Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Herbst.
President Trump says the peace deal between the U.S. and Iran will be signed tomorrow,
though nothing's finalized yet.
“Emperor's deep-a-shiver on reports, succumbs after a week of reignited tensions in”
the region, the both sides have wanted to see an end to the conflict that the U.S. and Israel started. Trump posted on social media saying the deal is scheduled to be signed tomorrow. Pakistan, which has been facilitating the deal, also indicating an imminent agreement that would be signed virtually.
But details are still not yet clear on what the agreement will contain. Trump says immediately after signing the deal, the straight-of-hormous would be "open to all," and that the agreement will ensure Iran has no nuclear weapon. Trump is also scheduled to meet with allies in the region, including Qatar and Egypt, while at the G7 summit in the coming days.
The Fetal Judge has ordered the Trump administration to restore signs that national parks
that it had previously removed or revised, saying changing public displays to fit up preferred political narrative, violates congressional mandates, impures Chloe Veltman reports. Judge Angel Kelly's Friday ruling orders the administration to restore a slavery exhibit at Independence Park in Philadelphia, and signage acknowledging climate change at Fort
“Sumpter in South Carolina among other public displays.”
In March, President Trump ordered the removal or changing of materials that may inappropriately disparage Americans or cast the U.S. in a negative light. The ruling accuses the administration of censorship and blocks further changes or removals and gives the government 21 days to fully restore all altered or removed content. The ruling is a result of a lawsuit by the National Parks Conservation Association and
others accusing the Trump administration of, quote, "mouncing a sustained campaigns where raised history and undermined science, neither the department of the interior nor the parks service responded to NPR's request for comment. Chloe Veltman MP on use." In eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, teams of volunteers are going door-to-door to raise
awareness about Ebola, but despite efforts to contain the virus, it continues to spread, and at Livingstone reports. In Buenia, in a Tory province, the epicenter of the Ebola outbreak, people no longer greet each other with a handshake. Teams of volunteers have been going door-to-door to raise awareness about the disease.
City residents consistently tell the volunteers that they don't have the money to buy disinfectant and they implore the government for help. Officials figures say that 139 people have died from Ebola, but the actual number is probably far higher. On Friday afternoon, a man riding on the back of a motorbike taxi in Buenia, vomited
blood, and then died on the street. His driver fled the scene. Although his death hasn't yet been confirmed as due to Ebola, stories of similar incidents have become common. And there's a feeling that people are increasingly wary.
For NPR news, I'm Emmett Livingstone in Buenia. Listening to NPR news in Washington. The Kennedy Center says President Trump's name has been removed from the facade of the building. This after federal judges denied late stage appeals. The removal, which was done behind a tarp took place early this morning, crowds had gathered
chanting, "Take it down." Trump took over the memorial to the late President John F. Kennedy in February amid his wider effort to put his stamp on Washington, D.C. He can be dangerous for pregnant women. A new study looks at how certain proteins inside a pregnant body responds to heat and how
that can affect both the mother and the fetus. And here's Alejandro Verunda has more. One way body's deal with heat stress is to ramp up the production of molecules called heat shock proteins. Find the mentally their job is to protect the cell.
That's Carrie Bretton. She's an environmental epidemiologist at Washington University in St. Louis.
“She says that's extra important during pregnancy when feeling too much heat can affect both”
mother and fetus. The new study in environmental science and technology shows that heat exposure ramped up the amount of protective heat shock proteins in most pregnant women's blood. But some women who developed lots of the proteins ended up having their babies early. It's a hint about why some pregnant people might be more sensitive to heat than others.
Alejandro Verunda and Piano's. World Cup soccer games are underway in North America. Tonight Scotland's men's team is playing for the first time in nearly 30 years. They will play a game against Haiti. Jeanine Herbst and you're listening to NPR News from Washington.
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