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    Hormuz guidance, abortion pill rollback and Spirit’s demise

     
    TODAY’S IRAN WAR story

    Trump says US will ‘guide’ ships through Hormuz

    What happened
    President Donald Trump said the U.S. was launching a new effort today to “guide” blockaded commercial ships “safely” through the Strait of Hormuz, which has effectively been closed to maritime traffic since Trump and Israel launched the Iran war Feb. 28. Trump offered few details, but described “Project Freedom” as a “humanitarian gesture” on behalf of the U.S., Middle Eastern countries and, “in particular,” Iran. Iranian state-run media said the announcement was part of “Trump’s delirium.”

    Who said what
    U.S. Central Command said guided-missile destroyers, drones and more than 100 aircraft would support Trump’s new initiative. But the plan “doesn’t currently involve U.S. Navy warships escorting vessels through the strait,” The Wall Street Journal said, citing senior U.S. officials. Traders and shipowners “expressed skepticism” that the “arm’s-length effort to unblock the vital supply route” would be effective

    Trump’s announcement was “essentially a challenge to Iran, and a bet that it would not want to take the risk of firing the first shots — or laying mines” — to challenge the U.S., The New York Times said. Ebrahim Azizi, the head of Iran’s parliamentary National Security Committee, said “any U.S. interference” in the strait “will be considered a violation of the ceasefire.”

    What next?
    Two months into the war, Trump’s “predictions of a relatively short-term conflict with minimal economic consequences appear to be crumbling around him,” the Times said. “Voter backlash is building” as average U.S. gas prices hit a “wartime high of $4.39,” The Washington Post said, and “inside the White House, the options to lower prices at the pump are dwindling.” 

     
     
    TODAY’S HEALTH POLICY story

    Abortion pill makers ask Supreme Court to lift ban

    What happened
    Two drugmakers on Saturday asked the Supreme Court to pause a federal appellate court’s decision to ban mail-order access to the abortion medication mifepristone nationwide. A panel of the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals late Friday had ruled that women seeking mifepristone had to get it in person from a doctor.

    Who said what
    The Fifth Circuit panel ruled 3-0 that Louisiana showed it is “irreparably harmed without a stay,” because out-of-state mifepristone shipments circumvent its near-total ban on abortions. Mifepristone makers Danco Laboratories and GenBioPro separately asked the Supreme Court to step in, arguing that overriding an FDA decision on a drug long proved safe and effective was unprecedented, chaos-inducing and upended the established drug-approval framework.  

    The ruling “puts the Trump administration in a politically difficult spot, especially ahead of the midterms,” The New York Times said. The White House “does not want to take a high-profile anti-abortion action” that “might antagonize some voters who support abortion rights.” But antiabortion groups are already furious with President Donald Trump over the continued “ubiquity of abortion pills,” The Wall Street Journal said, and they plan to pressure congressional candidates to pledge national abortion bans.

    What next?
    Mifepristone and its less-regulated partner drug misoprostol are used in about two-thirds of all U.S. abortions. If the mifepristone ruling stands, the Times said, “many abortion providers are prepared to prescribe only misoprostol, which can be used on its own for abortions.”

     
     
    TODAY’S BUSINESS Story

    Spirit Airlines collapse may push up airfare

    What happened
    Pioneering no-frills budget carrier Spirit Airlines ceased operations on Saturday, citing sharply higher fuel prices and the collapse of a $500 million Trump administration bailout. “This is tremendously disappointing and not the outcome any of us wanted.” Spirit CEO Dave Davis said in a statement. 

    Who said what
    The “proudly penny-pinching” airline had capped its “final, mad-dash scramble to save money” with tentative deals to emerge from bankruptcy, unveiled four days before the Iran war started, The Associated Press said. In the end, Axios said, the “spike in jet fuel prices from the war was the last straw.” 

    Spirit was “often skewered for its bare-bones service,” but its “corresponding dirt-cheap fares opened up air travel” to thousands and “helped shape how other airlines competed,” The Washington Post said. Even if “you never flew Spirit, you benefited” from its low prices, Dawn Gilbertson said in The Wall Street Journal. “Competing airlines vigorously matched its fares,” and “one big reason major airlines” were “rooting against a government bailout” is that “one less pesky discounter gives them more pricing power.”

    What next?
    Spirit said customers who booked flights with credit or debit cards would automatically get refunded. Most other U.S. airlines offered discounted or “rescue fares” to Spirit passengers facing canceled flights. 

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    A new artificial intelligence model developed at the Mayo Clinic might be able to detect pancreatic cancer before it spreads and becomes incurable, according to research published last week in the journal Gut. Pancreatic cancer is often discovered too late, but the Radiomics-based Early Detection Model seeks early signals, like tissue changes, by analyzing CT scans, including those ordered for unrelated conditions. In the study, REDMOD helped identify the cancer up to three years before clinical diagnosis.

     
     
    Under the radar

    Mahjong: Old Chinese tile game finds new life

    The popularity of mahjong “spans continents and centuries,” said Vanity Fair. And these days, it’s moving firmly from “amusing pastime” to a “lifestyle” for many young people. 

    A combination of “ritual and mystery,” the game, which dates back to the mid-1800s, requires “skill and intelligence” and can feel “nearly impenetrable” to observers, said the outlet. But Gen Zers are increasingly entranced by the “hypnotic and persistent clicking of tiles” and “silent swapping of pieces.”

    Mahjong’s current boom in popularity is driven largely by social media and popular culture. In manga and anime, it’s often used as a “narrative device” to “ramp up tension,” and in the 2018 hit movie “Crazy Rich Asians,” there’s a “pivotal” game, said The Economist. Over the past year, TikTok has seen a “70% surge in mahjong content,” with many videos “extolling the pleasures of playing with friends.” The game provides a “sensory experience” and feeling of “community” far more “enriching” than doomscrolling the evening away. 

    Mahjong requires pattern recognition and memory skills, both of which help to keep cognitive function in top gear. And you can “learn a lot about someone’s true nature by how they play,” including their impulsivity and attentiveness, said Angie Lin, the founder of the mahjong community East Never Loses in Los Angeles, to Dazed.

    At a time of digital fatigue and social isolation, the game is a “perfect vehicle for building connections,” Lin said. Everyone can have a seat at the mahjong table, as long as they have “respect” for its cultural past.

     
     
    On this day

    May 4, 1886

    A bomb detonated during a labor rally for an 8-hour workday at Chicago’s Haymarket Square. At least 11 people, including seven police officers, were killed in the explosion and ensuing gunfire. The Haymarket incident fueled a push for a May Day labor holiday, which is now celebrated globally on May 1 — except in the U.S.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Trump rallies retirees’

    “U.S. to guide vessels in strait,” The Washington Post says on Monday’s front page. “Cargo ship attacked off Iran’s coast,” The Minnesota Star Tribune says. “Trump rallies retirees in Florida” as “ratings decline,” USA Today says. “Trump faces complex reality of costly, unpopular Iran war,” The Sacramento Bee says. “Poll: More Americans disapprove of Trump than ever,” The Philadelphia Inquirer says. Gov. Bill Lee “calls for special session” to “create an all-Republican delegation” for Tennessee, The Commercial Appeal says. “Key to House held by handful of seats,” the Los Angeles Times says. “Border wall work damages 1,000-year-old AZ tribal site,” says the Arizona Republic. 

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Plush life

    Dirty and stained stuffed animals are washed squeaky clean at Cleaning Yonmarusan, a Japanese laundry business that offers spa-like services for plushies. The toys receive steam showers, bubble scrubs and soft brushing before they are returned to their owners. Some patrons ask that specific marks remain on their stuffed animals, like ink stains, because they hold “special memories,” owner Masakazu Shimura told Agence France-Presse. In 2025, more than 10,000 toys were brought in for cleaning.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Rafi Schwartz, Deeya Sonalkar and Peter Weber, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Roberto Schmidt / Getty Images; Drew Angerer / AFP via Getty Images; David McNew / Getty Images; Eric Lee / The Washington Post / Getty Images
     

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