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NPR News: 05-13-2025 7AM EDT

Tue, 13 May 2025

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Chapter 1: What is the format and purpose of NPR's Up First podcast?

0.63 - 23.771 Carvana Ad Narrator

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.

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Chapter 2: What is President Trump's agenda during his visit to Saudi Arabia?

24.642 - 39.067 Corva Coleman

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Korva Coleman. President Trump has landed in Saudi Arabia for his first visit there since taking office. Trump also made the Saudi kingdom an early destination during his first term in office. NPR's Aya Batrawi reports from Riyadh.

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Chapter 3: How is the relationship between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia evolving under Trump?

39.307 - 57.476 Aya Batraoui

Trump was greeted on the tarmac as he stepped off Air Force One by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. State TV showed them shaking hands as Saudi soldiers stood guard and the two leaders walked on a long lavender carpet flanked by American and Saudi flags. The relationship between Saudi Arabia and the U.S.

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57.536 - 70.7 Aya Batraoui

under Trump is stronger than it was under President Biden, who only fist bumped the crown prince when he visited the kingdom. Trump, though, is here to make deals. Tens of billions of dollars in military and weapons sales to the kingdom are expected to be announced during the trip.

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Chapter 4: What are the expected outcomes of Trump's trip to Riyadh and upcoming visits to Qatar and UAE?

71.04 - 82.242 Aya Batraoui

Trump's traveling with several members of his cabinet, and American CEOs of major companies are in Riyadh for an investment forum today. Trump heads next to Qatar and the UAE. Aya Patrawi, NPR News, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

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Chapter 5: What legal actions are being taken against the Trump administration's efforts to control public broadcasting?

82.482 - 95.026 Corva Coleman

Court filings show that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting rejected an effort by the Trump administration's cost-cutting entity to assign a Doge team to the CPB. NPR's Stephen Fowler explains.

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Chapter 6: How did the Corporation for Public Broadcasting respond to the Trump administration's intervention attempts?

95.326 - 115.221 Stephen Fowler

After President Trump attempted to fire three Corporation for Public Broadcasting board members and before an executive order claiming to defund PBS and NPR, Doge attempted to embed with a nonprofit. Court filings in a case challenging the alleged firings revealed Department of Government Efficiency staffers tried to set up a meeting with CPB leadership late last month.

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115.801 - 135.385 Stephen Fowler

CPB leaders denied that request, citing federal law that establishes the independent nonprofit outside of the control of the federal government. The request comes as the president is launching a broad assault against the country's two largest public broadcasters. At the same time, Doge has sought to embed itself in numerous independent agencies Trump wants to shutter.

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135.946 - 138.006 Stephen Fowler

Stephen Fowler, NPR News, Atlanta.

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Chapter 7: What is the controversy surrounding refugee status for white South Africans in the U.S.?

138.266 - 158.123 Corva Coleman

Nearly 60 white South Africans have arrived in the U.S. President Trump has given them refugee status. He's claimed they face persecution, a claim that the South African government has vehemently denied. Meanwhile, the Episcopal Church says it will end its decades-long partnership with the U.S. It had been asked to resettle the South Africans.

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158.523 - 179.655 Corva Coleman

The Episcopal Church says this violates its steadfast commitment to racial justice. and its ties with the Anglican Church of South Africa. The late Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa had worked to end apartheid in his country. Separately, the Trump administration says that it will end protections against deportation for people from Afghanistan.

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180.115 - 202.925 Corva Coleman

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem says that Afghanistan's security situation and its economy are improving. Critics say that Afghanistan remains fully under Taliban control. They say Afghans in the U.S. face persecution if they return, especially if the Afghans help the U.S. against Taliban militants. You're listening to NPR.

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204.446 - 226.999 Corva Coleman

The Trump administration says it will cut tariffs on more inexpensive packages that come to the U.S. from China that could include cheaper items from Chinese firms such as Temu and Shein. The cuts come after the U.S. and China agreed to slash their triple-digit tariffs this week. In South Korea, a group of female freedivers on Jeju Island fish in the frigid ocean nearly every day.

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227.34 - 234.245 Corva Coleman

They're called the henyos. NPR's Ari Daniel reports researchers looked into the adaptations that make this possible.

234.525 - 251.278 Daniel Estrin

When the Henyos were asked to dunk their faces in cold water, their heart rates dropped more than non-divers, due to a lifetime of training. When it came to the genetics, everyone on the island, Henyos and non-Henyos, basically had the same genes, including two that stood out.

251.819 - 260.005 Daniel Estrin

One related to cold tolerance, and one related to blood pressure that may offer protection from preeclampsia and other conditions like stroke.

260.267 - 266.548 Melissa Allardo

Wouldn't it be amazing if we can translate these findings to develop a therapeutic that protects people from stroke around the world?

266.823 - 281.494 Daniel Estrin

Melissa Allardo is an evolutionary geneticist at the University of Utah. She says the extreme diving of the Henyos has changed not just their bodies, but those of everyone else on the island who are descendants of divers. Ari Daniel, NPR News.

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