"Live from NPR News in Washington on Corvo Colman, Iran says it did not agree...
new on nuclear sight inspections during the Iran-US meeting in Switzerland.
“That's despite statements from Vice President Vance that international nuclear inspectors”
could be back in Iran as soon as this week." And Pierre's carry-con reports. "The spokesman for Iran's foreign ministry told state media that there are "no new commitments on nuclear inspectors. And any new engagement would take place according to previous procedures set by Iran.
U.N. inspectors have not had access to Iran's nuclear sites since Israel and the U.S. bombed them last summer in the 12-day war. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant said Iran committed to keep the straight of our moves open and allow inspectors in Iran's foreign ministry spokesman says no concessions were made and quote, "We only managed to reclaim some of Iran's violated rights from
the American." Russian authorities say five people are dead and several dozen injured in another round of Ukrainian drone strikes. It's the latest in a series of Ukrainian attacks targeting the Russian interior and Piers Charles Mains reports from Moscow."
“The attack occurred in the Russian city of Varonage, some 400 miles from the Ukrainian border.”
Local governors said the desk occurred after drone struck what he called an industrial enterprise. Ukraine's defense ministry said the target was a plant producing electronics for missile guidance systems. Separately, Ukraine continued to attack Russian energy infrastructure with drones targeting facilities as far as central Siberia.
That sparked a fuel crisis in a growing number of Russian regions. Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky is vowed to keep up the pressure and put bring the war home to Russians until the Kremlin's conflict had started more than four years ago. Charles Mains impure news. Moscow.
Russia has sent it as past the largest housing affordability bill in decades and Piers even Besah reports the legislation passed with bipartisan support. Before passing, 85 to 5, the bill's co-sponsor, Republican Senator Tim Scott, said the bill has meant to boost the country's housing supply.
“"When you put more housing supply on the market, more people have a chance to become”
a first-time home buyer."
The bill does not order the construction of new homes, that's up to the private sector. Instead, Scott says the legislation is meant to encourage home builders by reforming parts of the permitting process. "When you cut red tape, you actually reduce the cost of housing." The bill also banned institutional investors from buying up large numbers of single-family homes,
and now heads to the House of Representatives. Steven Besaha and PR news. Stock trading may be rocky when Wall Street opens in half an hour. Nasdaq futures are down 3%. There's concern about the technology sector, and whether the federal reserve could hike
interest rates this year. In overseas trading, South Korea's index lost 10%. This is NPR. There are primary elections in three states today, Maryland, New York, and Utah. South Carolina Republicans will hold a run-off primary to choose their nominee for governor.
For the first time in modern history, Utah has a safe democratic congressional seat and that
primary campaign has been competitive. Tiny transforming robots have landed on the moon, and beer's Regina Barber reports on these companions to the first successful lunar mission from Japan. A tiny sphere the size of a baseball and only half a pound in weight cracked down the center to transform into a rover on the moon.
In a study published this month in Science Robotics, researchers outlined this unique design and how this robot performed on the moon. The first rover of its kind to do so, taking images of the lander and the lunar terrain. These are not expensive devices, and if one or two fails, then you still have others. That's Roger Weenez, a planetary scientist who didn't work on this program.
He was thoroughly impressed and said redundancy was a huge benefit. In setting the future we could be seeing these rover's exploring other planets and even asteroids. Regina Barber and PR News, whether forecasters say dangerous heat continues to lurk in the Southwest, there are heated visories in New Mexico and Texas today and extreme heat warnings
in Arizona and California. Temperatures in Phoenix could reach 112 degrees. The National Weather Service says that intense dangerous heat will persist across the west, the southwest and the southern plains into the end of the week. I'm Core of a Coleman, NPR News.
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 of every size each week.


