What We’re Reading
Date: 24 February 2015
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 Damon Darlin, Matt Apuzzo and others.
24 februari 2015 was een dinsdag onder het sterrenbeeld ♓. Het was de 54e dag van het jaar. President van de Verenigde Staten was Barack Obama.
Als je op deze dag bent geboren, ben je 11 jaar oud. Je laatste verjaardag was op dinsdag 24 februari 2026, 92 dagen geleden. Je volgende verjaardag is op woensdag 24 februari 2027, in 272 dagen. Je hebt 4.110 dagen geleefd, of ongeveer 98.655 uur, of ongeveer 5.919.313 minuten, of ongeveer 355.158.780 seconden.
Date: 24 February 2015
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 Damon Darlin, Matt Apuzzo and others.
Date: 24 February 2015
By SYDNEY EMBER
Sydney EMBER
The careers of Mary Jo White and her husband can create headaches for the S.E.C. | A ruling against American Express may not help consumers. | HSBC is facing battles on multiple fronts. | “Wall Street Week” is set to return.
Date: 24 February 2015
By EMILY STEEL and RAVI SOMAIYA
Emily STEEL
Fox News host Bill O'Reilly bolsters his defense on his show against reports that he exaggerated stories about his war reporting of Falkland Islands and covering unrest in Buenos Aires; somer former CBS News colleagues say he has embellished claims.
Date: 24 February 2015
By SALMAN MASOOD
Salman MASOOD
Date: 24 February 2015
By MICHAEL HAFFORD
Michael HAFFORD
Robert Christgau, best known for his 37 years of short-form rock music reviews for The Village Voice, releases “Going Into the City” today.
Date: 25 February 2015
By RICHARD SANDOMIR
Richard SANDOMIR
ESPN suspends host Keith Olbermann from his ESPN2 program for remainder of week after his disparaging Twitter comments about Pennsylvania State University.
Date: 24 February 2015
By JOHN TIERNEY
John TIERNEY
Media analysis published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by the University of Vermont and the Mitre Corporation finds that news articles, books, websites, social media posts and other forms of communication contain more positive words than negative words; finding confirms Pollyanna theory of positivity bias and upends perception of negative news dominance.
Date: 24 February 2015
By KATHERINE SCHULTEN
Katherine SCHULTEN
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