Gqrl Airman charged with murder of federal officer at courthouse
Hoda Kotb has announced she is le
stanley cup aving NBCs Today show after 17 years with the program.Live on NBC Thursday morning, Kotb said tu
stanley quencher rning 60 in August allowed her to reflect and ultimately come to the decision. I realized that it was time for me to turn the page at 60, and to try something ne
stanley flask w, she said. I remembered standing outside looking at this beautiful bunch of people with all these gorgeous signs, and I thought, This is what the top of the wave feels like for me. And I thought it can t get better, and I decided that this is the right time for me to kind of move on. A visibly emotional Kotb said she wants to spend more time with her children, Haley and Hope, who are 7 and 5. I had my kiddos late in life, and I was thinking that they deserve a bigger piece of my time pie that I have, Kotb said. I feel like we only have a finite amount of time. She said deciding to leave was the hardest thing in the world. Kotb said she will stay on the Today show through the beginning of 2025, and will still remain a part of NBC once she leaves the program. She did not specify what her role would be afterward.RELATED STORY | Adrian Wojnarowski is leaving ESPN to become GM of men s baske Amcj Blue Valley Northwest High School given all clear to release students after lockdown
A new visualization, among multiple renderings released by NASA this week, shows the famous explosion of one of the most brilliant stars in our night sky.Eta Carinae s great eruption, which was observed in the 1840s, created a brilliant and unusual outburst, NASA said. The star managed to survive the massive outburst and has since continued to diminish in brilliance in the decades that followed.Astronomers used NASA s Hubble Space T
stanley flask elescope along with the Chandra X-ray Observatory to discover more details about how the eruption looked using visible light along with ultraviolet and X-ray light. That s how artists were able to work with astronomers at the Space Telescope Science Institute STScI in Baltimore, Maryland to create three-dimensional models helping the public and researchers visualize
stanley termos the shape of the glowing gas clouds and what is known as the homunculus. Frank Summers, a project lead and principal visualization scientist at STScI said, The team did such an amazing job representing the volumetric layers that viewers can immediately and intuitively co
stanley water jug mprehend the complex structure. In a visualization released by the group, the moving artist s rendering shows the mul