While you’re inside avoiding the frigid temperatures, here’s this week’s reading list.
The New York Times: Supreme Court to hear case over homelessness rules in Oregon
The New York Times: A city’s campaign against homelessness brings stories of violence
The Atlantic: The feeling of losing snow
The Washington Post: How Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s medical mystery ignited a firestorm
The Economist: The truth about Flight MH17
Associated Press: A judge has found Ohio’s new election law constitutional, including a strict photo ID requirement
L.A. Times: East Palo Alto goes from U.S. ‘murder capital’ to zero homicides
The Washington Post: Phoenix officials mount fight to block a potential Justice Department oversight of local police amid misconduct probe
The Economist: Mayday! War stalks the world’s oceans
The Atlantic: Why parents struggle so much in the world’s richest country
The Economist: Vladimir Putin cannot keep funding his war for ever
The Washington Post: Fight over toxic Maui wildfire waste brews in Lahaina.
FERN and NPR: Can $3 billion convince Black farmers to trust the USDA?
Axios: Who’s unhappy? Rural Americans
The Economist: Our former Moscow correspondent picks seven books on Russia
The New York Times: One man’s mission to revive an indigenous language in Argentina
The Washington Post: Civil War talk in presidential contest reveals fresh divisions on race
Boston Globe: Rhode Island plans to construct ‘village’ of small shelters for homeless people
Washington State Standard: State lawmakers consider blocking Washington police from lying during interrogations
The New York Times: Microsoft tops Apple to become most valuable public company
The Athletic: ESPN used fake names to secure Emmys for ‘College GameDay’ stars
Axios: How state governments plan to target drug costs and health worker shortages
The New Yorker: Coming of age at the dawn of the social internet
Texas Public Radio: Texas school districts lose $300 million in federal special education funding
The New York Times: Can Taylor Tomlinson have it all and a life, too?


