"Live from MPR news in Washington, I'm no arom.
Iran carried out a series of drone and missile attacks on Bahrain and Kuwait overnight,
“responding to a new round of U.S. air strikes on Tehran.”
Speaking through a BBC interpreter, Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Aragvi, called on all parties to abide by the memo of understanding, signed with the U.S. "Any attempt to adopt new or separate arrangements from those currently being implemented by the Islamic Republic of Iran will only complicate the situation. Delay the reopening of the straight-of-hormous and raise the level of tension.
As we witnessed over the past two nights with incidents in the straight-of-hormous that let to increase tensions and clashes. I urge all parties not to interfere in the management of the straight-of-hormous or in the rearrangements being made by the Islamic Republic of Iran to reopen the straight." Iran says any challenge to its control of the straight will jeopardize its reopening.
International rescue teams have joined efforts in Venezuela to find tens of thousands of people, believe missing after last week's earthquakes. More than 1,400 people died, NPR's Aitor Parallel to Reports Destruction is widespread. The whole coast of the state of LaWayda is now lined with other destruction. Right now, I'm in front of what used to be a 16-story building below all the Saundae towers
that overlook to the Caribbean. The two earthquakes have turned it into a pile of rubble, all that's left is a bangled mess of rebars, and a pile of concrete that is now stacked five stories high. The families are desperately looking for their loved ones. As they say, one rescue crew said it was too dangerous to work here, but they continued
digging. A smell of death fills the air, but they want to find their loved ones dead or alive. Itapralta en Gatia la Mar Venezuela. House Speaker Mike Johnson says he'll send to the White House tomorrow, a bipartisan bill designed to make housing more affordable, and he thinks the president will sign it.
Trump had refused to sign it last week saying Congress was first approved to save America
Act, which tightens election laws, and PR is Mar Eliason has more.
“I think it's an expression of how frustrated Donald Trump is about the limits of his power”
because he sees his power as unlimited. That's how he's described it. Whether it's his own Republicans in the Senate, who although they are pretty loyal to him, don't do every single thing he wants when he wants it. And he was hoping to pass this bill, and he is said, if we pass this bill, we win the
midterms. If we don't pass the save act, we won't. Now Republicans think holding up the housing bill could hurt them in the midterms. Democrats certainly will take advantage of it. I can imagine them starting to run ads that say, you know, Congress voted to help you
buy a home. Donald Trump is not on your side. NPR is Mar Eliason. This is NPR news in Washington. A skydiving plane crashed in northeastern France this morning.
“Authorities say all 11 people on board were killed.”
The plane went down near a shopping center, no one on the ground was hurt. The cause is under investigation. Comedian Mel Brooks is celebrating a major milestone today. NPR's Bob Mandelo has details. He's turned 100, which still makes him a spring chicken mix of the character he and Carl
Reiner made famous. 2000 years old. That true, sir. Yes, you want to see my driver's license? 2000 year old man had seen it all, and so had Brooks in his movies in history of the World
Part 1. He was Moses. He played the lead in his spoof of vertigo, and even saying the title song. And after creating Getsmark for TV, writing and directing 11 feature films and turning two of them into Broadway musicals, the 100 year old Mel Brooks has another movie on
the way. Space balls. The new one is just by the old one. But it's newer. With that in 2027, Bob Mandelo and PR News NASA is planning a mission to keep an aging
telescope from crashing to earth. The Swift Observatory launched in 2004 has been sinking faster and faster because of intense solar activity. NASA will send a space robot to boost it into a higher, more stable orbit. The robots about the size of a small refrigerator.
It is three arms with finger-like pinching grippers. It could be launched as early as this week and reached a telescope in about a month. I'm Nora Rom and PR News in Washington. This is our glass. On this American life, one thing we like is 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. This is true. Mysteries of every size each week.


