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Lobbyists and industry representatives in the fossil fuels industries, including Greg Kozera with Shale Crescent USA, like to claim that the industries are all about good-paying jobs, prosperity, and thriving communities. These are claims that West Virginians and Appalachians more broadly cannot afford to go on believing.
An article in The New Republic by staff writer Kate Aronoff titled “Fossil Fuels Companies Are Jobs Killers” from April 5 explains why the myth of the benevolent extraction industry must finally be subjected to and overcome by the truth. Aronoff writes, “A recent analysis from the Norwegian research firm Rystad Energy, published last week, finds that ‘robotic drilling systems can potentially reduce the number of roughnecks required on a drilling rig’ by 20 to 30 percent over the next decade, translating to hundreds of thousands of jobs lost and billions of dollars saved worldwide. In the United States, Rystad Energy predict
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The pandemic has upended college admissions with more surprises and more wait lists
By Deirdre Fernandes Globe Staff,Updated April 8, 2021, 2 hours ago
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Zeinab Yusuf, who was admitted to Cornell University, believes she wouldn t have been accepted if the SAT had been required.Erin Clark/Globe Staff
Each spring, high school seniors hope for joy but brace for heartbreak when colleges send out admissions decisions. But this year the
pandemic has made the nerve-wracking process even more unpredictable, a mix of new opportunity and fierce competition that is confounding students and colleges alike.
Faced with a record number of applications