Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Back home. I'm Lisa Lucera, Fox News. The four Artemis II astronauts landed in the Pacific a few minutes after 8 o'clock Eastern time.
It was near perfect from launch to splashdown. In fact, when they committed to that translunar injection, that major burn that moved them out of a relatively low Earth orbit on a course to the moon, it was so accurate they were able to
skip some of the corrective burns on the way to the moon just some of the maneuvering operations they had planned and it was only as they were approaching earth that they needed to pick a landing site a splashdown site and make those last burns to adjust the course
Chapter 2: What happened during the Artemis II astronauts' mission?
Fox's Jonathan Seri at Johnson Space Center in Houston. But it took about an hour to get them out of the Orion capsule because of rough seas. They're now being checked out by a medical team. The flyby marked the fastest, the farthest that humans have ever traveled from Earth, seeing parts of the far side of the moon never seen by humans and a total solar eclipse.
President Trump says the Strait of Hormuz will open with or without a deal with Iran as Vice President J.D. Vance leads the U.S. delegation for peace talks.
President Trump has a clear objective ahead of U.S. and Iranian peace talks on Saturday.
No nuclear weapon. That's 99 percent of it.
The president says Iran will also reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a critical waterway for oil tankers.
The Strait will open up. If we just left, the Strait's going to, otherwise they make no money. So the Strait's going to open.
But President Trump says Iran will not be allowed to charge tolls for the Strait. There are reports Iran is charging a dollar per barrel of oil aboard all ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz.
Fox's Jared Halpern of the White House. Democrat Eric Swalwell is denying allegations from a former staffer that he sexually assaulted her twice. The allegations have caused several prominent Democrats to pull their support as he runs for governor. America's listening to Fox News. The Trump administration admits a fraud probe into New York's Medicaid program grew out of an error in data.
In announcing the investigation into New York's Medicaid system, the head of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Dr. Mehmet Oz, claimed the state gave 5 million people personal care services, helping them with meals and grooming. Agency spokesman Chris Kreppich told the Associated Press the number was more like 450,000, just 6 to 7 percent of total enrollees.
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