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Do you think you have ADHD? You're not alone. After the pandemic hit, there was a huge jump
in ADHD diagnoses among adults. And at the same time, the internet is more and more obsessed
with saying everything is a sign of it. To identify the red flags when a diagnosis goes
viral. Listen to the It's Been A Minute podcast today. Lye from NPR News in Washington. I'm Lakshmi Singh. The U.S. Supreme Court is weighing
today's arguments on a conflict between church and state, and there are indications conservatives
on the court are open to approving religious charter schools. NPR's Nina Totenberg says
the Tess case from Oklahoma could transform public education.
On one side of the case are two Catholic diocese in Oklahoma. Representing them is lawyer James
Campbell. You can't create a public program and then just simply say that no religious organization
can apply. On the other side is the state's Republican attorney general, Gentner Drummond.
Religious liberty is really the freedom to worship.
It is not taxpayer-funded,
state-sponsored religious indoctrination.
A decision in the case is expected by summer.
Nina Totenberg, NPR News, Washington.
Mohsen Madhawi is free on bail
after a federal court in Vermont
ordered the Columbia University student release
from immigration enforcement custody.
Madhawi says the judge's decision today is a light of hope.
He had made a very brave decision to let me out, and this is what justice is.
And for anybody who's doubting justice, this is a light of hope.
Madawi is a legal resident, but he was detained during his naturalization interview earlier
this month.
The 34-year-old was among the organizers of pro-Palestinian protests demanding an end to the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. The Trump administration accuses
Madhawi of advocating anti-Semitic acts of violence and warned his presence in the U.S.
would have adverse foreign policy consequences. Madhawi denies he promotes violence.
Hospitals and clinics in Gaza are reporting high levels of children suffering from hunger
and malnutrition.
Doctors say they're seeing the most severe cases they've ever encountered during the
more than 18-month-long war with Israel.
And Piazaneh Sbaba has more from Gaza City.
Inside the patient's friend's hospital, the cries of hungry children echo through the
corridors.
It's the only hospital in northern Gaza still treating severe malnutrition,
and it's running out of supplies.
Mothers arrive carrying babies with sunken cheeks and frail bodies.
Some infants weigh half of what they should.
Half of Gaza's residents now rely entirely on local charity kitchens for single daily meal,
but many have closed and the remaining say they have just days
before food runs out. Israel has blocked all aid into Gaza for the past two months. Israel says
Hamas steals it, but the UN says it keeps control and warns that the risk of famine is imminent.
Anas Baba, NPR News, Gaza. President Trump is seeking to distance himself from data that shows the U.S. economy contracted
in the first quarter.
He told his cabinet today that's Biden, not him.
The economy shrank three-tenths of a percent from January to March.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down more than 200 points, or roughly half a percent.
This is NPR News.
The NFL has fined the Atlanta Falcons $250,000 and defensive coordinator Jeff Albrecht an
additional $100,000 after his son participated in a prank call to Shadoura Sanders during
the NFL draft.
Melissa Fato of member station WABE in-B-E in Atlanta has details.
The NFL says the fine is for failing to prevent the disclosure of confidential information
shared with the Falcons in advance of the draft. The Falcons said Ulbrich's 21-year-old
son, Jax, found a phone number for Sanders on an open iPad at his parents' house. He
and a friend prank called the quarterback last week, offering a spot on the New Orleans
Saints.
Ulbrich says he wasn't aware of his son's actions.
The Falcons say they're cooperating with the league and are confident in their security
policies moving forward.
They also say the Ulbrich family is working on community service initiatives in reaction
to last week's events.
Sanders was selected over the weekend in the fifth round by the Cleveland Browns.
For NPR News, I'm Melissa Faito in Atlanta.
A severe storm cut power to more than half a million households across Pennsylvania and
neighboring states today.
The storm system downed trees and power lines, resulting in at least three deaths.
Meanwhile, the National Weather Service's website shows active alerts for heavy rainfall,
flash floods, or tornadoes
are in effect from parts of southwest Texas through northwestern Missouri.
At last check on Wall Street, the Dow is down 189 points, nearly half a percent.
The S&P is off 39 points.
And the NASDAQ is down nearly 1 percent or 169 points. It's NPR News.