"Live from NPR news in Washington, I'm Dan Rumran.
The ceasefire between Israel and Iran appears to be holding despite new military strikes Monday. However both nations are warning each other they could lunch with territory attacks if provoked." Iran's military said it will halt offensive strikes, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu suggested the latest round of fighting is over. NPR's Jaina Raf is more from Bay Route where Israeli and his bill of forces have been fighting. "We are seemingly at a standstill," President Trump has said he's close to a deal. But Iran has made clear that close doesn't really mean the same thing to them.
“I mean, at issue are some very important things, whether Iran gets revenue from the”
straight of harm moves.
And then this first phase doesn't even discuss the nuclear issue, which the U.S. has said was
the most important one. That's NPR's Jaina Raf in Bay Route, a new report by the government accountability office finds the Trump administration has put preparations for the 2030 census at risk by making last-minute changes to a field test from the National Headcount. As NPR's Hansi, the Wang reports the Congressional Watchdog Agency is raising concerns
about the accuracy of the census. With a little explanation, the Trump administration canceled plans for a 2026 census test in rural areas and on indigenous tribal lands, and also removed forms and Spanish and Chinese, and got rid of tests for counting residents in college dorms and other group-style living quarters.
Lisa Van Arsdale, an acting director of the government at Calbili office, says these changes could hurt the 2030 census.
“"The census might not know that they work, and then they'll run the 2030 decennial, possibly”
using features that might affect the quality of the information they collect. It matters because the census underpins congressional districts, it helps determine where hundreds of billions of federal dollars go annually and it supports private sector decision-making." Door knockers are now trying to interview households with a 2026 census test in parts of Alabama
and South Carolina on Zila Wong and Pernuys. The U.S. men's National Soccer team is set to face Paraguay in the opening game of the World Cup Friday, and Piaz Rafio-Nam reports there are still plenty of tickets available. The opening game for the World Cup is traditionally one of the hardest tickets to get in the tournament, but this time Piaz Rafio-Nam has over a hundred tickets left for the U.S.
first game this week, and there are thousands more in-reseal platforms such as Stophobb
or Piaz Rafio-Nam Marketplace, many at below face value. A big reason for that, the prices. The most expensive tickets for that game cost over $2700, while the cheapest are over a thousand. Canada, one of the three co-hosts of the tournament, also had unsolved tickets for its opening
game against Bosnia Herzegovina this week, Rafio-Nam, in Piaz Rafio-Nam. Stocksfinist mixed on Monday, this is NPR News. Game 3 of the NBA Finals Monday night was won by the San Antonio Spurs at New York's Madison Square Garden. The next now lead the best of seven series two games to one.
The final score, San Antonio 115 New York 1111, President Trump attended the game he and others sat in an enhanced security suite with the New York Nick's owner James Dolan, Game 4 is Wednesday night in New York. In Bolivia, anti-government protest have for weeks paralyzed major cities. Katherine Osborn reports the President signed a new law Monday making it easier to send
them in the army rising fuel prices and government austerity have led to a drop in popularity for center-right President Rodrigo Paz after only seven months in office. His election was part of a right-wing wave in Latin America, but the global spike in fuel costs made his economic plans more complicated. Opposition activists and unions have blockaded streets in major cities.
Ten people have died in the unrest, officials say. Until now, the President has mostly held back for using security forces to clear roads,
“but lawmakers back stronger presidential powers to do so after key services like hospitals”
remain blocked from traffic. For NPR News, I'm Katherine Osborn in Rio de Janeiro. A federal appeals court Monday in Atlanta ruled that Alabama's use of nitrogen gas to execute prisoners needs additional study to determine if it violates the Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment, however the court did not issue a stay in the planned
execution of a 58-year-old man. This is NPR. Support for NPR comes from NPR. This is our glass. On this American life, when they mean like, it's a good mystery.
Sometimes about really big things, but most times, the little mysteries are the best. Our lost and found is currently filled with pants.
I don't know what I've never seen this happen.
This is true. This is true. The mysteries of every size each week, this American life, wherever you get your podcasts.


