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The US experienced its highest single day of new coronavirus cases on Wednesday with more than 45,500, breaking the April record.


1/22  |  NBC News


A study finds cable news appearances by the White House’s coronavirus task force have fallen from 61 appearances in March to just one so far in June.

2/22  |  Media Matters


States react with alarm to the White House's plan to end federal support for some Covid-19 testing sites.

3/22  |  The Guardian


New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut impose a 14-day quarantine on travelers from hotspot states like Texas and Florida.

4/22  |  CNBC


Meanwhile, an Arizona senator wants to give each US adult $4,000 to go on vacation, assuming you’re not too poor.

5/22  |  Vox


Related: A portrait of pandemic pain from food bank lines in San Francisco.

6/22  |  Mission Local


The Eiffel Tower reopens after its longest period out of action since World War Two.

7/22  |  Reuters


A map of American communities’ vulnerability to outbreaks, rather than their risk of infection.

8/22  |  The Surgo Foundation


On Tuesday, voters in Kentucky discovered polling places had been slashed from 3,700 to just 170—a 95% reduction.

9/22  |  Democracy Now!


Three men indicted on murder charges in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia.

10/22  |  The Los Angeles Times


Furor grows around justice for Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old unarmed black man who died after being detained by Colorado police, a forgotten case until recently.

11/22  |  The Sentinel, The New York Times


Nikole Hannah-Jones makes the (very convincing) case for reparations.

12/22  |  The New York Times Magazine


“This is akin to putting a neo-Nazi in charge of a UN human rights committee.” A history of racism implodes the romance publishing world.

13/22  |  Vox


Adrienne Maree Brown and Toshi Reagon launch Octavia’s Parables, a podcast about Butler’s two Parable novels.

14/22  |  The Morning News


Reconstructing the movements of two DC Army National Guard helicopters deployed against protesters.

15/22  |  The Washington Post


How cops are talking about George Floyd’s killing and the protests still sweeping America.

16/22  |  Slate


Over 1,500 mathematicians have signed a letter urging the math community to stop working with the police.

17/22  |  Inside Higher Ed


A judge rules that Rep. Devin Nunes has no right to sue Twitter over statements made by a fake Internet cow.

18/22  |  The Fresno Bee


"The most hyped invention since the Macintosh," Segway halts production.

19/22  |  Fast Company


How to use Google’s latest feature to delete your data automatically.

20/22  |  Recode


In the 1960s and '70s, Bob Damron's Address Books "became almost survival guides to gay and queer travelers."

21/22  |  Mapping the Gay Guides


Art experts call again for laws governing restoration work after another painting suffers a damaging and disfiguring repair.

22/22  |  The Guardian

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