Soft-spoken, with an appetite for risk
John Henry is a college dropout who used his knowledge of the soybean business to trade commodities before becoming the principal owner of the Red Sox.
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John Henry is a college dropout who used his knowledge of the soybean business to trade commodities before becoming the principal owner of the Red Sox.
The impending $70 million cash purchase will put the 141-year-old newspaper, its websites, and affiliated companies in John Henry’s hands.
In a letter to President Obama, 76 senators demanded tougher punishment on Iran’s economy until the country scales back its nuclear program.
Robert Mugabe won reelection by a landslide, the country’s electoral panel said, but the result could exacerbate tensions.
A sampling of stories from this Sunday's Globe.
patriots training camp report
The Patriots were split into blue and white teams, rather than the usual offense and defense, for a relaxed scrimmage.
Movies
Director Neill Blomkamp is Damon’s latest instructor in the captivating new science-fiction film “Elysium.”
Smackdown!
Lake Compounce in Bristol, Conn., traces its roots to 1846. Canobie Lake Park in Salem, N.H., was founded in 1902. Here’s how the parks stack up on some essentials.
LAWRENCE HARMON
Voters would do well to elect another mayor who knows the value of taking “no’’ for an answer.
A one-run deficit against the Diamondbacks hardly seemed like an obstacle after the last two games, but the Red Sox were unable to take another walkoff win.
The school food truck, which does not charge for meals, is the latest addition to a summer program that feeds more than 11,000 young people each day.
Militants wearing explosives-rigged vests killed at least nine civilians, most of them children, in a botched attack on the Indian consulate in an eastern Afghan city.
Senator Elizabeth Warren asked the federal government to speed its review of the ban on gay men donating blood.
The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis said his economic forecasts, as well as those of others at the Fed, have been too optimistic in the wake of the recession.
British writer Leo Hollis’s tour of the 21st-century metropolis explores the various social and creative possibilities that cities offer.
Her fiance’s bachelor party is a concern, but their marriage should be her bigger worry.
Globe e-book
I was the sun, the kids were my planets, and other reflections from the Globe columnist.