Here at NPR, we've been following the news unfolding of the Minneapolis protests,
including the recent shooting and killing of a 37-year-old man Saturday morning by federal agents.
That's the third shooting and second death in Minneapolis involving federal immigration officials in January.
We'll bring you more details on that developing story when up first returns tomorrow.
I'm Ayesha Roscoe and this is a Sunday Story where we go beyond the news of the day to bring you one big story.
On the morning of January 28th, 1986,
Bob Ebling was anxious and angry
as he drove to work to the Morton Thia called Booster Rocket Complex outside Brigham City,
Utah.
He knew that 2,000 miles away, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida,
ice had formed on the launch pad that cradled the space shuttle Challenger.
Seven astronauts, including a civilian, a high school teacher, were set for liftoff that morning.
Ebling believed their lives were at stake.
His daughter Leslie was in the car with him.
And he said, we are going to have a catastrophic event today.
The night before, Ebling and his Thyacal colleagues,
all booster rocket engineers, argued for a launch delay.
They said the freezing weather overnight could cause a catastrophic failure in the booster rockets that would lift Challenger towards space.
And he said the Challenger's gonna blow up, everyone's going to die.
And he was beating his hands on the dashboard.