"Live from NBR News in Washington, encore of a Coleman, this hour the U.
is starting to release the final opinions of this term.
“One top case is on birthright citizenship, a constitutional right, President Trump wants to”
limit." Palestinian authorities in the occupied West Bank say Israeli soldier shot dead a 15-year-old during a raid yesterday. This comes as a new UN report says Israeli security forces to liberally target Palestinian children.
You have Musla reports from Ramallah. The Palestinian health ministry says 15-year-old Amir Jabar was shot in his head and chest. The Israeli military says troops fired shots at Palestinians hurling rocks at the Madramallah. The military did not acknowledge the death of the teenager but said it's reviewing the incident. And you report by the United Nations Human Rights Council says Israeli security forces deliberately
target Palestinian children resulting in war crimes in the West Bank and evidence of genocide in Gaza. Israel called the 94-page U.N. report flowed and a libelous sham.
“Israel, any human rights group, bait sale in says soldiers killed 54 Palestinian children and”
teens last year in the West Bank. For NPR News, I'm Normus Leh and Ramallah. Stocks opened higher this morning as China reported an uptick in manufacturing activity. NPR Scott Horsley reports the Dow Jones industrial average rose about 90 points in early trading.
exports gave a boost to China's factories this month as domestic demand in the country remains limited.
Goods producers in the world's second biggest economy are still heavily dependent on export
markets. We'll get an update on U.S. factory activity tomorrow. Asian stocks were mixed overnight down in Hong Kong but up in Shanghai, Seoul and Tokyo. The Japanese yen filled with nearly four decade low against the dollar. President Trump has tapped acting labor secretary Keith Sonderling to fill a cabinet post
“on a permanent basis if confirmed by the Senate, Sonderling would replace Lori Chavez”
Deremer, who resigned in April following investigations of possible misconduct. Scott Horsley, in Pair News, Washington. The educational testing service, the nonprofit organization behind major standardized test, is acquiring the ACT and beer's listen ad warning reports. BTS administers a number of exams already.
The GRE for graduate admissions and the TOEFL, an English language test taken by many international students. And now they'll take over the ACT.
More than a million students take the ACT each year as part of college applications
and to get their high school diploma. More than a dozen states include taking the ACT as a requirement to graduate. ETS has struggled in recent years with layoffs and biodes. It was historically the administrator of the SAT, another college admissions test that rivals the ACT, but in 2024 the college board, which owns the SAT, took the administration
over. You're listening to NPR. The US Supreme Court has issued its first ruling this morning. It says states may ban transgender girls from participating in sports at publicly funded schools, just as Brett Kavanaugh wrote the majority opinion in support of the bands.
At the heart of the case is Title IX, the landmark civil rights law, it bars sex-based discrimination, education programs, and get federal money. It was enacted in 1972, it has revolutionized women's sports by requiring equal treatment for men and women, including proportional scholarship funding and equal facilities. But in recent years, 27 states have barred trans women and girls from participating in
girls' sports. The Alaska Supreme Court has ordered the state division of elections to restore a retired school teacher named Dan Sullivan to the ballot. He's filed to run as a Republican against Senator Dan Sullivan. Senator Sullivan and his allies say the retiree is a fraud trying to confuse voters and
throw the race for the Democratic candidate, Mary Peltola.
Senator Peltola and her party say they had nothing to do with the second Sullivan candidacy.
And the retired teacher insists he's a genuine candidate running because he's unsatisfied with the incumbent who shares his name. The state Supreme Court left it up to the division of elections to decide how the challengers' name will appear on the ballot. The two Sullivan's have different middle initials, but the division says that wouldn't
differentiate them enough. Let's lose Ruskin reporting. This is NPR. Let's talk about the fact that you're not in therapy, that's fastened. Don't miss our full conversation and the rest of our games, listen to the weight weight
don't tell me podcast in the NPR app or wherever you get your podcast.


