"Life from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Herbst.
The U.S. is really war on Iran now entering its fourth week, shows no signs of ending anytime soon.
“President Trump today threatened Iran on social media saying if it doesn't reopen the”
state of Hormuz in 48 hours, the U.S. will quote "obliterate its power plants." This is the U.S. and Israel continued to struggle with gaining safe passage for ships in the state. And Pyrus Greg Myriy has more on where things stand. Iran has lost most of its conventional military power, but it's still very well positioned
to carry out attacks from the rugged coastline with drones or with these fast boats in the Gulf, and particularly around the straight of Hormuz, which is just 21 miles wide. The Gulf has really become a giant parking lot for ships. There's some 3,000 oil tankers, gas tankers, cargo ships, and the U.S. Navy only has around 20 ships in the region.
And Pyrus Greg Myriy, meanwhile Iran launched an unsuccessful missile attack on a joint U.S. U.K. base in the Indian Ocean today, some 2,500 miles away from Iran, though
“it's not clear how close the missiles got to the base.”
A powerful storm continues to move across Hawaii as the entire state remains under a flood
watch. Hawaii Public Radio's Bill Dorman has more. Hawaii Governor Josh Green calls it the worst flooding in 20 years to hit the state, and estimates damages already around a billion dollars in counting. The storm system slammed a Wahoo Friday night and Saturday, swamping houses, cars, and
power lines, and forcing the evacuation of more than 5,000 people. Now the flash flooding and the evacuations are moving east across the island chain to Maui, powers out to more than 8,000 customers across the islands. The vast majority of them on the most popular island of Oahu for NPR News, I build Dorman in Honolulu.
Stocks fell for the fourth straight week on Wall Street, as the war on Iran pushed oil prices higher, and the federal reserve raised for more economic uncertainty, and Pyrus Maria Aspen reports.
The surge in oil prices is hitting consumers at the gas pump, but that's just the first
wave of pain. The energy crisis means companies will have to pay more for shipping and trucking, likely driving up all kinds of prices. Fedcher Jerome Powell said this week that the war is making the country's economic outlook cloudier.
The Fed held interest rates steady, as it tries to keep inflation under control. But now some investors are starting to worry that the Fed might actually have to raise the cost of borrowing later this year. U.S. government bonds also sold off, and the price of gold plunged. Gold is usually seen as a safe haven investment, but it just had its worst week in 15
years. Maria Aspen and PR News. You're listening to NPR News from Washington. There's a new research on a type of cockroach capable of what scientists call "pairbonding"
“as our Daniel reports that's what a male and a female team up to defend their nest and offspring.”
The study was done on the wood feeding cockroach from the forests of Japan after a male and female burrow into rotting wood, they chew off each other's wings and eat them. And when it finished, it means they formed a pair. Haruka Osaki is a behaviorally collegeist at the Museum of Nature and Human Activities in Hugo.
Many in her colleagues wanted to know how exclusive these insects are. In the lab, they found that two roaches that have eaten each other's wings tolerate only one another, becoming highly aggressive towards any other outsider, suggesting they form pairbonds, intercapable of recognizing and remembering each other. For NPR News, I'm Ari Daniel.
The NCAA is suing draft kings for trademark infringement. Seeking an emergency restraining order against the sport vetting company to stop the use of registered trademarks that are associated with its basketball tournaments, including March Madness, Final Four, and Sweet 16. It wants to avoid any appearance of being part of gambling.
Draft King says its use is not a trademark violation, but protected under the First Amendment.
The NCAA says it avoids any appearance of affiliation with gambling companies and has declined sportsbook sponsorships banned any sportsbedding by athletes and staff. You're listening to NPR News from Washington.


