Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Astronaut Tells High School Students Their Generation Could Visit Mars

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jan, 2018 12:00 PM
    MONTREAL — Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques has told a group of high-school students their generation could be visiting Mars in the next 25 years.
     
    Saint-Jacques held a question-and-answer session by videoconference with four Quebec schools today.
     
    From Moscow, the 48-year-old astronaut discussed work-life balance, his physical fitness regime and how he'll feel as he leaves Earth to travel to the International Space Station in November.
     
    At one point, he told the 400 students that one of his goals is not to make any mistakes during his six-month mission.
     
    He also said the first people who will land on Mars in the coming decades are likely around their age at the moment.
     
    Saint-Jacques, who was trained as both an engineer and a doctor, will be the first Canadian aboard the space station since Chris Hadfield spent five months on it in 2012 and 2013.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New model confirms endangered right whales are declining

    New model confirms endangered right whales are declining
    Researchers with the U.S. government and the New England Aquarium have developed a new model they said will provide better estimates about the North Atlantic right whale population, and the news isn't good.

    New model confirms endangered right whales are declining

    B.C. man acquitted of four terrorism charges related to Facebook posts

    B.C. man acquitted of four terrorism charges related to Facebook posts
    A British Columbia man accused of using his Facebook account to express support of "lone wolf" terrorist attacks has been acquitted of all charges.

    B.C. man acquitted of four terrorism charges related to Facebook posts

    B.C. government invites public to share views on marijuana rules

    B.C. government invites public to share views on marijuana rules
    A Vancouver councillor says it may take years, but he can see the day a craft cannabis industry emerges in British Columbia, with smoking lounges in the city allowing people to responsibly sample strains of specially cultivated marijuana.

    B.C. government invites public to share views on marijuana rules

    Legal cannabis tops packed agenda at annual meeting of B.C.'s municipal leaders

    Legal cannabis tops packed agenda at annual meeting of B.C.'s municipal leaders
    Municipalities in British Columbia are clamouring to have a say in the marijuana policies they believe will fall largely on their shoulders to enforce when pot becomes legal next summer.

    Legal cannabis tops packed agenda at annual meeting of B.C.'s municipal leaders

    Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong enters Liberal leadership race

    Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong enters Liberal leadership race
    British Columbia's former finance minister Mike de Jong has announced his bid for the provincial Liberal leadership, joining a race that already includes two other past cabinet ministers and the former mayors of B.C.'s two largest cities.

    Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong enters Liberal leadership race

    Families walk Highway of Tears before missing, murdered Indigenous women hearing

    Families walk Highway of Tears before missing, murdered Indigenous women hearing

    Gladys Radek raised a fist in the air and wept as she reached the end of her 350-kilometre journe...

    Families walk Highway of Tears before missing, murdered Indigenous women hearing