
If you like this newsletter, please share it. Russia's war in Ukraine is expected to be the main topic at the 74th NATO Summit, which kicks off on Tuesday.

Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, said North Korea's military chased a U.S.The order is set to expire after two weeks but can be extended, according to The Associated Press. A judge has ordered Kansas to stop transgender people from changing the sex listing that appears on their driver's licenses.The paper will use its sports website, The Athletic, for coverage of the sports world moving forward. The New York Times has decided to dissolve its sports department.to use data from Meta and other technology companies while collecting information on people living in the European Union. and the European Commission struck a deal that enables the U.S.
Resumes actors access full#
Threads has amassed more than 100 million sign-ups less than a full week after its launch, according to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
Resumes actors access series#
James Lewis, a suspect in a series of Tylenol poisonings that caused the deaths of seven people in the Chicago area in 1982, has died.

After blocking the bid for months, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erodgan recently suggested he'd be open to Sweden joining NATO if European nations "open the way" for Turkey to join the European Union. Louis.Turkey has agreed to allow Sweden's application to join NATO to move forward, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg announced. The restored list is a partnership with the American Booksellers Association, the trade group for independent stores, an online retailer which shares revenue with independent sellers, and The Novel Neighbor bookstore in St. The top seller on Wednesday’s list was Elin Hilderbrand’s latest beach read, “The Five-Star Weekend” followed by Bonnie Garmus’ popular debut novel “Lessons in Chemistry” and Ali Hazelwood’s comic romance “Love, Theoretically.” Others included range from such perennials as “To Kill a Mockingbird” and “The Very Hungry Caterpillar” to Paul McCartney’s photography book “1964,” David Sedaris’ “Happy-Go-Lucky” and “Blood Meridian,” the acclaimed novel by Cormac McCarthy, who died earlier this month.Īlong with sales rankings, VanDenburgh says, USA Today will include feature stories on independent sellers from around the country and recommendations from independent store owners. booksellers including bookstore chains, independent bookstores, mass merchandisers and online retailers.” Unlike The New York Times and other lists, USA Today does not have separate categories for hardcovers, paperbacks, audio books and e-books, instead combining them all, no matter the genre or release date. The list, which began in 1993 and includes the top 150 books, is “based exclusively on sales analysis from U.S. The publishing industry has long valued the USA Today rankings as a comprehensive, data-focused way of measuring the consumer market. The list otherwise will be managed by the paper’s books editor, Barbara VanDenburgh.


According to Erik Bursch, senior vice president for product and engineering, the logging of sales figures - entered manually by Cadden - has been automated. Gannett had not run the list since Mary Cadden, the longtime compiler, was among hundreds laid off late last year. “We couldn’t be more thrilled because this content is important to our vast audience and uniquely supports the communities we serve,” Kristin Roberts, Gannett Media’s chief content officer, said in a statement. NEW YORK (AP) - USA Today’s weekly list of bestselling books, a publishing fixture that had been on hiatus since December, returned Wednesday.
