This message comes from Sony Pictures Classics with Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight,
a new film based on a seven-year-old's childhood on a Zimbabwean farm during the 1980 War for Independence,
only in theaters New York and LA July 11th and nationwide July 18th.
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston.
President Trump is once again ramping up his tariff agenda.
NPR's Danielle Kurtzleben reports in a post on social media,
the president announced a 50% tariff on imports from Brazil.
Trump announced the tariff rate by posting a letter to Brazilian President Luis Inácio Lula da Silva on social media Wednesday,
his 22nd letter this week.
All of the other letters were similar,
telling countries that the new tariffs were being imposed to rectify their trade imbalances with the U.S.
But the letter to Brazil was about politics.
Trump angrily referenced what he calls a witch hunt against former far-right president Jair Bolsonaro,
who is facing trial for an alleged attempted coup against Lula.
Trump has long praised the far-right Bolsonaro who lost in a 2022 reelection bid against Lula.
Shortly thereafter, Bolsonaro's supporters stormed the capital, Brasilia.
Danielle Kurtzleben, NPR News.
The Texas Department that inspected the All-Girls summer camp in Kerr County that was devastated by catastrophic flooding says the quality of its emergency plans were the responsibility of the facility.
Houston Public Media's Dominic Anthony Walsh reports more than two dozen children and counselors died in the floods.
The Riverside camp was required by state law to maintain an emergency plan.