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Live from NPR News, I'm Janine Hurst.
Gaza health authorities say at least eight people, including children, have died from malnutrition since yesterday,
a day after international experts declared a famine in North Gaza.
MPR's Jane Arraf has more.
The IPC said food shortages, malnutrition and starvation levels in Gaza City and surrounding areas,
have now reached famine levels after months of warnings.
It blamed it partly on Israel blocking aid.
shipments to Gaza earlier this year, and a U.S. and Israeli-backed distribution system, the Gaza
Humanitarian Foundation, that it said did not qualify as humanitarian aid. It found that aid at
GHF sites was accessible for an average of only 23 minutes a day. Israel has barred the UN's
biggest provider of aid, replacing it with food delivered at limited locations under armed
guards. Gaza health authorities say more than 2,000 people, many of them children,
have been killed around aid sites.
Jane Arraf, NPR News, Amman.
The Justice Department released hours of audio
and a transcript of its interview with Gieland Maxwell,
the longtime associate of convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein.
MPIRS Ryan Lucas reports it's part of the Trump administration's efforts
to contain the fallout from its handling of the Epstein files.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche,
who is President Trump's former personal attorney,
interviewed Maxwell last month in Florida.
In the transcript from that interview, Maxwell discusses many of the famous people who knew Epstein over the years, including President Trump.
Maxwell told Blanche she never saw Trump do anything improper.
The president was never inappropriate with anybody.
In the times that I was with him, he was a gentleman in all respects.
Maxwell is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence for helping Epstein sexually exploit underage girls.
She would like a reduced sentence or a pardon from President Trump.
Shortly after her interview with Blanche, Maxwell was moved to a minimum security prison camp.
Ryan Lucas and Pierre News, Washington.
People are being urged to evacuate as fires blaze in the West, including through California's scenic Napa Valley.
And here's Alana Weiss has more.
The picket fire first sparked Thursday afternoon and its cause is not yet known.
The area where it's burning is the same as the devastating 2020 glass fire,
which raged for 23 days and destroyed more than 1,500 struck.
But officials assured residents that the weather condition is between now and then have made this fire easier to control.
Further north in Jefferson County in central Oregon, a similar blaze roared.
The flat fire, which has already burned across thousands of acres, is being aided by persistent heat.
Residents in the Lake Billy Chinook area were warned to leave immediately due to the imminent threat to the area.
Alana Wise, NPR News.
So far more than 4,000 acres have burned.
You're listening to NPR News.
Montana wildlife managers have decided to increase this year's wolf hunting and trapping quota by more than 100 animals.
Montana Public Radio's Ellis Julin has more.
Montana's Fish and Wildlife Commission authorized a statewide quota of 452 wolves.
That's 118 more than last year.
They say that increase is necessary to try to reduce the overall wolf population.
a directive given to them by the state's Republican majority legislature.
Included in that number is a regional limit for the number of wolves that can be killed in areas bordering Yellowstone National Park.
That area has seen declines in wolf populations in recent years.
Opponents of these changes say killing this many wolves could warrant federal protection under the Endangered Species Act.
A federal court recently ordered the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to reassess threats facing wolves.
For NPR News, I'm Ellis Jew Lynn in Helena, Montana.
A pair of Ospreys with their chicks has the best seed at a high school football stadium in Minnesota.
The migratory birds built a huge nest on the light pole of a football field at Apple Valley High School,
south of Minneapolis, and that means the light has to stay off.
And because the raptors are protected by federal law, they will stay in their new house.
The school is working on a fix with the state's Department of Natural Resources,
which is sending up a drone twice a week to check on the bird family.
Officials say that once the chicks are old enough to fly away,
they will then be able to move the nest,
and then the stadium can turn the light back on.
I'm Janine Hurst, and you're listening to NPR News from Washington.
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