"Live from NPR news in Washington," on Core of a Coleman, President Trump is ...
to the U.S. after concluding his state visited China.
“He's claiming success with business deals, but few details have been announced.”
Before he left, Trump told Fox News that Iran has to pick between making a deal with the U.S. or, quote, "get annihilated," and PR's A.A. betrroy has the latest. The U.K.'s maritime trade operations center, which tracks maritime security in the Persian Gulf, says a ship off the coast of Aman sank after an explosion this week. It says another ship anchored off the coast of the United Arab Emirates was seized by unauthorized
personnel and taken to Iranian territorial waters on Thursday. Iran has not commented on these incidents, but Iranian foreign minister Abbas Iraq, she said Friday, Iran is not to be blamed for the situation in the state of her moves. He said Iran is defending itself, and that the street is open to quote friendly countries. Nearly all oil tankers and commercial ships have been unable to transit the state since
March due to Iranian threats following the U.S. is really war. A.A. betrroy and PR News, Dubai. "It's been a week since Britain held municipal elections. That's when the U.K.'s center left Labor Party suffered big losses. Now some potential candidates have emerged to replace the unpopular Prime Minister, and
appears Fatima Al-Qasab has more from London." A.A. betrroy contenders include stars form a health secretary where's treating, who resigned from stars as Cabinet this week. Former Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rainer has also been widely mentioned, and then there's Andy Burnham, the popular mayor of Manchester, nicknamed The King of the North.
Burnham says he'll run in a special election to try and get a seat in Parliament. That's required for him to then potentially run for the party's leadership. Obama has so far vowed to remain in office despite the sweeping election loss, Fatima Al-Qasab and PR News London." A.A. jury hearing the federal civil case against artificial intelligence company OpenAI
and its CEO, Sam Altman, will start deliberating on Monday. The case was brought by billionaire Elon Musk.
“Remember station KQED, Rachel Myro reports he helped launch OpenAI and now owns a rival”
company. Elon Musk claims his former co-founder at OpenAI betrayed their nonprofit mission to enrich themselves, to win his lawyers need the jury to doubt CEO Sam Altman's credibility. OpenAI's lawyers need the jury to doubt Musk's. Musk's attorney argued Altman and others failed to prioritize AI safety and allowed Microsoft
$13 billion investment to put the technology under the control of one company.
And as attorney argued Musk was suing for revenge, not redress, saying "Mr. Musk abandoned OpenAI for debt in 2018 and it was only after he left that the maker of chat GPT became as topend his success. For NPR News, I'm Rachel Myro." This is NPR.
Ukrainian officials have increased the dev toll to 24 people from a Russian attack on an apartment building in the capital key, official say that includes three children. The Ukrainian Air Force says the Russian attack on Thursday is Russia's biggest barrage
“of missiles and drones since the war started in 2022.”
A few months ago, community support groups in Minneapolis raised millions of dollars to help immigrants affected by the surge of federal immigration agents to Minnesota. After that ended in February, donations dried up. NPR Sergio Martinez Beltran reports, immigrants there, are still in need. In April, eviction filings in Minneapolis spiked 26% in comparison to April of last year.
That's according to Homeline, a tenant, Advocacy Group. Alexander the Agusman Gomez has been helping migrants with housing.
She started a rent relief effort in Minneapolis in January that has paid over $1.5 million
in rent. But as of lately, community members are not donating as much. They think a lot of people are just burnt out. They're burnt out. They don't have the time.
They also don't have the money anymore. Food and gas have gotten pricier and volunteers as well as donors have lives to return to. They hope others will step up. Sergio Martinez Beltran, NPR News Minneapolis.
The National Weather Service is warning the chance of severe thunderstorms today and tomorrow across parts of the central plains. The danger could include extremely large hail and more tornadoes. Some storms could persist through Sunday morning. On Corvaculman, NPR News News news shows new music, new movies, keeping up with pop culture
sometimes feels like a full-time job. Thankfully over at pop culture happy-hour, it's literally our job. We break down what's actually worth watching listening to and pretending you already knew about. So the next time someone says, "Did you see that?
You can say." Yeah. Obviously.


