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Bridal Fashion Week: What We Saw at New York Bridal Fashion Week
Here is a peek at some of the latest bridal collections from top designers.
Women Today: Women Are Playing Today, and Leading Tomorrow
Sports programs for girls provide more than just a physical benefit — they can also help educate girls about gender issues, and empower them.
On Comedy: Moms at the Mike, on the Verge of a Breakthrough in Comedy
Led by Ali Wong, a generation of women is earning laughs by talking bluntly about the realities of pregnancy and motherhood.
Tom Petty, Classic Rocker? Sure. And Weird Video Star, Too.
Mr. Petty and his wacky visual aesthetic belonged to MTV, alongside Duran Duran and Cyndi Lauper, as much as it did to the rock ’n’ roll canon.
Op-Ed Contributor: ESPN Is Terrified of Jemele Hill’s Honesty on Racism
By suspending her, the sports network is making a desperate move not to alienate some viewers and sponsors.
Start-Up Bets on Tech Talent Pipeline From Africa
Andela, which has attracted the attention and money of people like Mark Zuckerberg, trains and employs workers in Africa to do programming.
When Two Men Fall in Love on the Ballet Stage, and Why It Matters
New York City Ballet’s same-sex duets bring a contemporary sensibility to an art that can be slow to change.
Gwyneth Paltrow, Angelina Jolie and Others Say Weinstein Harassed Them
“This way of treating women ends now,” Ms. Paltrow said as she and other actresses accused the producer of casting-couch abuses.
The First Time: Rob Huebel: The First Time I Filmed a Threeway for TV
The actor, a star of Amazon’s “Transparent,” on how his friends and family reacted when he rolled around in bed with two actresses.
Square Feet: In the Heart of Milwaukee, a Gleaming Tower Leads an Urban Renewal
After the opening of Northwestern Mutual’s new headquarters, other projects are sprouting up everywhere in the city’s center.
Op-Ed Columnist: To Serve Is to Slobber
President Trump demands an unseemly degree of gratitude and deference.
Books of The Times: In Ron Chernow’s ‘Grant,’ an American Giant’s Makeover Continues
Chernow is out to find undiscovered nobility in Ulysses S. Grant’s story, and he succeeds.
T’s Best Images From Fashion Month
The 30 unusual, surprising pictures from the shows in New York, London, Milan and Paris.
In Love With Romance Novels, but Not Their Lack of Diversity
The owners of the Ripped Bodice bookstore gathered data about writers’ races, and the results confirmed what many authors and consumers already knew.
On the (Rising) Trail of Thai Food in America
Why is such a sophisticated, spicy cuisine often rendered bland and cloying? A former Bangkok correspondent finds answers and good news in California.
Procter & Gamble Declares Victory in Proxy Battle; Peltz Says, Not So Fast
The company said it defeated an attempt by the activist investor Nelson Peltz to win a seat on its board. But Mr. Peltz’s company said the vote was too close to call.
Op-Ed Contributors: Mysterious Sounds and Scary Illnesses as Political Tools
The narrative around the “sonic attack” on the American embassy in Cuba fits a troubling pattern for Trump.
Books of The Times: Sylvia Plath’s Letters Reveal a Writer Split in Two
The massive first volume of Plath’s letters dispels the notion that Plath wasn’t aware of her contradictions or in (some) control of them.
North Korean Hackers Stole U.S.-South Korean Military Plans, Lawmaker Says
Among the data stolen in a hack last year was a plan to remove the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, referred to as a “decapitation” plan.
Op-Ed Contributor: The End of Moe’s Meat Market
The storefront gallery in Little Italy is closing, another sign that New York is losing the things that made it so captivating.