The Latest Health With social prescribing, hanging out, movement and arts are doctor's order Doctors are writing "social prescriptions" to get people engaged with nature, art, movement and volunteering. Research shows it can help with mental health, chronic disease and dementia. Rhitu Chatterjee National The latest on the deadly floods in central Texas The search for additional victims from floods in Kerr County, Texas was suspended Sunday because of new storms. The death toll reached at least 132 people, with more than 160 listed as missing. Frank Morris Politics When does a conservative lawmaker become moderate? After they disagree with Trump Congressional Republicans have become more aligned with President Trump since he first took office. That makes even a single vote against him a "moderate" stance, even for staunch conservatives. Stephen Fowler Arts & Life By land and by sea, these new nonfiction books will carry you away Helen Whybrow's memoir, The Salt Stones, is a closely-observed account of her life as a shepherd. In A Marriage at Sea, Sophie Elmhirst tells the true story of a couple adrift on a rubber raft. Maureen Corrigan National A lawsuit against Tesla and its driver-assistance technology goes to trial in Florida The case, which stems from a deadly crash in 2019, raises broader questions about the safety of Tesla's driver-assistance systems, and whether the company has exaggerated their capabilities. Joel Rose Arts & Life I went on a date with my AI dream guy. Then I cried over shrimp It started as a one-off dinner with a chatbot — a night of shrimp, sarcasm — then veered into something unsettlingly human. Windsor Johnston History Confederacy group sues Georgia state park over exhibit on slavery, white supremacy A group representing descendants of Confederate Civil War veterans is suing a Georgia state park over an exhibit they say won't properly reflect the history of the Confederate monument there. Sam Gringlas National 27 people in Baltimore rushed to hospital last week for possible overdoses Nationally, the number of overdoses is on the decline. But in Baltimore, officials are dealing with the aftermath of 27 people who overdosed in a small neighborhood last week. Scott Maucione Immigration Lawyer discusses judge's decision to bar indiscriminate immigration arrests in LA NPR asks Mark Rosenbaum, special counsel at the nonprofit law firm Public Council, about a judge's decision to bar indiscriminate immigration arrests in the LA area. Rosenbaum represented plaintiffs. Sarah McCammon Arts & Life Why the latest season of 'Love Island USA' became the internet's obsession Love Island USA Season 7 has drawn outsized attention. Slate magazine culture writer Nadira Goffe says that's because fans have more sway than ever. Claire Murashima Prev 742 of 1650 Next Sponsored
Health With social prescribing, hanging out, movement and arts are doctor's order Doctors are writing "social prescriptions" to get people engaged with nature, art, movement and volunteering. Research shows it can help with mental health, chronic disease and dementia. Rhitu Chatterjee
National The latest on the deadly floods in central Texas The search for additional victims from floods in Kerr County, Texas was suspended Sunday because of new storms. The death toll reached at least 132 people, with more than 160 listed as missing. Frank Morris
Politics When does a conservative lawmaker become moderate? After they disagree with Trump Congressional Republicans have become more aligned with President Trump since he first took office. That makes even a single vote against him a "moderate" stance, even for staunch conservatives. Stephen Fowler
Arts & Life By land and by sea, these new nonfiction books will carry you away Helen Whybrow's memoir, The Salt Stones, is a closely-observed account of her life as a shepherd. In A Marriage at Sea, Sophie Elmhirst tells the true story of a couple adrift on a rubber raft. Maureen Corrigan
National A lawsuit against Tesla and its driver-assistance technology goes to trial in Florida The case, which stems from a deadly crash in 2019, raises broader questions about the safety of Tesla's driver-assistance systems, and whether the company has exaggerated their capabilities. Joel Rose
Arts & Life I went on a date with my AI dream guy. Then I cried over shrimp It started as a one-off dinner with a chatbot — a night of shrimp, sarcasm — then veered into something unsettlingly human. Windsor Johnston
History Confederacy group sues Georgia state park over exhibit on slavery, white supremacy A group representing descendants of Confederate Civil War veterans is suing a Georgia state park over an exhibit they say won't properly reflect the history of the Confederate monument there. Sam Gringlas
National 27 people in Baltimore rushed to hospital last week for possible overdoses Nationally, the number of overdoses is on the decline. But in Baltimore, officials are dealing with the aftermath of 27 people who overdosed in a small neighborhood last week. Scott Maucione
Immigration Lawyer discusses judge's decision to bar indiscriminate immigration arrests in LA NPR asks Mark Rosenbaum, special counsel at the nonprofit law firm Public Council, about a judge's decision to bar indiscriminate immigration arrests in the LA area. Rosenbaum represented plaintiffs. Sarah McCammon
Arts & Life Why the latest season of 'Love Island USA' became the internet's obsession Love Island USA Season 7 has drawn outsized attention. Slate magazine culture writer Nadira Goffe says that's because fans have more sway than ever. Claire Murashima