"Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Herbst.
With the U.S. and Iran say the signing of a peace deal is imminent, but disagree on
when it will happen. President Trump says it will happen tomorrow, but a top Iranian official doesn't think it will be that soon, as NPR's carry-con reports." Trump posted that a deal to end fighting between the U.S. and Iran is "scheduled to get signed on Sunday."
“Many added that the "strait of Hormuz," a key transport route for the world's oil”
and gas supply, will be "open to all." Pakistani officials who have been key mediators said a deal was expected within 24 hours and would be signed electronically. But on Saturday, spokesman for Iran's Foreign Ministry said a deal was coming, but "we will have to wait and see about the exact date," adding it will not be Sunday.
Neither side has provided details of an agreement, other than Iran would open the "strait," the U.S. would lift its blockade and the current ceasefire would be extended for 60 days. Kerry Con and PR News, Tel Aviv. President Trump's name has been removed from the facade of the John F. Kennedy Center for
the Performing Arts in Washington after federal courts denied late-stage appeals. And Pierce Corrivalment has more. The Department of Justice filed an notice of compliance with the order to remove Trump's name on Saturday. The takedown occurred two weeks after a federal judge ruled the addition of Trump's name last December was illegal and required congressional approval.
Mallory Miller is a co-founder of Hands-of-the-art's.
“The activism group has spent months campaigning for the removal of Trump's name.”
"Well, this surely won't be the last time that Mr. Trump's overreach into our institutions is defeated.
It was the first time that his name was taken off of something.
And I'm so proud that Hands-of-the-art's got to be a part of that." The Kennedy Center did not immediately respond to NPR's request for comment. Chloe Veltman and PR News. And Thropic abruptly shut down its latest AI models after the Trump administration banned the use of those by foreign nationals and Pierce John Ruitt reports.
According to a statement from anthropic, the government's directive cited unspecified national security concerns. It ordered a suspension of access by foreign nationals to anthropics, fable five, and with those five models that includes foreigners inside and outside the U.S. and even foreigners working for anthropic.
The mythos AI model has been a source of buzz in recent months, and Thropic decided not to release it to the public in March because the company believed it could potentially help hackers exploit computer security flaws.
“So it came up with a workaround, Fable Five, an advanced model with extensive safeguards”
was released this week. And Thropic says it thinks the government is concerned that there may be a way to jailbreak the model to get around those safeguards, but anthropic says it disagrees with the ban. John Ruitt and PR News.
You're listening to NPR News from Washington. In California, firefighters are still battling a huge warehouse fire and Tracy about an hour south of Sacramento as authorities warn people who are sensitive to smoke to stay indoors, the fire has been burning for three days in the city of 100,000, fire officials say the area will remain smoky for a few days as they work to put out the fire at the
medical equipment warehouse, officials a poorly functioning sprinklers and hydrants with little to no flow from the building's fire suppression system are hindering firefighter efforts. The structure of the building is being assessed and there's no word yet on a cause. In Florida, law enforcement often searches rivers and swamps to find missing people, but
now a crime-solving order is helping crack those cold cases. Kathy Carter, from member station, WSF has more. In Sarasota County, Florida, my castle runs through training exercises with splash, an Asian small-cloth order. Splash.
Here we go. Yeah. I hear you talking. Oh, you want some more fish. Turns out, honors are exceptionally suited for underwater recovery work.
They can stay submerged for up to eight minutes. All it sees is but going as he's heading out and then he comes back and he grabs my mask. So let me know that he's found something. Hatsil has been training rescue dogs for decades. He got the idea to train an order in Thailand where fishermen use them to hurt fish into
nets. Splash is trained to detect the odor of human remains. So far he's been on 30 missions with nine successful lines. For NPR News, I'm Kathy Carter in Tampa. Stock Sea sawed on Wall Street this week but ended higher for the week both the downess
and P500 rose about two thirds of a percent. I'm Janine Herbst NPR News in Washington. This is our glass. On this American life, when they mean like, it's a good mystery. Sometimes it's 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. Mysteries of every size each week.


