Kfke Morning Must Reads: June 29
A copy of the Sun and the Times newspapers, published by News International are seen on display at a news agent in London on July 8, 2011Bloomberg/Getty ImagesBy Helen ReganJanuary 20, 2015 1:31 AM ESTEnding a 40-year tradition, one of Britainrsquo best-selling national newspapers, the Sun, will no longer feature large photos of topless female models on i
stanley cup ts page three, according to reports.The page has been an icon of working-class male life in the U.K., but campaigners have long branded it as ldquo exist, says Agence France-Presse.Though the Sun has not issued an official confirmation, a report in the Times which, like the Sun, is owned by Rupert Murdochrsquo News International
stanley cup said last Fridayrsquo issue would be the final one to show the topless models, dubbed page-three girls.A campaign launched by group No More Page Three garnered more than 217,000 signature
stanley cup s on a petition calling for an end to the publication of images of topless women in the mass-market paper.The group said it was truly historic news and a great day for people power, and many took to Twitter to welcome the news.[AFP]More Must-Reads from TIMEHow the Economy is Doing in the Swing StatesHarris Battles For the Bro VoteOur Guide to Voting in the 2024 ElectionMel Robbins Will Make You Do ItWhy Vinegar Is So Good for YouYou Dont Have to Dread the End of Daylight SavingThe 20 Best Halloween TV Episodes of All TimeMeet TIMEs Newest Class of Next Generation Ssbg Top White House Officials Talk Encryption in Silicon Valley
Fit to TweetBy John SimonsOctober 31, 2021 7:00 AM EDT To receive weekly emails of conversations with the worldrsquo top CEOs and business decisionmakers, click here. In todayrsquo youth-centric tech industry, Michael Dell, at 56, is somewhat of an elder statesman. The Dell Technologies chief executive occasionally hosts dinners for young entrepreneurs at his Austin, Tex., home, where guests seek out his advice on matters of life and business. Dell was once where they are: he started a tech
adidas campus company as a teenager in his college dorm room and dropped out of school. Thirty-plus years later, hersquo a billionaire. The details of his journey, however, are more complex. The PC assembly business he created at the University of Texas in
ugg 1984 became a Fortune 500 company that experienced dramatic twists and turns. Dell won a battle against activist investor Carl Icahn for control of his company and took Dell private in 2013. A few years later, he orchestrated the purchase of EMC Corp., one of the highest-valued tech acquisitions in history. He then took his company public again in 2018.Those events and others shaped Dell, who details his nearly four decades as a business trailblazer in a new book, Play Nice But Win: A CEO Journey from Founder to Leader. Dell spoke with
adidas campus TIME about the lessons he has learned, the changing role of the CEO, and his belief that for-profit businesses have potential to make the world a better placemdash;and be more effective than philanthro