Leslie Moonves Speaks on CBS Earnings Call but Not About Harassment Allegations Mr. Moonves took questions from Wall Street analysts after second-quarter earnings were released, but did not address claims against him that are being investigated. By EDMUND LEE
Review: ‘The Miseducation of Cameron Post’ Resists the Straight and Narrow Chloë Grace Moretz stars in this adaptation of a popular young-adult novel about faith and sexuality, brought to the screen with empathy and tact. By A.O. SCOTT
Summer in the City Things to do This Weekend: Free Arts in Parks! Noname headlines BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn on Friday, and it’s the second year of the INSITU dance festival in Queens. By MARGOT BOYER-DRY and TEJAL RAO
It Wasn’t a Crime to Carry Marijuana. Until the Police Found a Loophole. In 1977, New York State made carrying small amounts of marijuana in someone’s pocket a ticket-worthy violation, not a crime. But arrests soon skyrocketed. By BENJAMIN MUELLER
Calculator The Noisiest Places in New York All neighborhoods are not equal when it comes to noise. These are the loudest. By MICHAEL KOLOMATSKY
Fields Medal Is Stolen Minutes After It’s Given in Brazil Caucher Birkar, a Cambridge University professor, was one of four winners of the award, which is regarded as the world’s most prestigious prize for math. By CEYLAN YEGINSU
ART REVIEW Painting: An (Incomplete) Survey of the State of the Art The latest in a series initiated in 1998 by two Chelsea art dealers, “Painting: Now and Forever, Part III” examines the medium’s turn toward figuration. By ROBERTA SMITH
At Salzburg Festival, High Passion and Redemption Onstage It’s an event more associated with classical music, but drama is in its DNA. Two productions of German-language classics at the festival show differing approaches. By A.J. GOLDMANN
Jacinda Ardern Embraces Dual Role: New Zealand Prime Minister and Mom New Zealand’s prime minister, back from six weeks’ maternity leave, told reporters to expect “the odd press conference with a little bit of spill on me.” By CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-McLAY
Faced With Crippling Sanctions, ZTE Loaded Up on Lobbyists A Chinese company waged a furious — and ultimately successful — lobbying campaign to win a reprieve from penalties in Congress. By ANA SWANSON and KENNETH P. VOGEL
Pennsylvania Diocese Orders Removal of Former Bishops’ Names From Church Buildings The move by a Harrisburg bishop comes ahead of a grand jury report expected to expose decades of mishandled cases of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
Art Review Stripes and Tangles of Neon, Under the Hamptons Sun Neighboring shows offer new reflections on Keith Sonnier, whose assemblages include light, glass, found objects and the ambient sound of U2. By JASON FARAGO
Books of The Times Finding Alarm and Consolation About the Apocalypse in Two New Books Things are worse than ever, Roy Scranton insists in “We’re Doomed. Now What?” They always have been, Eugene Thacker says in “Infinite Resignation.” By JOHN WILLIAMS
Who Wore It Better: Art or Commerce? It’s a museum show. It’s a fashion show. It’s a critique. No, a boutique. Whatever you call the Whitney installation by the label Eckhaus Latta, you’re likely to leave with more questions (and clothes) than answers. By DAVID COLMAN
Campaigns Enter Texting Era With a Plea: Will U Vote 4 Me? Welcome to the age of the political mass-text. Candidates in this year’s midterm elections are adding a new, hard-to-ignore tool to their arsenal. By KEVIN ROOSE
Trump Tells Sessions to ‘Stop This Rigged Witch Hunt Right Now’ The order to the attorney general on Twitter immediately raised questions from some lawyers about whether it was an attempt to obstruct justice in the special counsel’s Russia inquiry. By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS, EILEEN SULLIVAN and KATIE BENNER
Critic’s Notebook Now You Can Just Pay Celebrities to Say Stuff Cameo is the “Being John Malkovich” of apps. By AMANDA HESS
Living In Irvington, N.Y.: A Walkable Village With Striking Manhattan Views A small town with a progressive attitude, Irvington offers residents a sense of community and history — as well as proximity to the Hudson River. By SUSAN HODARA
Review: In a Blissful Musical ‘Twelfth Night’ in Central Park, Song Is Empathy This radiant Public Works production of Shakespeare’s comedy of identity asks us “to see through the eyes of another.” By BEN BRANTLEY
Tuskegee Airman’s Remains Are Identified, Ending Daughter’s Quest for Answers Lawrence E. Dickson was 24 when his fighter plane went down in December 1944. On Friday, officials confirmed that remains found last year were his. By MELISSA GOMEZ
Leslie Moonves Speaks on CBS Earnings Call but Not About Harassment Allegations Mr. Moonves took questions from Wall Street analysts after second-quarter earnings were released, but did not address claims against him that are being investigated. By EDMUND LEE
Review: ‘The Miseducation of Cameron Post’ Resists the Straight and Narrow Chloë Grace Moretz stars in this adaptation of a popular young-adult novel about faith and sexuality, brought to the screen with empathy and tact. By A.O. SCOTT
Summer in the City Things to do This Weekend: Free Arts in Parks! Noname headlines BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn on Friday, and it’s the second year of the INSITU dance festival in Queens. By MARGOT BOYER-DRY and TEJAL RAO
It Wasn’t a Crime to Carry Marijuana. Until the Police Found a Loophole. In 1977, New York State made carrying small amounts of marijuana in someone’s pocket a ticket-worthy violation, not a crime. But arrests soon skyrocketed. By BENJAMIN MUELLER
Calculator The Noisiest Places in New York All neighborhoods are not equal when it comes to noise. These are the loudest. By MICHAEL KOLOMATSKY
Fields Medal Is Stolen Minutes After It’s Given in Brazil Caucher Birkar, a Cambridge University professor, was one of four winners of the award, which is regarded as the world’s most prestigious prize for math. By CEYLAN YEGINSU
ART REVIEW Painting: An (Incomplete) Survey of the State of the Art The latest in a series initiated in 1998 by two Chelsea art dealers, “Painting: Now and Forever, Part III” examines the medium’s turn toward figuration. By ROBERTA SMITH
At Salzburg Festival, High Passion and Redemption Onstage It’s an event more associated with classical music, but drama is in its DNA. Two productions of German-language classics at the festival show differing approaches. By A.J. GOLDMANN
Jacinda Ardern Embraces Dual Role: New Zealand Prime Minister and Mom New Zealand’s prime minister, back from six weeks’ maternity leave, told reporters to expect “the odd press conference with a little bit of spill on me.” By CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-McLAY
Faced With Crippling Sanctions, ZTE Loaded Up on Lobbyists A Chinese company waged a furious — and ultimately successful — lobbying campaign to win a reprieve from penalties in Congress. By ANA SWANSON and KENNETH P. VOGEL
Pennsylvania Diocese Orders Removal of Former Bishops’ Names From Church Buildings The move by a Harrisburg bishop comes ahead of a grand jury report expected to expose decades of mishandled cases of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
Art Review Stripes and Tangles of Neon, Under the Hamptons Sun Neighboring shows offer new reflections on Keith Sonnier, whose assemblages include light, glass, found objects and the ambient sound of U2. By JASON FARAGO
Books of The Times Finding Alarm and Consolation About the Apocalypse in Two New Books Things are worse than ever, Roy Scranton insists in “We’re Doomed. Now What?” They always have been, Eugene Thacker says in “Infinite Resignation.” By JOHN WILLIAMS
Who Wore It Better: Art or Commerce? It’s a museum show. It’s a fashion show. It’s a critique. No, a boutique. Whatever you call the Whitney installation by the label Eckhaus Latta, you’re likely to leave with more questions (and clothes) than answers. By DAVID COLMAN
Campaigns Enter Texting Era With a Plea: Will U Vote 4 Me? Welcome to the age of the political mass-text. Candidates in this year’s midterm elections are adding a new, hard-to-ignore tool to their arsenal. By KEVIN ROOSE
Trump Tells Sessions to ‘Stop This Rigged Witch Hunt Right Now’ The order to the attorney general on Twitter immediately raised questions from some lawyers about whether it was an attempt to obstruct justice in the special counsel’s Russia inquiry. By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS, EILEEN SULLIVAN and KATIE BENNER
Critic’s Notebook Now You Can Just Pay Celebrities to Say Stuff Cameo is the “Being John Malkovich” of apps. By AMANDA HESS
Living In Irvington, N.Y.: A Walkable Village With Striking Manhattan Views A small town with a progressive attitude, Irvington offers residents a sense of community and history — as well as proximity to the Hudson River. By SUSAN HODARA
Review: In a Blissful Musical ‘Twelfth Night’ in Central Park, Song Is Empathy This radiant Public Works production of Shakespeare’s comedy of identity asks us “to see through the eyes of another.” By BEN BRANTLEY
Tuskegee Airman’s Remains Are Identified, Ending Daughter’s Quest for Answers Lawrence E. Dickson was 24 when his fighter plane went down in December 1944. On Friday, officials confirmed that remains found last year were his. By MELISSA GOMEZ