"Line from NPR News in Washington, on Corva Coleman, President Trump is at th...
in France, where he's discussing his new agreement with Iran to cease fighting. Trump says
“there will be a signing ceremony with Iran on Friday and Switzerland, the main focus”
of the agreement is to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and allow oil tanker traffic to resume. And beer's Eleanor Beardsley reports there are some tensions at the summit." President Trump poopooed French President Emmanuel Macron's offer of help in opening the Strait of Hormuz, saying it would be fully open Friday and that, quote, "The U.S.
had negotiated a very powerful deal."
"When did you write it not?" Macron welcomed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to the summit, ending the war as a top priority for the four European members of the G7. Trump said Russia should make a deal and that he believes President Vladimir Putin is open to ending the war, Putin sent his own message to the G7, as the summit opened Monday
morning, he fired 60 ballistic missiles on Kiev. Eleanor Beardsley and Pernu's Paris The Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo is in the grip of a major Ebola outbreak.
“The World Health Organization says there are more than 800 confirmed cases and nearly 200 deaths.”
The virus is spreading amid funding gaps and disinformation, and at Livingstone reports
from Democratic Republic of the Congo.
"I'm in Mongualu Hospital, which is up on a hill with a commanding view of the surrounding town. The town is a small place, but just standing outside the hospital gives you an idea of how hard Ebola has hit Mongualu in the space of an hour or so, an ill patient has already been brought in, and disinfection teams immediately got to work on the ambulance.
"And in the background, there's the constant sound of women weeping." "I'm at Livingstone reporting. Executives with a big tech firm Anthropic met with officials from the Commerce Department yesterday. This is after the Trump administration ordered the company to suspend its latest AI models.
“The federal government is concerned the models could be deployed by military intelligence”
of U.S. adversaries, including China or Russia. And P.R.'s deepishiveram has more." The Trump administration's citing national security reasons said Anthropic had to shut down its new models to anyone who isn't a U.S. citizen that includes foreign nationals residing in the U.S. and even Anthropic employees who aren't citizens.
On Friday evening Anthropic announced that in order to comply, it had to shut down its Fable 5 and mythos 5 models for everyone. In a statement, Anthropic attributes the order to quote a misunderstanding. The Trump administration has clashed with Anthropic before the AI company sued the defense department earlier this year after fallout from the Pentagon wanting Anthropic to loosen
its safety standards. Deepishiveram and P.R. News. "You're listening to NPR News from Washington." Health experts say that "tick bites tend to spike in the U.S. during the months of May and June, and P.R.'s paying long reports on some precautions people can take before
having outdoors. This spring takes started biting a few weeks early, then there was a dip likely to weather. Now, they're at an full force, especially in the northeast and Midwest. That's according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which tracks rates of tick bite visits to the ER. Here's Allison Hingley with CDC. "According to our tick bite tracker, ticks are out everywhere, and there are a lot of reasons
to wear repellent and do all the things you can to prevent tick bites." "Tick bites can cause lime and other diseases or provoke serious allergies. If you're out in grassy or forested areas, which are likely, Hingley recommends pre-treating clothes with an insecticide called Permatrin, wearing long sleeves and conducting a full body tick check when you return. Ping Huang and PR News."
"Alasca election officials have determined that a Senate candidate named Dan Sullivan cannot appear on the state Republican ballot to challenge Republican incumbent senator, who is also named Dan Sullivan. Election officials cited complaints from the Alaska Republican Party and the National Republican Senatorial Committee. They say the challenger only changed his voter registration to the GOP just before he filed to run. Challenger Dan Sullivan had
previously insisted he was not working with any candidate or party when he wanted to face incumbent senator Dan Sullivan. Alaska's primary is an August. You're listening to 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."
Mysteries have every size each week, this American life, wherever you get your podcasts.


