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Live from NPR News, I'm Dale Wilman.
President Trump said once again Sunday that he thinks a diplomatic end of the war with
Iran could happen soon.
But speaking with reporters on Board Air Force One, he also said it's possible those discussions
will fail.
Trump also said the U.S. is allowing a Russian oil tanker to enter Cuban waters.
Cuba's president says his country hasn't received any imports for three months and the
power sector is suffering.
But Trump said Cuba needs much more than oil.
The Russian tanker is expected to arrive on Tuesday.
A funeral was held Sunday in Beirut for three journalists killed while covering Israel's
invasion of southern Lebanon.
One of them worked for a Hezbollah-affiliated TV channel and was accused by Israel of producing
propaganda.
The killings have drawn criticism from Lebanese officials and press freedom groups.
NPR's Lorne Freire reports from Beiruts.
Colleagues and relatives carried the coffins of TV correspondent Fatima Fattuni, her cameraman
brother Muhammad Fattuni, and another veteran TV journalist Ali Shaheb, a household name
in Lebanon.
He's the one Israel says it targeted, claiming without providing evidence that he was a militant
to operating under the guise of a journalist.
The non-president called the killings a blatant crime.
The Washington-based watchdog committed to protect journalists, says it's investigating
what it calls a disturbing pattern of Israel accusing journalists of being terrorists.
A CPJ spokesperson said journalists are not legitimate targets, regardless of the
outlet they work for.
Lorne Freire and PR News Beirut.
The fighting between Iran and Israel is occurring during an important time for both Christians
and Jews.
The next week we'll see both Passover and Easter taking place, but many of Jerusalem's
holiest places are sitting empty.
The Western wall is closed to worshipers, Israeli officials say gatherings are capped
at no more than 50 people, and stores in the old city remain closed as the fighting continues.
It will be a short week ahead on Wall Street, NPR's Scott Horsley reports, that traders
may welcome the break after a big sell-off last week.
All the major stock indexes fell last week, as the U.S. war with Iran continued to scramble
energy markets, crude oil prices topped $100 a barrel, and gasoline prices climbed to
about $1.00 a gallon higher than they had been before the war.
This coming week brings a fresh look at the U.S. job market, we'll find out on Friday
how many jobs employers added or subtracted in the month of March.
The job market has shown little movement for the last six months, but at 4.4% the unemployment
rate remains relatively low.
Officers will not get an immediate opportunity to react to the jobs report.
The stock market will be closed that day for the good Friday holiday.
It's Scott Horsley and Pair News, Washington.
And your listening to NPR News.
At least 14 people were killed this weekend by paramilitary forces in the Sudanese city
of Dilling.
The Sudan Doctors Network says at least 23 other people were injured in the fighting and
some of those killed were children.
Sudan's military says it was able to stop the attack, the paramilitary forces and the
army had been fighting for almost three years.
The area around Dilling has until recently faced a two-year siege with most supplies cut
off.
Project Hail Mary, a feel-good movie about a space forage is still soaring at cinemas
and PR's Bob Mandello has our details.
Ryan Gosling's film about an alien encounter during a long shot effort to save Earth.
No one's ever done this before.
Took off like a rocket last weekend.
It is time to go.
I think you mean go time, pal.
And apparently the 85% of its audience that said in exit polls that they'd recommend
Project Hail Mary to a friend actually recommended it to a friend.
Where most blockbusters drop drastically after a big U.S. opening, Project Hail Mary will
finish this second weekend with another $54 million in the till.
And it's holding even better overseas.
So the worldwide 10-day total will top $300 million all before the start of next weekend's
lucrative Easter holidays, Bob Mandello, NPR News.
Gary Woodland won the PGA's Houston Open Sunday.
He finished five strokes ahead of Nikolai Hishgard.
Woodland finished the day with a 3657 and a tournament total of 21 under 259.
The win comes less than three years after Woodland had brain surgery to remove a lesion.
The one also made him eligible for the master's tournament in Augusta, Georgia, which teased
off in two weeks.
I'm Dale Woodman, NPR News.
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