"Live from NPR news in Washington, I'm Noraram.
It's really military officials say they carried out a strike in Lebanon.
“One day after the two sides signed a framework agreement, the set out of half to restore”
Lebanese sovereignty, and dismantle the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah, which has rejected those terms, NPR's Jawadour's Call of Reports." Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said the framework is aimed to secure Israel's withdrawal from all Lebanese territory. But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that agreement allows Israel to keep its
security zone in southern Lebanon until Hezbollah is disarmed. While handing two small pilot zones to the Lebanese army, Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadullah said that the agreement legitimizes Israel's occupation and gives it what it's failed to achieve on the battlefield. He warned that any attempt to disarm the group by force would fail and said Iran would not
sign a final deal with the United States before Israel withdraws completely. Jawadour's Call and Pianus Beirut Belgium has canceled its annual reenactment of Napoleon's defeat at the Battle of Waterloo due to an intense heat wave in Europe. Terry Shultz has more.
“With temperatures around 95 degrees Fahrenheit and a heat alert in place, organizers of an”
annual event depicting Allied forces defeating Napoleon Bonaparte's army cancelled it, saying
"Public safety comes first.
Many trains have been cancelled or stranded and authorities warn people to stay in cool environments and drink plenty of liquids." But competitive athlete, Susanne Jebrille said, "She could find a positive spin." "Living in Belgium, obviously we're not used to this type of weather." But it's interval training because obviously your heart rate is elevated when you're training
in such hot weather. The stopping regularly but then keeping your training up its excellent work out. In two Belgian cities, however, surgeries had to be suspended because a computer system located in Paris overheated and shut down. For imperial news, I'm Terry Shultz in Brussels.
Hot dry and windy weather is complicating firefighter efforts in Utah. The cottonwood fire is burned more than 92,000 acres of forest. Red flag warnings are posted throughout the western U.S. because of low humidity and strong winds. Tech companies had a rough week on Wall Street with a Nasdaq down about 4.6%.
NPR Steven Pisaaha has more. The tech sell off hit many of the major players and artificial intelligence. In video, down about 8.5%, Google parent company alphabet almost 9%, Oracle wore the 19%. SpaceX's stock value lost most of what it gained since its initial public offering earlier this month.
The AI sell off comes as investors doubt whether the tech will deliver serious returns after investors dumped hundreds of billions of dollars in the AI over recent years. Investors are also worried about a possible interest rate hike this year. After the Department of Commerce reported inflation hit at three year high in May, a 4.1% from a year earlier.
Steven Misaaha and PR news. This is NPR News in Washington. Chinese authorities are investigating a plane crash in Beijing yesterday. A single engine plane crashed into the tallest building in the city, killing the pilot the only person on board, 13 people were injured.
The Center's Ford Disease Control and Prevention is raising its response to the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo and PR's Ping-Wong reports. There have been more than 1100 cases and 300 deaths attributed to Ebola, the viral hemorrhagic fever that is circulating in the DRC and Uganda. The Africa CDC warns it could become the largest Ebola outbreak ever.
The steep rising cases and the need for assistance has caused the U.S. CDC to raise its emergency activation to level 1. An agency wide response at the highest level. Dr. Kevin Chadam Stevens, with the CDC, says that includes stepping up preparations in the U.S.
The reason the risk of Ebola spreading in the U.S. is considered low is because the U.S. has robust domestic public health capacity to contain a control in Ebola outbreak. In the past, the CDC has mounted level 1 responses a few times, including to Hurricane Katrina, the 2009 swine flu pandemic, and the 2020 COVID pandemic, Ping-Wong and PR News. Climate.gov used to be a trusted source on climate data and analysis for scientists, farmers,
and the general public, but it was shut down during government cutbacks last year, and the staff was laid off. Now the fired workers and some volunteers have set up a new site, climate.us, to fill in the gap.
“The founders say the information is important and must be protected.”
I'm Nora Ram, NPR News, in Washington. This is our class, 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 hands.
I don't know what I've never seen this happen.
This is true. Mysteries of every size each week, this American life, wherever you get your podcasts.


