Line from NPR News in Washington, on Corva Coleman, President Trump says he w...
conference today in the Oval Office with military leaders.
He says he'll discuss the war in Iran.
“This comes after Trump used profanity online over the weekend.”
He's demanding that Tehran opened the Strait of Hormuz to shipping. And Piers Mar Elias and says he is set another deadline. The latest moving of the Gold Post is opening the Strait of Hormuz. Donald Trump now says the Strait must be opened by Tuesday or else. But that's a big difference from what he was saying last week that the U.S. didn't
need to open the Strait. The U.S. allies in Europe should deal with it themselves, or that the Strait would open naturally when the war ended. And the fact that he goes back and forth so many times gives the impression that Trump is making it up as he goes along, and that there isn't a clear strategy even when the
military strategy may largely be working. And Piers Mar Elias and reporting Israel says it is killed the intelligence chief of
Iran's revolutionary guard corps, as follows, and Iranian missile attack that killed at
“least four people in Israel, and Piers Daniel Estrin has more from Tel Aviv.”
Iran has confirmed the killing of Majid Hadami, intelligence chief of the paramilitary revolutionary guard corps. Israel's defense minister said Israel would continue to quote hunt down Iran's leaders one by one, and threaten to destroy Iran's national infrastructure if Iran continues firing at civilians in Israel.
In the Israeli city of Haifa, rescue crews found the bodies of four people under the rubble of an apartment building hit Sunday by Iranian missile. Iran fired rounds of missiles in the middle of the night Monday, seriously wounding one person in Central Israel, authority say. As Israel burns through its stockpile of interceptors that shoot down missiles, Israel
has announced a plan to speed up production. Daniel Estrin and PR news Tel Aviv. NASA's Artemis crew will start a fly by of the moon later today. For person crew will also surpass the distance record set by the Apollo 13 crew by more than 4,000 miles from Central Florida Public Media, Brendan Burden, has more.
At its farthest point, the Orion spacecraft will be just over a quarter of a million miles
from home. During the fly by of the far side of the moon, the crew will take geological observations and photos of the surface. NASA's Kelsey Young says, even though satellites have observed this part of the moon, the human eye can see things cameras can't pick up.
We understand what it's made out of. We understand the topography, but we don't know what the crew are going to see in these specific illumination conditions from a scientific perspective and that's exciting. The crew is expected to observe about 35 geological features snapping thousands of photos. At the end of the fly by the crew will begin its journey home, splashing down Friday
off the coast of California. Friend Pyrenees, I'm Brendan Burden in Orlando. You're listening to NPR. A federal judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration's effort to force colleges to gather information on race in their admissions process and then hand that over to
the administration. The federal judge ruled the Trump administration does have the right to collect the data that called the process rushed. The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo says it will take some migrants deported by the U.S. the Congolese Ministry of Communications says this will be on a temporary
basis and that the U.S. will pay the costs. The Trump administration has transferred migrants to at least two other African nations, Eswattini, and sounds Sudan. A recently published study from the University of Southern California finds that being vaccinated against shingles may help slow the process of aging, Ashley Miln Tite, has more.
This study is part of a growing body of research that shows receding the shingles' shot may do more than prevent the painful illness itself. Island Crimans is a professor of gyroontology at the University of Southern California. She's co-author of the new study that looked at adults who had received the shingles' vaccine.
They looked younger. The ways that are basic differences in biology compared to those who haven't had the shot. Crimans says those who have been vaccinated showed fewer signs of aging at the molecular
“level and showed improvements in a key immune response.”
They also had less inflammation. For NPR News, I'm Ashley Miln Tite. On Wall Street in pre-market trading, Dow Futures are down by about 30 points. I'm Korvakulman, NPR News.


