"Lie," from NPR News, I'm Lakshmi, saying.
The House has approved a bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security minus immigration
“enforcement through the end of the fiscal year.”
The measure was approved with a voice vote after weeks of delays and infighting among Republicans on the path forward to fund the agency. The measure now heads to President Trump's desk for his signature. Republicans are also working on a separate partisan bill to fund immigration operations using a tool of the budget process known as reconciliation.
President Trump has selected a new nominee for Surgeon General.
This will be his third Surgeon General pick of this term after his first two choices
did not make it through the nomination and confirmation process. Your San Piers Daniel Kurtz-Labin, Trump posted that he will nominate Dr. Nicole Sapphire for the position. So White House withdrew its first pick, Dr. Janet Nechawatt, after scrutiny over her credentials. Trump's second pick, Dr. Casey Means, stalled in the Senate.
In a separate post, the President seems to blame Louisiana Republican Senator Bill Cassidy for means his failure in the Senate.
“Cassidy himself, a doctor, grilled means in her confirmation hearing about her beliefs”
about vaccines. Trump wrote that he hopes Cassidy is defeated in his primary. Sapphire the new nominee is a radiologist.
Unlike Trump's first pick, Nechawatt, she has also been a Fox News contributor.
Daniel Kurtz-Labin and PR News, the White House. The UN Secretary General says the world could face a global recession as the war in Iran enters its third month and the straight-of-arms remains effectively closed. And PR's Michelle Kellerman reports he's trying to get the straight open, at least for fertilizer to prevent a food crisis.
Secretary General Antonio Guterre says, even if this straight reopens today, supply chains will take months to recover. He says the conflict is driving up inflation and the longer this goes on, the higher the cost to humanity. So he had a message for all those involved.
“"Open the straight, let all ships pass, let the global economy breathe again."”
Guterre says, sending a top UN official to Oman and Iran to discuss the idea of a humanitarian corridor. But he calls that the worst case scenario, if the straight remains restricted. Michelle Kellerman and PR news, the State Department. The historic northern Virginia town of front Royal is extending its own regal welcome to King
Charles III in Queen Camilla. The Associated Press capturing the sound of crowds lined along means street waving flags and cheering as the British couples more to Kate arrives earlier. The World Cup will left the White House and visited Arlington National Cemetery. This is the final day of King Charles State visit to the United States.
From Washington, this is NPR News. It appears artificial intelligence is not better than alternatives so when it comes to forecasting extreme weather events. NPR's Rebecca Hershey reports a new study finds AI, misjudges extremely hot and extremely cold weather.
Researchers compared AI weather models to other forecasting models that use physics. The authors found that AI was not as accurate when it came to very hot weather, very cold weather, and wind storms. Previous studies and real-world tests have found that some AI models are extremely good at predicting normal every day weather.
But the new study finds that doesn't extend to extreme weather events. Rebecca Hershey and PR News. There are more than 50 bald eagle nest with cameras across the country each spring when the baby eagle has hatched the real fun begins. Here is how Jenny Boysard describes Jackie and Shadow, her favorite bald eagle couple.
They act like an old married couple sometimes a lot of times should try to go in for a kiss in the back of the baby and he's like not ready yet. Boysard is the media manager at Friends of Big Bear Valley, the non-profit that runs the camera. She's one of 1,000 sometimes millions of people who watch bald eagle camera live streams.
Jackie and Shadow's nest is in the San Bernardino Mountains in California. The cameras give anyone anywhere and at any time exclusive access to the tragedies, scandals and love of bald eagle families. People watching from around the country have created communities deeply invested in these domestic dramas.
Let's record burger reporting, it's NPR News.
This year for the first time in NPR's history, public media is operating without federal
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