Live from NPR news in Washington, I'm damn runnin.
There could be further peace talks between the United States and Iran, this despite
“the Iranian health ministries claim that American air strikes this week killed 17 people”
in injured more than 100 others. As Willah Marks reports, the status of the state of Hormood will remain central to any potential negotiations. Iran's Foreign Minister arrived in the Omani cap to the Muscat on Saturday with the possibility of further talks involving U.S. officials not yet publicly confirmed by either
side. The Iranian state backed far's news agencies said Iran will not enter into talks with American negotiators until the United States reverses its positions, as Foreign Minister Abbas Iraqi criticised the Trump administration for failing to uphold its side of a previous agreement. Earlier this week, Iranian forces fired on several commercial tankers in the state of Hormood's
precipitating retaliatory U.S. air strikes across Iran.
On truth-social Friday, President Trump promised to decimate and destroy all areas of Iran should there attempt to follow through on reported threats to assassinate him. For NPR news, I'm Willah Marks.
“A widespread dangerous heat wave is building across the U.S. triple-digit temperatures are”
expected next week across the southwest and the Great Plains, before moving to the Midwest in East Coast. Joe Weggman is a meteorologist with the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland. The next big heat wave follows right on its heels across the northern Plains, particularly,
but also including portions of the Inter-Math West around Utah, and also down into the Los Angeles Basin for next week.
The Weather Service is forecasting temperatures at 90 U.S. locations being tied or broken
by the middle of next week. The Justice Department is subpoenaed at least for journalists from the New York Times. This over-the-papers recent reporting about potential security concerns involving Air Force 1 and aircraft donated by the Cotauri government. The Times had reported President Trump left Turkey this week on the old Air Force 1 after
the Secret Service intervened. NPR's David Folk and Frick reports.
“The Times says, and FBI official initially asked the paper to hold off unpublishing, and”
then asked for its sources. The Times refused. On Friday after publication, federal agents went to the homes of several of the journalists involved to deliver the subpoenas, the Justice Department and the FBI did not return requests for comment.
David McCraw, a senior lawyer for the New York Times, called it "abrazen attempt to intimidate reporters and the Times and to prevent the public from knowing how the government operates." The journalists have been instructed to appear before a grand jury next week. David Folk and Frick and PR News. In Maine, Graham Platner is now officially out of the U.S. Senate race Democrats now have
a little more than two weeks to select a replacement in that race. This is NPR News from Washington. A 61-year-old passenger on a Ryan Air Greece to Germany flights sustained injuries on Friday when he was partially sucked out of the plane after a window broke open after takeoff. The man sustained neck and shoulder injuries as well as a friction burn.
When you say they hurt a wild bang, the oxygen mask dropped in the plane, then began losing altitude the aircraft did return safely. The president of Panama, the Free Speech Advocacy Organization, has resigned from his post seven months into his tenure. As NPR's Anastasi Cioca's reports, he quit in response to an article published by Panabout
Israel and Jewish writers who say their work is being boycotted. The novice denouble in Guestu was elected the president of PanAmerica in December. He told the New York Times he had resigned partly due to an article PanAmerica published about Israeli and Jewish authors who say they are being isolated and excluded since the October 7th attacks and the Warren Gaza.
Within the story, PanAmerica outlined its objections to cultural and academic boycotts. According to the Times, Minguestu said it was part of a larger trend at PanAmerica of what he called quote, "defending some rights while not defending others." PanAmerica told the Times they quote, "respect that he's made a decision he believes in. Anastasi Cioca's and PR News New York."
Work crews are once again draining the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool in Washington and a attempt to make repairs after an algae bloom began after the repairs were done. This is NPR News. Support for NPR comes from... For three weeks in 2020, part of my Seattle neighborhood was taken
over by a protest occupation. We were here to protest police brutality. But it ended in tragedy. The whole space felt darker and angrier. Join me as I investigate the unsolved killing of 16-year-old Antonio Maze Junior.
Listen to We Keep Us Safe on the Embedded Podcast from NPR.


