Hungary Passes ‘Stop Soros’ Law Criminalizing Aid to Migrants Prime Minister Viktor Orban campaigned on a nationalist, anti-immigrant platform. Providing help to those who enter the country illegally will now be punishable by up to a year in jail. By PATRICK KINGSLEY
The World Cup Is Fun. Except for the Russians Being Tortured. Aside from being a sporting event of global significance, this is a major P.R. victory for President Putin and his entourage. By ALEXEY KOVALEV
Feature How One Conservative Think Tank Is Stocking Trump’s Government By placing its people throughout the administration, the Heritage Foundation has succeeded in furthering its right-wing agenda. By JONATHAN MAHLER
New Group, With Conservative Credentials, Plans Push for a Carbon Tax A new lobbying group is hoping to build support for a “climate dividend” plan. Its members include Trent Lott, Janet L. Yellen and Ben S. Bernanke. By JOHN SCHWARTZ
Trump Is Said to Intend to Campaign for South Carolina Governor in G.O.P. Runoff The decision is a gamble that President Trump can lift Gov. Henry McMaster, one of Mr. Trump’s earliest supporters, to the Republican nomination at the last minute. By JONATHAN MARTIN
On the Runway In Praise of Wearing a Dress Again and Again Tiffany Haddish is a fashion role model for our time. By VANESSA FRIEDMAN
Warhol at the Whitney: From Myth to Man The curator of the Whitney’s coming Andy Warhol retrospective offers details of the exhibition — more intimate than usual — for the first time. By HILARIE M. SHEETS
Governors Refuse to Send National Guard to Border, Citing Child Separation Practice The debate over the issue has seeped into state-level politics, as a growing number of governors declared that they will not deploy troops given ‘cruel’ rule. By MATTHEW HAAG and JESS BIDGOOD
Swift Frontier Justice for Migrants Brought to Federal Courts President Trump’s new policy requiring criminal prosecutions of migrants who illegally cross the border is flooding the court system with a new kind of defendant. By MIRIAM JORDAN
Contributing Op-Ed Writer What Trump Gets Right About Europe The president’s anger, however crude, gets at a core problem with the Western alliance. By JOCHEN BITTNER
Kim Jong-un Returns to China, This Time With Leverage As the United States and China drift into a trade war, Mr. Kim, a week after meeting President Trump, will have the chance to play one power against the other. By JANE PERLEZ
How Anti-Immigration Passion Was Inflamed From the Fringe Jeff Sessions and Stephen Miller once shouted from the sidelines. Now they’re the driving force behind the policy separating immigrant children from parents. By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and KATIE BENNER
34 Days Later, the Yankees Lose a Game That Was Halted by Rain The Nationals got a tiebreaking homer from Juan Soto, their 19-year-old slugging sensation who wasn’t in the big leagues when the first part of the game was played in May. By BILLY WITZ
DealBook Financial World’s A-List Could Take Hollywood’s Cue on Inclusion To promote diversity, big pension funds and college endowments could insist on equitable hiring practices at investment firms. By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN
Walter Bahr, a Star of a World Cup Upset, Is Dead at 91 Later a successful college coach, in 1950 he was a key to what many consider the greatest upset in the history of international soccer. By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN
Global Health The Man Who (Almost) Wiped Out the Guinea Worms Dr. Ernesto Ruiz-Tiben has saved tens of millions of people from painful parasitic infections. By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr
Global Health Nearly Eradicated in Humans, the Guinea Worm Finds New Victims: Dogs For 30 years, scientists have fought to eliminate a horrifying parasite. Suddenly, it has begun infecting dogs in Chad, threatening to undo decades of progress. By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr
World Cup Trivia Quiz How well do you know the history of the world’s most popular sport? By KEITH WILLIAMS
It Was Supposed to Be an Unbiased Study of Drinking. They Wanted to Call It ‘Cheers.’ Buried in a new N.I.H. report are disturbing examples of coordination between scientists and the alcohol industry on a study that could have changed America’s drinking habits. By RONI CARYN RABIN
Harry Kane Rescues England. Tune In for the Next Episode. Even under recalculated expectations, England appeared to be headed for a period of second-guessing until Kane scored with a stoppage-time header to beat Tunisia. By MATTHEW FUTTERMAN and KEVIN DRAPER
Hungary Passes ‘Stop Soros’ Law Criminalizing Aid to Migrants Prime Minister Viktor Orban campaigned on a nationalist, anti-immigrant platform. Providing help to those who enter the country illegally will now be punishable by up to a year in jail. By PATRICK KINGSLEY
The World Cup Is Fun. Except for the Russians Being Tortured. Aside from being a sporting event of global significance, this is a major P.R. victory for President Putin and his entourage. By ALEXEY KOVALEV
Feature How One Conservative Think Tank Is Stocking Trump’s Government By placing its people throughout the administration, the Heritage Foundation has succeeded in furthering its right-wing agenda. By JONATHAN MAHLER
New Group, With Conservative Credentials, Plans Push for a Carbon Tax A new lobbying group is hoping to build support for a “climate dividend” plan. Its members include Trent Lott, Janet L. Yellen and Ben S. Bernanke. By JOHN SCHWARTZ
Trump Is Said to Intend to Campaign for South Carolina Governor in G.O.P. Runoff The decision is a gamble that President Trump can lift Gov. Henry McMaster, one of Mr. Trump’s earliest supporters, to the Republican nomination at the last minute. By JONATHAN MARTIN
On the Runway In Praise of Wearing a Dress Again and Again Tiffany Haddish is a fashion role model for our time. By VANESSA FRIEDMAN
Warhol at the Whitney: From Myth to Man The curator of the Whitney’s coming Andy Warhol retrospective offers details of the exhibition — more intimate than usual — for the first time. By HILARIE M. SHEETS
Governors Refuse to Send National Guard to Border, Citing Child Separation Practice The debate over the issue has seeped into state-level politics, as a growing number of governors declared that they will not deploy troops given ‘cruel’ rule. By MATTHEW HAAG and JESS BIDGOOD
Swift Frontier Justice for Migrants Brought to Federal Courts President Trump’s new policy requiring criminal prosecutions of migrants who illegally cross the border is flooding the court system with a new kind of defendant. By MIRIAM JORDAN
Contributing Op-Ed Writer What Trump Gets Right About Europe The president’s anger, however crude, gets at a core problem with the Western alliance. By JOCHEN BITTNER
Kim Jong-un Returns to China, This Time With Leverage As the United States and China drift into a trade war, Mr. Kim, a week after meeting President Trump, will have the chance to play one power against the other. By JANE PERLEZ
How Anti-Immigration Passion Was Inflamed From the Fringe Jeff Sessions and Stephen Miller once shouted from the sidelines. Now they’re the driving force behind the policy separating immigrant children from parents. By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and KATIE BENNER
34 Days Later, the Yankees Lose a Game That Was Halted by Rain The Nationals got a tiebreaking homer from Juan Soto, their 19-year-old slugging sensation who wasn’t in the big leagues when the first part of the game was played in May. By BILLY WITZ
DealBook Financial World’s A-List Could Take Hollywood’s Cue on Inclusion To promote diversity, big pension funds and college endowments could insist on equitable hiring practices at investment firms. By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN
Walter Bahr, a Star of a World Cup Upset, Is Dead at 91 Later a successful college coach, in 1950 he was a key to what many consider the greatest upset in the history of international soccer. By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN
Global Health The Man Who (Almost) Wiped Out the Guinea Worms Dr. Ernesto Ruiz-Tiben has saved tens of millions of people from painful parasitic infections. By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr
Global Health Nearly Eradicated in Humans, the Guinea Worm Finds New Victims: Dogs For 30 years, scientists have fought to eliminate a horrifying parasite. Suddenly, it has begun infecting dogs in Chad, threatening to undo decades of progress. By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr
World Cup Trivia Quiz How well do you know the history of the world’s most popular sport? By KEITH WILLIAMS
It Was Supposed to Be an Unbiased Study of Drinking. They Wanted to Call It ‘Cheers.’ Buried in a new N.I.H. report are disturbing examples of coordination between scientists and the alcohol industry on a study that could have changed America’s drinking habits. By RONI CARYN RABIN
Harry Kane Rescues England. Tune In for the Next Episode. Even under recalculated expectations, England appeared to be headed for a period of second-guessing until Kane scored with a stoppage-time header to beat Tunisia. By MATTHEW FUTTERMAN and KEVIN DRAPER