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NPR News: 04-04-2026 6PM EDT

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Transcript

EN

"Live from NPR News in New York City, I'm into a helicyc hotel.

For the fourth time since the start of the US is really war in Iran, a nuclear power plant

on the southwestern coast of the country has been struck, according to Iran in media.

NPR's Deep Harvaz reports the plant remains functioning and a possible radiation leak would not be limited to Iran." The nuclear power plant in Boucher, which is on the country's coastline on the Persian Gulf, was struck by a projectile from a strike to its perimeter on Saturday, killing one of the plant's security personnel.

The International Atomic Energy Agency says that no increase in radiation levels have been detected in the area. But in the statement posted on X, the agency's director General, Raphael Grossi, said that

the nuclear power plant in surrounding areas must never be attacked.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Al-Aqqi noted on X that any radio act to fall out from the plant will cook and life in neighboring Gulf Arab countries.

Radioactive material from the damage plant could leak into the Gulf, contaminating waters

vital to states like Kuwait, Bahrain, Etat, and the United Arab Emirates. Deep Harvaz and PR news, Vaughn Turkey. Stuffing at airports across the country are beginning to improve, but in Piazza Windsor Johnson reports wait times remain uncertain. Hundreds of TSA workers resigned during the recent pay disruption, and experts say it can

take months to hire and train replacements. That means staffing levels can vary by airport and even by the time of day, creating unpredictable wait times for travelers. Aviation analyst Henry Hardvalt says the progress so far is uneven. Some of the airports where we saw the worst lines, such as at Houston, Bush, and or continental,

Atlanta Heartfield Jackson International are performing much better, but this is a day-to-day situation. President Trump signed an executive order on Friday to pay all DHS workers as Congress remains deadlocked over how to fund the agency. Windsor Johnson and PR news, Washington.

The unemployment rate is down at 10th of a percent in March, and the Labor Department says about 178,000 jobs were added. However, revisions from February show a loss of more than 100,000 jobs. Heather Long is author of the everyday economics newsletter and chief economist with the Navy Federal Credit Union.

Companies are spending so much money investing in AI and the latest technology that there simply isn't a lot of money left to hire, or to give big pay raises anymore. And so it's almost like the AI investment is eating the jobs, and now there's concern with the war in Iran that as these gas and diesel prices rise, if they stay high and stay elevated, that's also eating into company budgets.

And does that force, even less hiring or potentially layoffs later this year?

This is NPR. U.S. museum attendance in 2025 was impeded by natural disasters and political instability. NPR's Chloe Veltman reports the art newspapers annual survey also reveals signs of modest growth. Attendants at American museums was heavily impacted by two external factors.

One, the January 2025 wildfires in Los Angeles, the getty villa was hit particularly hard, attendance dropped nearly 60% due to it being closed for almost half the year. And two, last fall's federal government shut down, it crippled these museums like the National Gallery of Art, which lost more than a quarter of its audience compared with 2024. Despite the volatility, the country's most visited museums remained relatively stable,

is it a ship at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art was up slightly, and some regional museums also saw big gains. The San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art nearly doubled its attendance, Chloe Veltman NPR News.

A niece and grand niece with ties to Iran, or its Islamic Revolutionary Guard, are now in

federal custody. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said they, along with two other Iranian nationals, are no longer eligible for reentry into the U.S., or lawful permanent resident status. In the statement, the State Department said, "Hamide Salamani off-shar and her daughter are in the custody of U.S. immigration and customs enforcement.

The two, along with Salamani's husband, are related to a former Iranian military chief, Cussim Salamani who was killed in a U.S. air strike in 2020 in Iraq. This is NPR News."

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