"Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Nor-Rom.
Iran's military said today it closed the straight-o-poor moves again, because of Israel's
“continued attacks on Hezbollah in Lebanon and P.R.s. Jain-A-Raph has more.”
Iran is now saying that it was Washington's job to ensure Israel adhered to that ceasefire, and it calls it a violation of the understanding that fighting is still going on. They say that violation those ceasefire violations call the entire agreement between the U.S. and Iran, including the opening of a straight-o-arm move into question, that's after Israeli attacks Friday in Saturday.
Mostly, southern Lebanon, where Israeli forces have invaded and they're trying to take more territory. His Bolaf is fighting back there, so not much of a ceasefire. NPR's Jain-A-Raph, Pakistani officials who have been mitigating the talks between U.S. and Iran on ending the war, along with Qatar, say the negotiations will resume
tomorrow in Switzerland. Tension between Senate Republicans and President Trump is nearing a breaking point. Trump is venting for a situation that the chamber is refusing to pass a strict voter ID law, and P.R. Sam Greenglass has more.
“Senate Majority Leader John Foon had a plan to reauthorize a key spy tool, confirm a permanent”
director of national intelligence before Trump's more controversial acting pick could take over. Then in the middle of the night, Trump fired off a post-blowing up that plan. Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska later compared it to sled dogs. If some big distraction, like a moose comes through, and you got half the team going over
here, and half the team going over here, it is chaos. And then what that mushroom has to do is he's got to stop and spend all his time untangling this mess. Dune says he's trying to stay focused on an agenda that will help Republicans win the mid-turns.
Sam Greenglass and P.R. News Washington. Voters head to the polls in Utah next week for primary elections. Several candidates, without ties to the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, will challenge former congressman Ben Megatams, a new district, and P.R.S. Mohamed Javid reports.
“The Democratic primary next week, Bitt's McCadams, who some delegates view as Duke”
Conservative, against three more liberal Democrats. None of whom is Mormon. Matthew Bowman is a chair of Mormon studies at Claremont Graduate University.
Some of the interesting to see how that turns out, and if someone who has never been
the LDS can actually win as a Democrat, which is a double a hard thing to do in Utah, I've been both of those at the same time. So that'll be I can convince your current harbinger of how Utah politics might change over the next couple of generations. Bowman says that the city's demographics are changing.
That, and a blue-leaning congressional district, have changed the way the city views politics. Mohamed Javid and P.R. News. This is N.P.R. News. The National Weather Service warns of extreme heat at the Grand Canyon next week, with temperatures as high as 110 degrees.
Three hikers have died there in recent days of heat-related causes. Scientists say they've found the oldest known traces of the plague in prehistoric teeth, N.P.R. is Nate Rot reports. At international team of researchers, we're doing a genetic analysis of ancient human teeth found in southern Siberia when they found a surprise.
DNA belonging to the bacteria that causes the plague. The 5,500-year-old bacteria was different from later versions that caused the black death in Europe millennia later, but the study's lead author, roaring the cloud, and anthropologists at the University of Oxford, says its existence in hunter-gatherers changes a long-held theory.
The theory was that we shouldn't see major devastating outbreaks of its disease at effect in power communities until the neolithic until we have this farming revolution. When people started living in closer quarters, this new finding, he says, shows dangerous pathogens can affect people in all social structures. It rot, and PR news.
The cyclist arrested near the reflecting pool in the National Ball said today he was not a vandal. 67-year-old David Hurn told the Washington Post he didn't destroy or break or appeal anything. He said he was riding his bike yesterday when he noticed part of the blue liner it was partially detached from the pool bottom.
He reached into the water to see what it felt like, and then was handcuffed. Whereas on Trump has accused, quote, "radical left lunatics for the peeling and increased algae at the pool. I'm Nora Rom, and PR news in Washington." This is our glass.
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