Corrections: Wednesday, August 16, 2017 Corrections appearing in print on Wednesday, August 16, 2017.
Trump Comments on Race Open Breach With C.E.O.s, Military and G.O.P. President Trump was abandoned by executives, contradicted by military leaders and shunned by Republicans outraged by his defense of white nationalists. By MICHAEL D. SHEAR, GLENN THRUSH and MAGGIE HABERMAN
Common Sense C.E.O.s Long Avoided Politics. Trump Is Changing the Calculus. Corporate leaders often avoid taking political stands, especially on the president. Equivocation from the White House on right-wing extremism has forced a response. By JAMES B. STEWART
Cuomo Says Confederate Names on New York Streets Should Go Plaques honoring two Confederate leaders were taken down in Brooklyn. Two busts of them will be removed in the Bronx. And the governor has asked the Army to remove their names from streets in Fort Hamilton. By SARAH MASLIN NIR and SHARON OTTERMAN
Kara Walker: Art Can’t Solve the Nation’s Racial Problems In the shadow of Charlottesville, viewers may to come to the artist’s fall show expecting answers. Her statement acknowledges they may be disappointed. By BLAKE GOPNIK
Critic's Notebook A Weekend Can Span Centuries at Tanglewood Our critic’s visit to the Boston Symphony’s home in the Berkshires began with Purcell’s 17th-century “Fairy Queen” and ended with a work from 2015. By JAMES R. OESTREICH
Asia and Australia Edition Charlottesville, Guam, Alibaba: Your Thursday Briefing Here’s what you need to know to start your day. By CHARLES McDERMID
Kenya Opposition Leader Says He’ll Expose Election Fraud Raila Odinga, who lost last week’s presidential election to the incumbent, President Uhuru Kenyatta, says he will challenge the result in the Supreme Court. By KIMIKO de FREYTAS-TAMURA
Critic's Notebook An Enchanted Evening of Indian Dance Under a Turner Sky Outdoors near the Manhattan waterfront, the Erasing Borders Festival of Indian Dance on Tuesday evening had diversity and vitality — and magical lighting. By ALASTAIR MACAULAY
Prominent Opposition Leader in Iran Begins Hunger Strike Old, sick and increasingly frustrated, Mehdi Karroubi, who has been under house arrest since 2011, demanded a public trial in exchange for ending his fast. By THOMAS ERDBRINK
Inside the C.E.O. Rebellion Against Trump’s Advisory Councils The president announced that he would dissolve two councils of business leaders after a decision by the members of his Strategic and Policy Forum to disband. By DAVID GELLES, LANDON THOMAS Jr., ANDREW ROSS SORKIN and KATE KELLY
Found: Oldest Known Photo of a U.S. President (Socks and All) A recently surfaced original daguerreotype taken in 1843 of John Quincy Adams will be auctioned at Sotheby’s in October. By JENNIFER SCHUESSLER
Tom Stoppard’s ‘Travesties’ Will Return to Broadway The play is transferring from London and so will the star Tom Hollander. By ANDREW R. CHOW
In Ukraine, a Malware Expert Who Could Blow the Whistle on Russian Hacking For the first time, an actual witness has emerged in the election hacking, and he has been interviewed by the F.B.I. By ANDREW E. KRAMER and ANDREW HIGGINS
Trump Gives White Supremacists an Unequivocal Boost During a shouting-match of a news conference, an angry president asserted that “alt-left” activists in Charlottesville were as much to blame as neo-Nazis. By GLENN THRUSH and MAGGIE HABERMAN
Trump Reminded Threats Work Differently in Diplomacy Than in Real Estate President Trump is accustomed to using strong statements as a negotiating tactic. But on the global stage, the politics of intimidation can get complicated. By DAVID E. SANGER
For-Profit Charlotte School of Law Closes The school had been hanging on by a thread for months in the face of tumbling enrollment after the American Bar Association’s accreditors put it on probation in November. By ELIZABETH OLSON
Trump Defends Initial Remarks on Charlottesville; Again Blames ‘Both Sides’ The president said he did nothing wrong in his first remarks on Saturday following racial unrest in Virginia.
Square Feet U.S.C. Expands in a ‘Neglected’ Neighborhood, Promising Jobs and More The University of Southern California’s campus extension in South Los Angeles brings together one of the state’s poorest areas and one of its wealthiest universities. By LAUREN HERSTIK
Off the Menu Sola Pasta Bar, From a Michelin-Starred Chef, Opens in SoHo Major Food Group plans a new branch of Parm and a tiki bar, Eiji Ichimura’s next moves, closings and other restaurant news. By FLORENCE FABRICANT
One U.S. Factory Goes Global, While Trump Shrinks the World As the administration renegotiates Nafta, a fan manufacturer in Kentucky worries that its business could be hurt by rising impediments to trade. By PETER S. GOODMAN
Trump Comments on Race Open Breach With C.E.O.s, Military and G.O.P. President Trump was abandoned by executives, contradicted by military leaders and shunned by Republicans outraged by his defense of white nationalists. By MICHAEL D. SHEAR, GLENN THRUSH and MAGGIE HABERMAN
Common Sense C.E.O.s Long Avoided Politics. Trump Is Changing the Calculus. Corporate leaders often avoid taking political stands, especially on the president. Equivocation from the White House on right-wing extremism has forced a response. By JAMES B. STEWART
Cuomo Says Confederate Names on New York Streets Should Go Plaques honoring two Confederate leaders were taken down in Brooklyn. Two busts of them will be removed in the Bronx. And the governor has asked the Army to remove their names from streets in Fort Hamilton. By SARAH MASLIN NIR and SHARON OTTERMAN
Kara Walker: Art Can’t Solve the Nation’s Racial Problems In the shadow of Charlottesville, viewers may to come to the artist’s fall show expecting answers. Her statement acknowledges they may be disappointed. By BLAKE GOPNIK
Critic's Notebook A Weekend Can Span Centuries at Tanglewood Our critic’s visit to the Boston Symphony’s home in the Berkshires began with Purcell’s 17th-century “Fairy Queen” and ended with a work from 2015. By JAMES R. OESTREICH
Asia and Australia Edition Charlottesville, Guam, Alibaba: Your Thursday Briefing Here’s what you need to know to start your day. By CHARLES McDERMID
Kenya Opposition Leader Says He’ll Expose Election Fraud Raila Odinga, who lost last week’s presidential election to the incumbent, President Uhuru Kenyatta, says he will challenge the result in the Supreme Court. By KIMIKO de FREYTAS-TAMURA
Critic's Notebook An Enchanted Evening of Indian Dance Under a Turner Sky Outdoors near the Manhattan waterfront, the Erasing Borders Festival of Indian Dance on Tuesday evening had diversity and vitality — and magical lighting. By ALASTAIR MACAULAY
Prominent Opposition Leader in Iran Begins Hunger Strike Old, sick and increasingly frustrated, Mehdi Karroubi, who has been under house arrest since 2011, demanded a public trial in exchange for ending his fast. By THOMAS ERDBRINK
Inside the C.E.O. Rebellion Against Trump’s Advisory Councils The president announced that he would dissolve two councils of business leaders after a decision by the members of his Strategic and Policy Forum to disband. By DAVID GELLES, LANDON THOMAS Jr., ANDREW ROSS SORKIN and KATE KELLY
Found: Oldest Known Photo of a U.S. President (Socks and All) A recently surfaced original daguerreotype taken in 1843 of John Quincy Adams will be auctioned at Sotheby’s in October. By JENNIFER SCHUESSLER
Tom Stoppard’s ‘Travesties’ Will Return to Broadway The play is transferring from London and so will the star Tom Hollander. By ANDREW R. CHOW
In Ukraine, a Malware Expert Who Could Blow the Whistle on Russian Hacking For the first time, an actual witness has emerged in the election hacking, and he has been interviewed by the F.B.I. By ANDREW E. KRAMER and ANDREW HIGGINS
Trump Gives White Supremacists an Unequivocal Boost During a shouting-match of a news conference, an angry president asserted that “alt-left” activists in Charlottesville were as much to blame as neo-Nazis. By GLENN THRUSH and MAGGIE HABERMAN
Trump Reminded Threats Work Differently in Diplomacy Than in Real Estate President Trump is accustomed to using strong statements as a negotiating tactic. But on the global stage, the politics of intimidation can get complicated. By DAVID E. SANGER
For-Profit Charlotte School of Law Closes The school had been hanging on by a thread for months in the face of tumbling enrollment after the American Bar Association’s accreditors put it on probation in November. By ELIZABETH OLSON
Trump Defends Initial Remarks on Charlottesville; Again Blames ‘Both Sides’ The president said he did nothing wrong in his first remarks on Saturday following racial unrest in Virginia.
Square Feet U.S.C. Expands in a ‘Neglected’ Neighborhood, Promising Jobs and More The University of Southern California’s campus extension in South Los Angeles brings together one of the state’s poorest areas and one of its wealthiest universities. By LAUREN HERSTIK
Off the Menu Sola Pasta Bar, From a Michelin-Starred Chef, Opens in SoHo Major Food Group plans a new branch of Parm and a tiki bar, Eiji Ichimura’s next moves, closings and other restaurant news. By FLORENCE FABRICANT
One U.S. Factory Goes Global, While Trump Shrinks the World As the administration renegotiates Nafta, a fan manufacturer in Kentucky worries that its business could be hurt by rising impediments to trade. By PETER S. GOODMAN