New York Times
Review: Verdi’s Requiem Recast as Memorial for Dmitri Hvorostovsky
A four-performance run of the great choral work has been dedicated to the memory of the Russian baritone, a beloved Met artist who died on Wednesday.
Trump Urges Voters to Pick Roy Moore Instead of ‘Liberal Jones’
As the Alabama Senate election approaches, the president attacked the Democratic candidate, Doug Jones, as a “Schumer/Pelosi puppet.”
Brantley in Britain: Eye-Openers in London: 19th-Century Women With 21st-Century Problems
Revivals of plays by Ibsen and Wilde, and a new work about the young Karl Marx, find strong women chafing under the yoke of dominating men.
Pete Moore, an Original Miracle and Co-Writer of Hits, Dies at 79
As an integral member of the group led by his childhood friend Smokey Robinson, Mr. Moore played an important role in Motown Records’ origin story.
A Tired Brooklyn Transit Hub Is Finally Getting Attention
New York City officials aim to transform Broadway Junction from a pass-through to a destination stop with offices, stores, restaurants and other amenities.
Bulletin Board: Readers Accuse Us of Normalizing a Nazi Sympathizer; We Respond
Our national editor responds to readers’ feedback, most of it highly critical, of our profile of a white nationalist in Ohio.
New York Punk, Out of Retirement
Rockers from the downtown scene of the 1970s and ’80s are keeping the flame alive, and their gray-haired fans are happy to party like it’s 1979.
Mount Agung in Bali Erupts Again, Grounding Flights
The eruption, the second in a week on the Indonesian island, left thousands of airline passengers stranded.
The Neediest Cases Fund: Living on Scraps, Boy Who Fled Boko Haram Yearns to Heal the Poor
Usman Lawan, 13, dreams of becoming a doctor while contending with his own hunger and irregular access to water amid Nigeria’s eight-year war against the terrorist group.
No Man’s Land: Barbuda After Irma
The Caribbean island of Barbuda felt the full force of Hurricane Irma. Now, a struggle to control its future is underway. On one side are Barbudans who own the land and want to preserve their unique way of life — on the other, the government and foreign investors who see opportunity in disaster.
Mikhail Baryshnikov Gives a Tour of His Arts Center
Mikhail Baryshnikov, one of the greatest dancers of the 20th century, introduces the Baryshnikov Arts Center and its most recent crop of international artists.
In Peru’s Deserts, Melting Glaciers Are a Godsend (Until They’re Gone)
Accelerating glacial melt in the Andes caused by climate change has set off a gold rush downstream, letting the desert bloom. But as the ice vanishes, the vast farms below may do the same.
Pakistan Calls In Army to Help Restore Order After Violent Clashes in Islamabad
Thousands of officers moved against a sit-in led by a firebrand cleric that has paralyzed the capital, with at least six deaths and 150 arrests.
Why Trump Stands by Roy Moore, Even as It Fractures His Party
Senator Mitch McConnell and his allies have been infuriated as President Trump has reacted with indifference to a series of ideas they have floated to try to block Mr. Moore.
Diplomats Sound the Alarm as They Are Pushed Out in Droves
A State Department exodus marks a new stage in the broken and increasingly contentious relationship between Rex W. Tillerson and much of his work force.
In Egypt, Furious Retaliation but Failing Strategy in Sinai
One of the most striking aspects of the carnage at a Sinai mosque: How easy it was for militants to carry it out.
Who Will Be Running Consumer Agency on Monday? It’s Unclear
A legal battle over who will run the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau broke out after its chief abruptly resigned on Friday.
Auburn 26, Alabama 14: Auburn Upsets No. 1 Alabama: ‘We Did That for the Nation’
The Crimson Tide, the dominant force in college football in recent years, needs a lot of help from outsiders to reach this season’s national playoff.
Op-Ed Columnist: Is There an Evangelical Crisis?
Trump is testing whether identity or theology defines his evangelical supporters.
Op-Ed Columnist: Myanmar Is Not a Simple Morality Tale
The West made a saint of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. The Rohingya crisis revealed a politician.