever were isolated and closely monitored, the country’s national broadcaster reported at the time.
By mid-January, Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam was ordering government agencies to take “drastic measures” to prevent the disease from spreading into Vietnam, strengthening medical quarantine at border gates, airports and seaports.
On January 23, Vietnam confirmed its first two coronavirus cases — a Chinese national living in Vietnam and his father, who had traveled from Wuhan to visit his son. The next day, Vietnam’s aviation authorities canceled all flights to and from Wuhan.
As the country celebrated the Lunar New Year holiday, its Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc declared war on the coronavirus. “Fighting this epidemic is like fighting the enemy,” he said at an urgent Communist Party meeting on January 27. Three days later, he set up a national steering committee on controlling the outbreak — the same day the WHO declared the coronavirus a public health emergency of international concern.
On February 1, Vietnam declared a national epidemic — with just six confirmed cases recorded across the country. All flights between Vietnam and China were halted, followed by the suspension of visas to Chinese citizens the next day.
Over the course of the month, the travel restrictions, arrival quarantines and visa suspensions expanded in scope as the coronavirus spread beyond China to countries like South Korea, Iran and Italy. Vietnam eventually suspended entry to all foreigners in late March.
A Vietnamese People's Army officer stands next to a sign warning about the lockdown on the Son Loi commune in Vinh Phuc province on February 20.
Vietnam was also quick to take proactive lockdown measures. On February 12, it locked down an entire rural community of 10,000 people north of Hanoi for 20 days over seven coronavirus cases — the first large-scale lockdown known outside China. Schools and universities, which had been scheduled to reopen in February after the Lunar New Year holiday, were ordered to remain closed, and only reopened in May.

Thwaites, the infectious disease expert in Ho Chi Minh City, said the speed of Vietnam’s response was the main reason behind its success.

“Their actions in late January and early February were very much in advance of many other countries. And that was enormously helpful … for them to be able to retain control,” he said.

Meticulous contact-tracing

The decisive early actions effectively curbed community transmission and kept Vietnam’s confirmed cases at just 16 by February 13. For three weeks, there were no new infections — until the second wave hit in March, brought by Vietnamese returning from abroad.

Authorities rigorously traced down the contacts of confirmed coronavirus patients and placed them in a mandatory two-week quarantine.

“We have a very strong system: 63 provincial CDCs (centers for disease control), more than 700 district-level CDCs, and more than 11,000 commune health centers. All of them attribute to contact tracing,” said doctor Pham with the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology.

A confirmed coronavirus patient has to give health authorities an exhaustive list of all the people he or she has met in the past 14 days. Announcements are placed in newspapers and aired on television to inform the public of where and when a coronavirus patient has been, calling on people to go to health authorities for testing if they have also been there at the same time, Pham said.

A woman stands in a queue to provide a sample at a makeshift testing centre near the Bach Mai hospital in Hanoi on March 31.

When the Bach Mai hospital in Hanoi, one of the biggest hospitals in Vietnam, became a coronavirus hotspot with dozens of cases in March, authorities imposed a lockdown on the facility and tracked down nearly 100,000 people related to the hospital, including medics, patients, visitors and their close contacts, according to Pham.

“Using contact-tracing, we located almost everyone, and asked them to stay home and self quarantine, (and that) if they have any symptoms, they can visit the health centers for free testing,” he said.

Authorities also tested more than 15,000 people linked to the hospitals, including 1,000 health care workers.

Vietnam’s contact-tracing effort was so meticulous that it goes after not only the direct contacts of an infected person, but also indirect contacts. “That’s one of the unique parts of their response. I don’t think any country has done quarantine to that level,” Thwaites said.

All direct contacts were placed in government quarantine in health centers, hotels or military camps. Some indirect contacts were ordered to self isolate at home, according to a study of Vietnam’s Covid-19 control measures by about 20 public health experts in the country.
A roadside barber donning a face mask gives a haircut to a customer in Hanoi.

As of May 1, about 70,000 people had been quarantined in Vietnam’s government facilities, while about 140,000 had undergone isolation at home or in hotels, the study said.

The study also found that of the country’s first 270 Covid-19 patients, 43 percent were asymptomatic cases — which it said highlighted the value of strict contact-tracing and quarantine. If authorities had not proactively sought out people with infection risks, the virus could have quietly spread in communities days before being detected.

Public communication and propaganda

From the start, the Vietnamese government has communicated clearly with the public about the outbreak.

Dedicated websites, telephone hotlines and phone apps were set up to update the public on the latest situations of the outbreak and medical advisories. The ministry of health also regularly sent out reminders to citizens via SMS messages.

Pham said on a busy day, the national hotlines alone could receive 20,000 calls, not to count the hundreds of provincial and district-level hotlines.

A propaganda poster on preventing the spread of the coronavirus is seen on a wall as a man smokes a cigarette along a street in Hanoi.
The country’s massive propaganda apparatus was also mobilized, raising awareness of the outbreak through loudspeakers, street posters, the press and social media. In late February, the health ministry released a catchy music video based on a Vietnamese pop hit to teach people how to properly wash their hands and other hygiene measures during the outbreak. Known as the “hand-washing song,” it immediately went viral, so far attracting more than 48 million views on Youtube.

Thwaites said Vietnam’s rich experience in dealing with infectious disease outbreaks, such as the SARS epidemic from 2002 to 2003 and the following avian influenza, had helped the government and the public to better prepare for the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The population is much more respectful of infectious diseases than many perhaps more affluent countries or countries that don’t see as much infectious disease — Europe, the UK and the US for example,” he said.

“The country understands that these things need to be taken seriously and complies with guidance from the government on how to prevent the infection from spreading.”

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Michelle Obama: ‘I’m Exhausted By A Heartbreak That Never Seems To Stop’

Former first lady Michelle Obama said it was “up to all of us — Black, white, everyone” to root out racism as she responded on social media to the death of George Floyd.

Obama revealed in an Instagram post on Friday that she was “pained “and “exhausted by a heartbreak that never seems to stop,” noting how “race and racism is a reality that so many of us grow up learning to just deal with.”

“Right now it’s George, Breonna, and Ahmaud. Before that it was Eric, Sandra, and Michael. It just goes on, and on, and on,” she wrote

“But if we ever hope to move past it, it can’t just be on people of color to deal with it,” Obama continued. “It’s up to all of us — Black, white, everyone — no matter how well-meaning we think we might be, to do the honest, uncomfortable work of rooting it out.”

Obama said it “starts with self-examination and listening to those whose lives are different from our own” and “ends with justice, compassion, and empathy that manifests in our lives and on our streets.”

“I pray we all have the strength for that journey, just as I pray for the souls and the families of those who were taken from us,” Obama concluded the post, which featured illustrations by artist Nikkolas Smith.

Check out Obama’s post here:

Floyd, an unarmed Black man, died in Minneapolis on Monday after a police officer knelt on his neck. Four Minneapolis police officers were fired following Floyd’s death, which was captured on camera and sparked protests nationwide.

Officer Derek Chauvin was arrested and charged Friday with third-degree murder and manslaughter.

Former President Barack Obama, meanwhile, said in a statement Friday that “this shouldn’t be ‘normal’ in 2020 America.”

“It’s natural to wish for life ‘to just get back to normal’ as a pandemic and economic crisis upend everything around us,” he said. “But we have to remember that for millions of Americans being treated differently on account of race is tragically, painfully, maddeningly ‘normal’ — whether it’s while dealing with the health care system, or interacting with the criminal justice system, or jogging down the street, or just watching birds in a park.”



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Delhi Seeks Resumption of Metro Services, Maharashtra Mulls Opening Schools as States Gear Up for Lockdown 5

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Boys wearing face masks take a break as they work at a tire repair shop in Kohima, Nagaland. (AP)

Most states are in favour of giving a boost to economic activities but are also worried about the rising coronavirus numbers.

  • News18.com
  • Last Updated: May 30, 2020, 12:39 PM IST

As phase 4 of the coronavirus lockdown comes to an end, not just the country but also state governments are on tenterhooks about the Centre’s strategy to enter the next stage amid an increasing number of Covid-19 infections. India on Saturday recorded the biggest one-day spike in coronavirus cases as well as deaths, with 7,964 infections and 265 fatalities in 24 hours.

The central government is likely to extend the lockdown in some form by another two weeks after May 31 to stop the spread of coronavirus but there could be even more relaxations in the offing. A top source in the government described the next phase as “lockdown extension in spirit”, and said most of the focus would be on 11 cities that account for nearly 70 per cent of the Covid-19 cases in the country. This includes the six major metro cities of Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Ahmedabad and Kolkata, as well as Pune, Thane, Jaipur, Surat and Indore.

The continuing rise in cases poses a severe challenge for India’s strained medical capacity and overburdened health system, leading to questions about the effectiveness of the over two month lockdown as it has not managed to flatten the curve despite slowing the rise in cases.

The Centre had in the fourth phase of the lockdown focused most of the restrictions to the containment zones and allowed operation of all markets, offices, industries and business along with plying of buses in all other areas to completely open the economy. Last week, the government also allowed operations of domestic flights in a limited capacity.

Among the relaxations that may be added in ‘Lockdown 5.0’ is the reopening of places of worship, as well as gymnasiums. Government officials said temples and other places of worship can be allowed to open provided social distancing is maintained and worshipers wear a mask. However, no religious congregation or festival will be allowed.

Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Friday met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and sources say the two discussed suggestions that have come from states and the task forces set up by the Centre. On Thursday, Shah had called up the chief ministers of all states and Union Territories to seek their view on the proposed lockdown extension. Most states are in favour of giving a boost to economic activities but are also worried about the rising coronavirus numbers.

As the Centre readies its blueprint, here’s what states expect in lockdown 5.0:

Delhi

The Arvind Kejriwal government has made it clear it will follow MHA guidelines. If the Centre gives its nod, the Capital seeks resumption of metro services. Schools, meanwhile, have been asked to prepare a plan for re-opening, while the government adopts a wait-and-watch policy on Centre’s reaction to opening of malls and religious places.

Maharashtra

Not much relaxation or economic activities are expected in the red zones of Mumbai and Pune as Maharashtra battles the maximum Covid-19 cases. While the government waits for Centre’s guidelines, efforts are on to allow resumption of local train services in Mumbai for essential service providers such as healthcare, BMC staff, etc for a few hours in a few stations every day. Maharashtra is mulling reopening of schools cautiously from mid-June in low-risk zones but a final decision will be taken only after Centre’s guidelines.

Tamil Nadu

Tamil Nadu had indicated to district collectors that economic activities can be opened up in districts where there are no positive cases recorded for at least three weeks but has asked districts to wait for guidelines of MHA. Sources say state government is cautious when it comes to Chennai and restrictions likely to continue in Chennai post May 31. The TN CM is also meeting public experts on Saturday to get their views on lockdown exit strategy.

Telangana

Several relaxations are already in place in Telangana with all shops open in the state except for salons and pubs. State-run RTC buses are operating, except in Hyderabad. Any more relaxations are unlikely at this point in time.






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Brussels and Berlin reach deal on Lufthansa bailout

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The deal heads off a dispute between Brussels and Berlin over plans to save the country’s prized airline from the impacts of the economic crisis | Andreas Gebert/EPA

Airline to give up lucrative slots at Munich, Frankfurt airports.

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Updated

BERLIN — Lufthansa has agreed to give up take-off and landing slots at its Munich and Frankfurt hub airports in exchange for EU approval for a €9 billion bailout from the German government.

The deal heads off a dispute between Brussels and Berlin over plans to save the country’s prized airline from the impacts of the economic crisis.

A European Commission official said Saturday morning that “commitments proposed by Germany to preserve effective competition” had paved the way for a deal on the mega bailout — the largest airline rescue announced so far.

Earlier this week, Lufthansa said it could not immediately approve the proposed government bailout due to the terms being imposed during preliminary talks with the Commission. German Chancellor Angela Merkel is said to have pledged a “tough fight” should EU officials try to water down Lufthansa’s position in the European aviation market in exchange for allowing the government aid.

In a statement published Saturday morning, Lufthansa said that “the scope of the conditions required in the EU Commission’s view has been reduced in comparison with initial indications.”

Under the terms of the deal, the airline said it will transfer a limited number of slots to European competitors, with those slots initially only available to new entrants at the Frankfurt and Munich airports.

A Commission spokesperson told POLITICO the deal includes “commitments from Lufthansa to make available certain slots and assets at Frankfurt and Munich airports once the airports become congested again, and enable a viable entry or expansion of activities by other airlines at these airports to the benefit of consumers and effective competition.”

The EU executive said it will now “assess Germany’s notification as a matter of priority.”

Under the terms of the bailout, the German government will take a 20 percent stake in Lufthansa and the option to increase that by an additional 5 percent. Berlin has pledged to sell its stake as soon as the company is back on its feet.

Want more analysis from POLITICO? POLITICO Pro is our premium intelligence service for professionals. From financial services to trade, technology, cybersecurity and more, Pro delivers real time intelligence, deep insight and breaking scoops you need to keep one step ahead. Email pro@politico.eu to request a complimentary trial.



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Historic SpaceX rocket must launch at just the right second Saturday — or be postponed again

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NASA Astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley rehearse the upcoming historic launch of a SpaceX Crew Dragon to the International Space Station.

Florida Today

NASA says Saturday’s attempt at a historic rocket launch is proceeding as planned, although weather could again postpone the return to space for veteran NASA astronauts Robert Behnken and Doug Hurley.

NASA and SpaceX teams are targeting exactly 45 seconds after the clock strikes 3:22 p.m. EDT to launch from pad 39A at Kennedy Space Center to the International Space Station. It will mark the second attempt for the mission known as Crew Dragon Demo-2, the first of which was scrubbed Wednesday due to poor weather.

The mission is set to be the first time a private company sends humans into orbit – and the first time since 2011 that the United States has launched astronauts into space from U.S. soil. Wednesday’s scrubbed launch drew crowds that braved drizzles and downpours – even a tornado warning.

The weather forecast: SpaceX rocket launch is at a ‘50% go’ for Saturday due to more bad weather

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said Wednesday’s launch was delayed because liftoff could have triggered a lightning storm in an electrically charged atmosphere. “In fact, the rocket itself could become a lightning bolt,” he said.

Teams have developed strict launch criteria to protect the safety of the astronauts: “If the weather is good, you go. If the weather is not good, you don’t go,” Bridenstine said. It’s a difficult challenge to meet, given all conditions must be met in a single instant, he said.

Unfortunately, teams can’t extend a window and wait for weather to improve. The requirement for Falcon 9 to launch exactly on time is due to orbital mechanics, as the Crew Dragon capsule has to “catch up” with the ISS, which is traveling at 17,000 mph about 250 miles above Earth.

But it’s not just weather around the pad that matters – teams have to monitor a massive flightpath and the conditions below it in the event that Behnken and Hurley have to abort, hurtling the spacecraft away from its Falcon 9 rocket and into the Atlantic Ocean. If conditions at sea are too rough, the launch is a “no-go.”

Hurley said he was no stranger to scrubbed launches in a Friday tweet: “On my first flight STS-127 on Shuttle Endeavour, we scrubbed 5 times over the course of a month for technical and weather challenges.”

Meanwhile, the astronauts – both longtime friends and shuttle veterans – have been spending time with their families and continuing preps for the one-to-four-month stay at the ISS, Bridenstine said.

“They’ve started a tradition of launching little rockets from the beach,” Bridenstine said of KSC’s famous “Astronaut Beach House,” a place where crews have historically spent time relaxing with families and friends. “I would imagine they’re probably getting some downtime and thinking about what’s coming.”

Also Saturday, President Donald Trump is expected to return to the Space Coast to watch the liftoff of Demo-2. He’s scheduled to be joined by Vice President Mike Pence on the deck of Operations and Support Building II, which offers an unobstructed view of pad 39A from just over three miles away.

Contributing: Britt Kennerly, Florida Today; The Associated Press.

Follow Emre Kelly on Twitter at: @EmreKelly

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The vision for a national Open School is a good one. The BBC is ready to make it happen | Tony Hall

The Covid-19 crisis has transformed all our lives in ways we could barely have imagined just a few weeks ago. In so many areas, we will be desperate to go back to “normal life” as soon as safely possible. But in others, however, what we have learned in this crisis will – and should – reshape our thinking for ever.

Educating the nation’s children is one of those areas. All of us have had to adapt to play our part – from the thousands of teachers who have been delivering lessons remotely, to the many organisations offering resources for free to the parents who have had to balance homework with homeworking. Society as a whole has stepped up like never before.

At the BBC, we have done our best to contribute. Our core mission is to educate, as well as inform and entertain, which is why we pulled out all the stops to support pupils, parents, and teachers when schools closed. Our Bitesize Daily package has offered two hours of original broadcast programming for pupils in years 1-10 every single day. By the end of the summer term we will have published nearly 2,000 daily lessons online. All are designed to support pupils, to take a load off parents, and to offer structure and support for teachers coping with new realities.

Bitesize Daily has had 5 million visitors online every week since term began on 20 April, more than three times our site’s usual weekly traffic. And BBC Education is driving more young people to sign up for a BBC account than anything else we currently make. Let no one tell you our young people aren’t keen to learn.

Now the BBC is starting to consider what lessons we might learn from our role in helping to educate the nation during these past few months. None of us knows how education systems will adapt as a result of the global coronavirus crisis. It is still uncertain what we will need to do collectively to meet children’s needs in both the short and the long term as we emerge from lockdown.

That is why I read with particular interest the proposal by Tim Brighouse and Bob Moon, in Education Guardian, for a virtual Open School in the tradition of the Open University. They sketched out a compelling vision of an independent institution supporting students and teachers in school and out, offering high-quality self-learning tutored courses and resources in every subject, capable of helping to raise educational standards for decades to come. They also suggested a role for the BBC.

The BBC is prepared to pick up this gauntlet, in partnership with others. We would be delighted to join a discussion with key players before the end of this term. We could plan for next year’s inevitably disrupted learning and explore what might come after that.

Schools will always be the best places for children to learn. We will continue to be led by the government on the future of schooling in the UK. But the BBC has shown that we can play a critical role in the UK’s education infrastructure and I would like to see this continue as an even greater part of the corporation’s contribution to the nation.

Where could this discussion take us? How could we support teachers and parents? How might learning change, in and outside schools? Could we help the students who struggle the most, including those excluded from school? Could we deliver the dream of equal access to enrichment activities such as the arts and music? Overall, could we create a public infrastructure that would make it easier for all schools to benefit while growing the market for commercial providers?

I don’t know the answers. But I am sure these questions are worth discussing, and quickly. The BBC is keen to play a part. We cannot allow the lessons of lockdown, and the strength of our collective response, to go to waste.

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