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Korva Coleman
In Washington, I'm Corva Coleman. Spain says a cruise ship where deadly hantavirus cases have been identified is preparing to arrive in the Canary Islands. Three people have died and several others have been sickened. The cruise ship operator says dozens of passengers disembarked early earlier. Many are being traced in several countries, including the U.S. Dr. Celine Gounder is an infectious disease specialist and editor at large for public health at KFF Health News. She says the hantavirus does not spread like Covid.
Dr. Celine Gounder
I completely understand why people are feeling anxious in this moment. I think we all have this collective Covid ptsd. I know I do. This is very different. Covid like say, the flu or measles, those are viral respiratory infections that are spread much more easily through the air. Hantavirus, even when it spreads person to person, is not airborne in that way. It requires much, much closer, prolonged contact.
Korva Coleman
She spoke to npr. Israel and Lebanon will meet for another round of talks in Washington next week, but Israel has escalated its bombing campaign in Lebanon despite a ceasefire. NPR's Jane Araf reports from Beirut.
Jane Araf
The day after Israel launched its first attack on Beirut, the April 16th ceasefire. Rescue crews Thursday. We're still trying to find bodies in the rubble. Israel's military says it killed a Hezbollah commander. The militant group has so far not commented. Most of Israel's attacks have been in southern Lebanon. UN peacekeepers say up to 600 Israeli strikes a day. Meanwhile, Hezbollah has launched dozens of attacks each day into Israel. Lebanese officials say Israeli strikes Thursday killed at least 12 people, including two children and a the latest, they say, among almost 100 medical first responders killed by Israel since March. Jane Araf, NPR News, Beirut.
Korva Coleman
The Labor Department says US employers added more jobs than expected last month. NPR's Scott Horsley reports. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%.
Scott Horsley
US employers added 115,000 jobs in April, more than forecasters predicted but fewer than the month before. Job gains for February and March were revised down by a total of 16,000 jobs. Job gains in April were concentrated in healthcare, retail, restaurants and transportation. The federal government continued to cut jobs. The unemployment rate remained low as the number of people working or looking for work shrank by 92,000. Average wages in April were up 3.6% from a year ago, which is a slightly larger annual gain than the previous month. Wages have generally been rising faster than prices, increasing workers purchasing power, but the rapid run up in gasoline prices is cutting into that advantage. Scott Horsley, NPR News, Washington.
Korva Coleman
You're listening to NPR News from Washington. Lawmakers in Tennessee have redrawn the state's congressional districts. They've cracked a majority black district in Memphis and split it three ways. Residents will likely lose the only Democratic member of Congress from Tennessee, although about a third of Tennessee residents support Democrats. The World cup kicks off in just over four weeks. A controversy continues to swirl over how much soccer fans will pay for a train ride from New York City to a tournament venue across the river in New Jersey. Bruce Konviser reports.
Bruce Konviser
New Jersey transit is backpedaling on how much it will charge fans for a 20 minute train ride. The transportation authority says it will now charge fans $105 for a round trip ticket. That's a 30% reduction from the $150 fare announced last month. But it's still eight times more than the standard roundtrip ticket, which costs just under $13. New Jersey officials, led by Governor Mikey Sherrill, argued that New Jersey residents would not pay the $48 million price tag to provide the rail service. She said FIFA, soccer's global governing body, stood to make billions of dollars from the tournament and should subsidize the rail service. FIFA has refused. New Jersey now says third party financing will enable the fair cut. For NPR News, I'm Bruce Konfeiser in Greenbrook, New Jersey.
Korva Coleman
The Pentagon is releasing files on UFOs today. The Defense Department says the public can review these and people can make up their own minds. Pentagon officials say more releases on unidentified anomalous phenomena are coming in the future. I'm Korva Coleman, NPR News, in Washington.
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A concise roundup of major global and national news stories, including a cruise ship hantavirus outbreak, Israeli-Lebanese conflict escalation, U.S. job market updates, Tennessee redistricting, World Cup transit fare controversies, and the Pentagon's release of UFO files.
Summary compiled in the informative, neutral tone characteristic of NPR’s reporting.