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NPR News: 07-04-2026 1AM EDT

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Live from NPR News, I'm Dale Wilman.

Thousands of people have been evacuated from their homes as a wildfire south of Denver

continues to burn at this hour.

The Aspenakers fire has expanded the cover about 115 square miles and is destroyed more

than 160 structures. It's one of about 40 uncontained wildfires still burning across the west, including the cottonwood fire in southwestern Utah, which has grown to about 147 square miles. The extreme heat that's broiled much of the eastern U.S. for the past several days is beginning to fade a bit, at least for now, at broad record temperatures to some areas

and caused stress, particularly for those who live in cities. Ashley Ward of Duke University's Heat Policy Innovation Hub says that's because of something called the Heat Island effect. Places that we live in are built environment, hold on to heat that's absorbed during the day.

So what happens is overnight, those things like pavement and buildings, they absorb that heat, I mean, they absorb it during the day and release it slowly at night. So this is one of the reasons why we see overnight temperatures or remaining persistently high. While the heat is dropping, it's still warm outside and humans aren't the only ones battling

the dangerously high temperatures. From Ember Station, WBHM and Birmingham, Alabama, Lauren Linnahan reports on how staff at the zoo there are keeping animals cool. Look around habitats at the Birmingham Zoo and you'll see misting fans and shady trees. Animals from cooler climates even get air conditioning.

The flamingos don't mind the heat, prancing around their pond, swapping as usual. While the elephants dip their trunks into a mud pit and sling water on themselves. Zoo CEO Chris Feffercorn says some animals have doors in their habitats that allow them to move inside. But it's up to them.

The choice and control we try to give our animals is very important to their well-being.

And just as animals enjoy sweet treats when it's hot, staff give animals frozen fruit and ice to help them stay cool. For NPR News, I'm Lauren Linnahan, in Birmingham, Alabama. Pope Leo praised America's founding principles of its welcoming of immigrants during an award ceremony Friday, Mayor Rindi with member station WHY has a report.

Pope Leo received the Liberty Medal from Philadelphia's National Constitution Center for his work defending religious liberty and freedom of conscience and expression. In a live speech from the Vatican, he said the principles of the Declaration of Independence had inspired people around the world. It was the firm resolved to achieve the noble vision the nation's founders that made America

a byword for freedom. As the country opened its doors to successive ways of immigrants.

Leo is the first ever US-born Pope and is a graduate of Villanova University outside Philadelphia.

For NPR News, I'm Mayor Rindi in Philadelphia. And you're listening to NPR News.

Health officials in France say that country experienced a major surge of deaths during last

week's heat wave. They say the country had 2,000 more deaths than from the previous week. Paris was hit the hardest with a 63% increase in deaths. Last week, France saw its hottest ever days. America's 250th anniversary celebrations include a widely criticized state fair in Washington,

D.C., but as NPR's Rachel Treesman reports, some of its past birthday parties have been controversial as well. Philadelphia hosted an extravagant world's fair in 1876. It was a hugely successful six-month showcase of American art innovation and industrial power. The city hosted another for the Cesque Centennial in 1926, but it didn't go as well.

"It's as though there really was a curse going on." Philadelphia-based historian Thomas Keele says a local political boss had the event moved to his district, which was swampy and expensive to build on, and especially wet summer, including major July 4th storms, damaged exhibits, and dampened turnout. "The aftermath was basically Philadelphia was effectively insolvent."

He says it left the city basically bankrupt on the eve of the Great Depression. Rachel Treesman and PR News. After months of rumors, Taylor Swift and Travis Kelsey are finally married, the nuttools were held Friday during a star-studded ceremony at New York's Madison Square Garden. Swift's brother served as her man of honor, and Kelsey's brother, Jason, was his best

man. The event followed a rehearsal dinner Thursday night. The couple donated $26 million this week to 20 charities just ahead of the wedding. "I'm Dale Willman, NPR News."

250 years ago, the nation's founders considered a free press a critical protection for

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