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Sunday Reads: July 23

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NPR: Federal ruling blocks tribes’ objection, approves building largest lithium mine

The Economist: The fight over working from home goes global

Associated Press: Phoenix sweltered from heat that will break record for U.S. cities

The Washington Post: The atomic bombings left Oppenheimer shattered: ‘I have blood on my hands.’ In turn, the president called him a ‘crybaby.’

The New Yorker: A New Approach to M.S. Could Transform Treatment of Other Diseases

The Economist: Could America’s economy escape recession?

Reuters: Waste pickers work for reliable business as global firms pull back on recycled materials

The Denver Post: Denver’s pay-as-you-throw program increases diversion rate 3 percent in first 6 months; compost rollout stretches to 2024.

The Washington Post: Legacy admissions at colleges questioned after affirmative action ruling

Foreign Affairs: Why China won’t talk with America’s military

Reuters: U.S. says Amazon agrees to penalty for Alexa’s alleged violations of children’s privacy law

AL.com: Many Alabama schools see cuts in state funding for teacher roles

High Country News: The country’s most controversial hunt

The Bismarck Tribune: South Dakota lawmakers push for special session against carbon capture pipeline

Associated Press: House Republicans propose planting a trillion trees as they move away from climate change denial

Route Fifty: As EPA cracks down on ‘forever chemicals,’ cities worry about the price tag

The Texas Tribune: Texas A&M president Katherine Banks resigns

The New York Times: Why did 488 golden retrievers gather in Scotland?

Hakai Magazine: How far will salmon swim for a craft beer?

Popular Science: Who caught the first bluefin tuna?

Reuters: As lab-grown meat hits menus, the next investor hurdle is scaling

The New Yorker: What my musical instruments have taught me

Jenn Rowell
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