"Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Louise Skivoni.
President Trump at the Sour is in Ankara Turkey for a NATO summit, a top focus among
“the allies will continue to be the war between Russia and Ukraine.”
President Trump and Ukrainian President Zelensky are slated to meet on the sidelines of the summit tomorrow. Stocks open mixed this morning as President Trump celebrates Walmart's price cuts, and PR Scott Horsley reports that Dow Jones industrial average was higher in early trading." Walmart says it's cutting prices on hamburger, and so to pop this summer, the Trump administration
out of the rollbacks in a social media post. Grocery prices in May were up 2.7% from a year ago, looking to update on June's grocery prices. Next week. A tanker carrying natural gas through the straight-of-war moves caught fire, after being
struck by a projectile, authorities in Oman say they're investigating. The eventual leaders in Canada are proposing a pipeline to carry crude oil from Western Canada to the Atlantic coast. Canada is exploring new markets for its exports in response to stiff tariffs in the United States.
Scott Horsley, in Piano, is Washington. The United States is condemning a missile test conducted by China that included a launch from a nuclear-powered submarine into the Pacific Ocean from Taipei. Young Commons and Brumby has more. The US accuses Beijing of a "rapid and opaque nuclear weapons" buildup, and says it will
continue to urge China to engage in meaningful arms control discussions. The statements come after Beijing launched a missile on Monday. China's state media describes the launch as routine, adding that the launch was not aimed at any country. Despite this, the launch has drawn criticism from nearby governments with Australia's Prime Minister
Anthony Albanese describing the launch as provocative, or Secretary of Taiwan's National Security Council, Joseph Wu, referred to China as a bully. The MP on New Zealand comes in Brumby, in Taipei. Once again, America's soccer team has been unable to gain traction in a final thrust to a possible World Cup championship.
MPR's Becky Sullivan looks at the road to Belgium's 4-1 victory over the US team last night in Seattle. They had this promising young team back in 22.
“You might remember that should have had these past four years to improve, and mature,”
they had all these guys who were getting experienced on top-light clubs in Europe. They had the name-branded coach, Marisiopo Chitino, they had the home-fielded vanages you mentioned, and yet, somehow all of that amounted to just another exit, it's actually the same stage as their previous three World Cup appearances a loss in the round of 16,
and for the third time in a row, at the hands of a European opponent.
MPR's Becky Sullivan controversy hung over the team's last game, with the inclusion of Foular and Balagan for the US, after President Trump's appeal of his suspension to FIFA's president, the Belgium team will now advance to play against Spain on Friday. Wall Street at the start of the Dow basically flat the Nasdaq off 245. This is NPR News in Washington.
The Trump administration could soon make peptide therapies more available in the US. The injectables are promoted for wellness and longevity, but Biden era restrictions have largely kept them off the market. As NPR's Will Stone reports an FDA panel is expected to make recommendations that could lead to changes.
These peptides are not FDA-approved and have not been studied in large rigorous trials with humans. They're often touted for injury recovery, muscle growth, metabolism, and more. But compounding pharmacies in the US haven't been legally allowed to offer them. Sean Norian is CEO of Empower Pharmacy, one of the peptide makers hoping the FDA will
open up the market again.
“I think the FDA would much rather see these medications sourced from regulated entities”
instead of patients being forced to go to unregulated sources. The FDA's own scientists have come out against doing this because of a lack of evidence, a committee charged with making recommendations on some of the most popular peptides we'll meet later this month, Will Stone and PR News. In Paris, far right leader Marine Le Pen has moved to step closer to a possible run for
the French presidency. A Paris appeals court softened a ban on elected office for her while upholding an embezzlement conviction, court of appeals judges sentenced her to three years of imprisonment with two suspended and one within electronic tag. In London, Prince Harry has lost a $50 million lawsuit against the publisher of the Daily
Mail. A judge ruled that Harry failed to demonstrate his privacy invasion charges. The fatal shooting of a teenager at a protest in Seattle has gone unsolved for six years.
Our investigation has uncovered new evidence and witnesses who say they've never talked
to police. Did police ever call you? Not once. Listen to Weakey Bus Safe, a new true crime series on the embedded podcast from NPR.


