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Jeeno leads Boutier by one at LPGA Americas Open
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Lowry, Straka share lead at windy Truist
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Messi suffers worst defeat in MLS as Miami fall again
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Celtics overwhelm Knicks to pull within 2-1 in NBA playoff series
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Toulouse crush Toulon to reach Top 14 semis as Castres pay tribute to Raisuqe
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Marseille, Monaco clinch Champions League qualification from Ligue 1
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'One of those days': Atletico record-breaker Sorloth hits four
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Toulouse's Ntamack suffers concussion in Top 14, Willemse nears exit
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Record-breaker Sorloth hits four as Atletico smash Real Sociedad
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'Weight off my shoulders': Bayern's Kane toasts breakthrough title
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Sinner grateful for 'amazing' support on Italian Open return from doping ban
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Hamburg return to Bundesliga after seven-year absence
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Toulouse's Ntamack suffers concussion in Top 14 clash
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India, Pakistan reach ceasefire -- but trade claims of violations
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'Long time coming': Bayern's Kane toasts breakthrough title
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US, China conclude first day of trade talks in Geneva
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Kane tastes first title as champions Bayern bid farewell to Mueller
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Benfica deny Sporting to take Portuguese title race to wire
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Sinner makes triumphant return from doping ban at Italian Open
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Sinner wins at Italian Open in first match since doping ban
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Leo XIV, new pope and 'humble servant of God', visits Francis's tomb
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India claims Pakistan violated truce, says it is retaliating
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Champions League race hots up as Man City held, Villa win
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Kane tastes first title as champions Bayern see off Mueller
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Southampton avoid Premier League 'worst-ever' tag with Man City draw
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Leipzig miss Champions League as Bochum and Kiel relegated
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Tarling wins Giro time trial in Tirana, Roglic in pink
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Champions Chelsea finish WSL season unbeaten
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Ukraine allies set ultimatum to Russia for 30-day ceasefire
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Alonso has 'every door open': Real Madrid's Ancelotti
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Swiatek's Rome title defence ends early as Sinner set for hero's return
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Marc Marquez wins French MotoGP sprint race
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Swiatek's Italian Open title defence ended early by Collins
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Uproar as S. Korea conservatives switch presidential candidate
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Vollering retains women's Vuelta title in style
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India and Pakistan agree to ceasefire after days of attacks
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Pope Leo XIV says choice of name reflects social commitment
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Thousands in Spain confined indoors for hours by toxic fumes

Liftoff, finally: Boeing Starliner launches first crew to space station
Boeing on Wednesday launched its very first astronauts bound for the International Space Station aboard a Starliner capsule, which joins a select club of spacecraft to carry humans beyond Earth.
The third time turned out to be the charm for the aerospace giant, after two previous bids to fly were aborted with the crew strapped in and ready to go.
Astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, both of whom have two previous spaceflights under their belts, blasted off at 10:52 am (1452 GMT) atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.
Their Starliner, named "Calypso" after famed oceanographer Jacques Cousteau's ship, is now chasing the ISS in orbit. It should rendezvous with the research lab at 12:15 pm (1615 GMT) Sunday to begin a roughly one-week stay.
"Suni and I are honored to share this dream of spaceflight with each and every one of you," Wilmore, who is commander of the test flight, said just before liftoff. "Let's put some fire in this rocket, and let's push it to the heavens."
Starliner becomes just the sixth type of US-built spaceship to fly NASA astronauts, following the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs in the 1960s and 1970s, the Space Shuttle from 1981 to 2011, and SpaceX's Crew Dragon from 2020.
"This is another milestone in this extraordinary history of NASA," the space agency's chief Bill Nelson told reporters.
"And I want to give my personal congratulations to the whole team that went through a lot of trial and tribulation. But they had perseverance. And that's what we do at NASA, we don't launch until it's right."
- Boeing looks to turn a corner -
A successful mission will help dispel the bitter taste left by years of safety scares and delays, and provide Boeing a much-needed reprieve from the intense safety concerns surrounding its passenger jets.
"I think about over the years how many bad headlines I read about the Shuttle program, about the International Space Station -- and I look back now at how successful they were," said Mark Nappi, Boeing's vice president and program manager of Commercial Crew Program.
"Someday, we'll be looking back at this program the same way."
NASA meanwhile is seeking to certify Boeing as a second commercial operator to ferry crews to the ISS -- something Elon Musk's SpaceX has already been doing for the US space agency for four years.
Both companies received multibillion-dollar contracts in 2014 to develop their crew capsules, following the end of the Space Shuttle program that left the US temporarily reliant on Russian rockets for rides.
Boeing, with its 100-year history, was heavily favored, but its program fell badly behind.
Setbacks ranged from a software bug that put the spaceship on a bad trajectory on its first uncrewed test, to the discovery that the cabin was filled with flammable electrical tape after the second.
The first crewed launch attempt on May 6 was scuppered in the final hours due to a buzzy valve on the Atlas V rocket the capsule is fixed atop.
Saturday's launch attempt was even more dramatic, aborted with just minutes left on the countdown due to a ground launch computer issue.
- Put to the test -
Ex-Navy test pilots Wilmore and Williams are now charged with probing Starliner "from izzard to gizzard," in Nelson's words -- from piloting it manually, to tracking the stars around them to recover the spacecraft's orientation.
During their stay on the orbital outpost, they will continue to evaluate the spacecraft, including simulating whether the ship can be used as a safe haven in the event of problems.
NASA's Steve Stich said teams were monitoring just one issue so far: excessive water use in a spacecraft cooling system called a sublimator, but expected there was enough in reserve for a safe return.
After undocking from the ISS, Starliner will re-enter the atmosphere, with the crew experiencing 3.5G as they slow down from 17,500 miles per hour (28,000 kph) to a gentle parachute and airbag-assisted touchdown on land in the western United States.
J.Williams--AMWN