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On the Planet Money podcast, you've seen them, those labels that say made in China or made in France.
But what do they really mean?
The reaction was, it can't possibly work like that. That can't possibly be right.
We dig into the delightfully convoluted rules behind country of origin. What makes, say,
a Chinese product Chinese? And how companies facing tariffs are getting creative.
From Planet Money on NPR, wherever you get your podcasts.
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Korova Coleman.
Representatives from Ukraine and Russia have held a second round of peace talks
in Istanbul, Turkey today. These lasted for only an hour.
This comes as Ukraine's security service says it will continue to strike Russia's
bombers and other military targets as long as Russian attacks continue on
Ukraine. NPR's Joanna Kakissis reports from Kyiv, Ukraine claims it hit more than 40 Russian
warplanes deep in Russian territory.
In a statement, the head of Ukraine's security service, Lieutenant General Vassil Malyuk,
said Russia uses these planes to bomb Ukraine nearly every night.
He wrote on social media, our strikes will continue as long as Russia terrorizes Ukrainians with missiles and Shahid drones. In this weekend's operation,
officially dubbed Spiderweb, Maluk explained that it was a task that took
more than 18 months to plan. It involved hiding drones inside the roofs of wooden
cabins placed on trucks. Maluk said the roofs were opened remotely and the drones
flew out to hit the Russian bombers. Russia acknowled said the roofs were opened remotely and the drones flew out
to hit the Russian bombers. Russia acknowledges the bombers were hit but is
disputing the scale. Joanna Kakissis, NPR News, Kyiv. An official with the
Department of Homeland Security has issued a statement about the suspect in
yesterday's attack on a group of peaceful marchers in Boulder, Colorado. The
official says the suspect came to the US on a visa that expired more than two years ago
and that he had earlier applied for asylum.
Officials say the suspect threw incendiary devices
into a group of people in Boulder yesterday.
Alex Osante was an eyewitness.
One of them he threw inside of a group at the group,
and one lady lit on fire from head to toe.
And then the other four people were
also injured and in the fire but not as bad as the as the first one. The marchers had been gathering
weekly in Boulder to highlight the plight of Israeli citizens held in Gaza. Authorities say
they're investigating the attack as an act of terrorism. The city of Tulsa Oklahoma is raising
money for a 105 million5 million charitable trust.
Organizers say they'll use the donations to repair harm for the Tulsa Race Massacre.
For Member Station KWGS Max Bryan has more.
As many as 300 people were killed and dozens of homes and businesses leveled in the 1921
Tulsa Race Massacre when a white mob raised the city's
prosperous black neighborhood of Greenwood.
Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols announced the trust, which will put millions of dollars toward
housing, reducing blight, land acquisition for descendants, and spurring economic growth.
There is not one Tulsa, no matter their skin color, who wouldn't be better off today had
the massacre not happen.
The mayor's announcement follows city officials' creation of a commission to explore reparations
for descendants of massacre survivors and people who live in the area today.
For NPR News, I'm Max Bryan in Tulsa.
You're listening to NPR.
The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear a challenge involving guns. Ryan in Tulsa. You're listening to NPR.
The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear a challenge involving guns.
The justices turned away a challenge to a Maryland law that bans assault-style weapons.
The law was passed more than a decade ago after the mass shooting in a classroom of
children and educators at Sandy Hook Elementary.
Other states have similar measures.
The court's majority did not offer a reason
why it did not take the case,
but three justices said they disagreed.
A fourth justice said such bans
are probably unconstitutional.
Groundwater reserves in the western U.S.
are rapidly drying up.
From member station KUNC, Alex Hager reports,
scientists used NASA satellites to gather
data for a new study.
The numbers they found are grim. Over the past two decades, the Colorado River basin
lost nearly 28 million acre feet of groundwater. That's roughly the amount stored in Lake
Mead, the nation's largest reservoir. Kathleen Ferris is a groundwater expert at Arizona
State University. She wasn't involved in the study, but says groundwater pumping needs better regulation.
We need to do far more than we're doing. And I am very pessimistic that the political will to make something happen is not there.
Ferris said stricter rules are needed soon because of the shrinking Colorado River. More cities,, and farms are pumping groundwater as the amount
on the surface gets smaller.
For NPR News, I'm Alex Hager in Fort Collins, Colorado.
The National Weather Service has issued air quality alerts for nearly all of Minnesota.
That's due to Canadian wildfires.
The wildfires have forced more than 25,000 people to evacuate.
I'm Korva Coleman, NPR News. A lot of short daily news podcasts focus
on just one story, but right now you probably need more. On Up First from NPR,
we bring you three of the world's top headlines every day in under 15 minutes
because no one story can capture all that's happening in this big crazy world
of ours on any given morning. Listen now to the Up First podcast from NPR.