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Live from NPR News, I'm Lakshmi Singh.
It is graduation day at Harvard.
Welcome.
President Alan Garber receiving a lengthy standing ovation as the face of the university's
landmark court battles against government interference.
Harvard is fighting against the Trump administration's deep funding cuts and attempts at blocking
the school's ability to enroll international students.
Today, a federal judge said in court she would issue a preliminary injunction on the administration's
efforts, efforts that are widely viewed as a warning to institutions across the U.S.
that do not comply with Trump's directives.
Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of Chinese students across the U.S. are affected by new visa restrictions. Trump supporters defend tighter procedures
as a matter of national security. The spokesperson for China's foreign ministry says the Trump
White House is engaging in political discrimination. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has sent his
reorganization plan to Congress. He is making deep cuts
saying they are meant to make the State Department more agile. NPR's Michelle
Kellerman has details. Secretary Rubio often complains about the bureaucracy at
the State Department. Now he's giving Congress a look at his plan to
streamline the org chart and cut staff drastically in some areas like human
rights and democracy. He's putting more of an emphasis on regional bureaus and says in today's world,
the State Department must move at the, quote, speed of relevance.
Democrats on Capitol Hill have argued that his cuts mean that the U.S. is seeding ground
to U.S. adversaries, including China.
The Trump administration has dismantled the lead U.S. aid agency,
and Rubio is taking
over what remains of USAID. There won't be cuts to passport and visa services, which
are funded by fees. Michelle Kellerman, NPR News, the State Department.
A second federal court's blocked President Trump's authority to unilaterally impose tariffs.
This less than a day after the U. the US Court of International Trade ruled against most Trump tariffs, and PR Scott Horsley reports the stakes are enormous.
A dozen states and five businesses challenged the president's authority to unilaterally
levy those taxes. And last night, a specialized trade court handed those challengers a decisive
victory. The unanimous three-judge panel ruled that under the Constitution, it's Congress that has exclusive power to regulate
trade and impose tariffs. That's NPR's Scott Horsley reporting. The Trump
administration says it will appeal the decision all the way to the US Supreme
Court. US stocks are trading higher this hour. The Dow Jones Industrial Average up now 65
points at 42,164. The S&Ps climbed 14 points and the NASDAQ is up 45 points.
From Washington, this is NPR News.
A new study finds that breathing in wildfire smoke raises the chances of cardiorespiratory
problems long after the smoke has cleared.
Here's NPR's Alejandra Burunda.
New research published in the journal Epidemiology found that breathing in wildfire smoke contributed
to hospitalizations for heart and breathing problems as long as three months after the
smoke exposure, especially for hypertension.
It's another study in the growing body of research showing that smoke can have
long-term health impacts. In the study, the researchers point out that climate
change is making wildfires and their smoke more intense.
That's NPR's Alejandro Perrunda reporting. A Swiss village was wiped from the map
Wednesday after a massive glacier carrying rock and
debris detached and roared down the mountainside, destroying everything in its path.
NPR's Eleanor Beardsley reports that scientists predicted the coming disaster and had evacuated
the entire village.
Video footage of the glacier and rock roaring down the mountainside went viral Wednesday
afternoon as the natural disaster unfolded. Footage of the glacier and rock roaring down the mountainside went viral Wednesday afternoon
as the natural disaster unfolded.
The 300 residents of Blattin were evacuated on May 19th.
A mile-long strip of ice, rock and dirt several feet deep now covers their village.
What happened is unthinkable.
It's the catastrophic worst-case scenario, said Christophe Lambiel, a specialist in high mountain
geology and glaciers speaking on RTS Swiss television. Lambiel said the glacier detached
because the rot face had been breaking off and falling into it for years, adding weight and
pressure until it finally collapsed. That's in Piazzon or Beardsley.