"Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Louise Skivoni.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he will not strike any more Iranian oil
“fields and will follow the direction of President Trump.”
And without providing any evidence, he also said that Iran no longer has the ability to enrich uranium or produce ballistic missiles. NPR's carry con has the latest." In the press conference with foreign reporters Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made his comments about Iran's decimated nuclear capabilities in Hebrew.
He also said Israel acted alone striking Iran's south-pars gas field, Iran has since intensified strikes against Gulf Energy Site-sending oil prices soaring. Netanyahu said Trump "asked us to hold off on future attacks and we're holding off." "I don't think any two leaders have been as coordinated as President Trump and I. He's the leader. I'm, you know, his ally."
Trump also says the U.S. did not know about Israel's oil field attack.
“However, person briefed on the matter told NPR that the U.S. and Israel are coordinated”
on all targets, carry con and PR news to live. "A federal jury has found Elon Musk liable for attempting to drive down the social media platform Twitter's stock prices ahead of his takeover of the company in 2022." Katie D. Ben Adedi with Member Station KQED reports. The civil lawsuit accused Musk of making misleading statements about the number of bots on Twitter
and falsely saying that his takeover was temporarily unhold. Attorneys for the former stockholders say the billionaire was trying to manipulate the market to get a better deal. Here's attorney Mark Mollumfee speaking outside the courtroom. The jury's verdict sends a strong message that just because you're a rich and powerful
person, you still have to obey the law and no man is above the law." Musk's legal team declined to calm him.
“The plaintiff's attorneys estimate Musk could owe up to $2.6 billion in damages.”
For MPR news, I'm Katie D. Ben Adedi in San Francisco. Across the Hawaiian Islands, evacuation warnings are up.
As a second powerful storm, dumps heavy rain, north of Honolulu rising waters behind a 120-year-old
of why he would dam our racing alarms that the dam could fail. Hawaii Governor Josh Green is urging residents to seek safety. The why he would dam was, was surging up about a half-foot. It looked like per hour. It was going up quite quickly in that triggered a little bit more emergent response.
We didn't want to wait to evacuate. More than 200 people were rescued yesterday and to rental rains on the Hawaiian Island of Oahu, Green says some people were stranded on roofs, some were rescued from the water. This is the worst flooding the island has had in 20 years, and the damage could top a billion dollars.
This is NPR news.
There were no upsets Friday on the first full day of the NCAA Women's Basketball
Tournament as Greg Ekland reports Michigan State had the closest contest of the day in Oklahoma when the Spartans squeaked out of 65 to 62 win over Colorado State. Michigan State is one of 12 teams from the big 10 conference in the women's tournament the most of any conference, but the Colorado State Rams from the Mountain West Conference pushed the Spartans to the brink of illumination as CSU coach Ryan Williams expected.
We put a plan together and our kids prepared to win this game, not to keep it close. That wasn't the plan. The game's result was one of only three on the day, decided by single digits of the four number one seeds in the women's field only Texas played on Friday and the long-horns defeated Missouri State 87 to 45.
For NPR news, I'm Greg Ekland. After nearly a century of operation CBS News is shutting down its radio division dozens of people will be part of the company's overall layoffs decisions starting in May. In 1927 CBS Radio News was the precursor of the entire CBS News operation as a currently exists, giving voice to legendary broadcasters like Edward Armouro and radio executives
like Bill Payley. The SAG Harbor, New York Police have released the bodycam video of the 2024 Drunken Driving Rest of Popstar, Justin Timberlake.
His lawyers fought the release ultimately they agreed to a redacted version.
I'm Luis Skivone and PR News, Washington.


