What We’re Reading
Date: 05 August 2016
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting great stories from around the web. Today, great reads from Patrick LaForge, KJ Dell’Antonia and others.
5. avgust 2016 je bil petek pod znakom zvezdice ♌. Bil je 217 dan v letu. Predsednik Združenih držav je bil Barack Obama.
Če ste rojeni na ta dan, ste stari 9 let. Vaš zadnji rojstni dan je bil torek, 5. avgust 2025, pred 303 dnevi. Vaš naslednji rojstni dan je sreda, 5. avgust 2026, čez 61 dni. Živeli ste 3.590 dni ali približno 86.182 ur, ali približno 5.170.937 minut ali približno 310.256.220 sekund.
Date: 05 August 2016
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting great stories from around the web. Today, great reads from Patrick LaForge, KJ Dell’Antonia and others.
Date: 05 August 2016
By MIKE ISAAC and SYDNEY EMBER
Mike ISAAC
Facebook says it is aiming to eliminate what it calls 'clickbait,' or misleading news stories by changing its news feed algorithm so that these stories are ranked lower; move is designed to keep its 1.71 billion users regularly coming back to social network.
Date: 05 August 2016
By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr
James McKINLEY
Justice Bonnie G Wittner of State Supreme Court in Manhattan rules New York Times reporter Frances Robles must testify about jailhouse interview with Conrado Juarez; holds notes and testimony of reporter shed critical light on only public statement Juarez made about killing toddler Anjelica Castillo, known as Baby Hope, besides his confession to police; Robles's lawyer says she will appeal decision immediately.
Date: 05 August 2016
By MICHAEL POWELL
Michael POWELL
Michael Powell Sports of the Times column recounts how embattled International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach has repeatedly fumbled in his response to World Anti-Doping Agency report on Russian state-sponsored doping program.
Date: 06 August 2016
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Date: 05 August 2016
By REUTERS
Date: 05 August 2016
By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS
Anemona HARTOCOLLIS
Campus disruptions in last year, particularly at small, elite liberal arts institutions, have unexpectedly led to backlash from alumni who usually give generously to alma maters; among surprising complaints from alumni are that students are too invested in racial and identity politics, showing lack of respect for history, and that university administrators have been too meek in dealing with protesters whose messages defy concept of free speech.