From The Boston Globe <[email protected]>
Subject Today's Headlines: Ten years after the Summer of Market Basket, the beloved grocer’s business is better than ever
Date August 28, 2024 9:10 AM
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Today's Headlines
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Wednesday, August 28, 2024


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Today's Headlines

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Today's Paper
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Metro
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Opinion
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Sports
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Arts
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Comics
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Crossword





Page one







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Chesto Means Business


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Ten years after the Summer of Market Basket, the beloved grocer’s business is better than ever

Sales are up, there’s more stores, and nearly all the $1.6 billion that Arthur T. Demoulas borrowed to buy out his cousin has been paid back.
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Around New England


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The case of the poisoned trees in Maine accelerates a movement to beef up local environmental laws across the state

The saga of a rich Missouri couple poisoning a neighbor’s trees to improve their ocean view is having a side effect: motivating citizen-led initiatives to restrict or ban lawn chemicals in towns all the coast.
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K-12


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Mass. schools are cracking down on cellphones in class. It’s putting teachers and students at odds.

A growing number of Massachusetts public schools this fall are banning cellphones and other personal devices to keep students focused on learning and improve their overall mental wellbeing.
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Climate


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Mosquito-borne EEE claims its first victim in New England this year. We may soon see more.

As climate change turns the Northeast into a habitat that welcomes more mosquitoes, the number of infected residents is very likely to rise.
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Boston Globe Today











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Debate over the Harris-Trump debate

WATCH: Stakes are high. Political reporter James Pindell unpacks the latest polls, and Senator Warren’s reelection strategy in his “3 Political Things.”
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Watch &rarr;








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Scorching reality: Heat waves hit Mass. farm workers

WATCH: The state has no safeguards to protect workers from the extreme temperatures. Reporter Esmy Jimenez breaks down the problem and the push for regulations.
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Plane seat belt rules stuck in a holding pattern

WATCH: Climate change is causing more turbulence, but requirements haven’t changed in decades. Why? Travel writer and columnist Christopher Muther explains.
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The Nation






Nation


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With dams removed, salmon will have the run of a western river

This week, as the final pieces of four dams are demolished, a 240-mile stretch of the Klamath River will flow freely for the first time in more than a century — and salmon will get their best shot at long-term survival in the river.
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Nation


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On the COVID ‘off-ramp’: no tests, isolation, or masks

COVID has become so normalized that many Americans no longer see it as a reason to disrupt social, work, or travel routines.
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POLITICAL NOTEBOOK


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Trump to put Kennedy and Gabbard on his transition team

Both Kennedy and Gabbard spent most of their public life as progressive Democrats.
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The World






World


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Mexico pauses ties with US Embassy amid clash over judicial overhaul

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador also announced a pause in relations with the Canadian Embassy, which had conveyed Canadian investors’ concerns over the judicial overhaul.
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World


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A hostage in Gaza is rescued by Israel after 326 days of captivity

Qaid Farhan Alkadi was one of eight members of Israel’s Bedouin Arab minority who were abducted on Oct. 7. He was working as a guard at a packing factory in Kibbutz Magen, one of several farming communities that came under attack.
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World


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The world’s largest wetland is burning, and rare animals are dying

Wildfires are laying waste to Brazil’s Pantanal, the world’s largest tropical wetland and one of the most important biodiversity sanctuaries on the planet.
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Editorial & Opinion






EDITORIAL


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Aggrieved Swifties, lovers of AI memes unite

This election season, fighting online disinformation by actors foreign and domestic is everybody’s business.
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OPINION


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How politics devoured our summer

The old adage that no one pays attention to elections until after Labor Day evaporated faster than Donald Trump’s lead in the polls.
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OPINION


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Religion is America’s mighty engine of charitable goodness

The federal government rightly characterizes faith-based organizations as ‘the bedrock of our society.’
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Metro






Metro


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Public defender turned clerk candidate wants to bring the SJC closer to the public it serves

The elected clerk’s job — which pays approximately $190,000 a year — is one that’s unique to Massachusetts. The clerk basically acts as a liaison between the public and the state’s highest court.
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Massachusetts


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The November Project began in Boston and has chapters world-wide. Participants say the experience is life altering.

After beginning in Boston 2011, the November Project has grown into a broader community — chapters exist in 53 locations around the world — that values difference and serves as a vital support network.
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Cambridge


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When Cambridge ended towing, parking tickets soared. Now it’s doubling fines, to $100.

Illegal parking has more than doubled since Cambridge launched a pilot program that suspended all towing for street-sweeping related violations. Now, the city is doubling fines to $100.
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Sports






chad finn


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Did Drake Maye’s bosses learn from the Mac Jones experience? QB’s protection won’t come from this offensive line.

Jerod Mayo and Eliot Wolf know what it looks like when a young quarterback gets battered, then twitchy, then gun-shy, then melts into a puddle. They can't let it happen again.
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On baseball


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‘Any role at any time:’ Lefthander Rich Hill prepared to answer the Red Sox’ call to arms

The 44-year-old veteran pitcher from Milton was called up from Triple A Worcester after spending most of his summer coaching his son's Little League team.
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Dan Shaughnessy


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Should the Patriots play Drake Maye over Jacoby Brissett? It’s not about who starts, it’s who finishes.

The history of NFL rookie quarterbacks taking charge immediately is not great, and the Patriots know that first-hand.
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Business








Technology


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Zuckerberg says the White House pressured Facebook over some COVID-19 content during the pandemic

In a letter, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg alleges that the officials “repeatedly pressured” Facebook for months to take down “certain COVID-19 content including humor and satire.”
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Housing


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This Cape Cod couple couldn’t sell their home. They say the neighborhood pickleball court is to blame.

In early August, the couple took the house, originally listed at $1.3 million, off the market.
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Biotech


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Massachusetts’ biotech sector sees slower job growth in past year, report finds

Despite economic headwinds and widely reported layoffs, the sector still added 2,943 jobs, a new report said.
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Obituaries






Obituaries


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Leonard Riggio, who forged a bookselling empire at Barnes & Noble, is dead at 83

He transformed the publishing industry by building Barnes & Noble into the country’s most powerful bookseller before his company was overtaken by the Web and the rise of Amazon.com.
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Obituaries


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Eric Butler, who promoted ‘restorative justice’ for young people, dies at 49

Mr. Butler, an anti-violence counselor with a gift for winning the trust of emotionally closed-off teenagers, died Aug. 4 at his home in New Orleans.
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Arts & Lifestyle






Visual Arts


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If wind could talk: Dorchester artist’s drawing machine sparks conversation about climate change

Andrew Mowbray, whose wind-drawing machine is on display through Sept. 27, also has an upcoming exhibit.
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Arts


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Where Are All The Black People At founder to host artists panel at Watertown Library

Archy LaSalle founded the grassroots organization to address a lack of diversity in the arts world.
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TONY'S TIPS


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It’s been a peachy year for peaches. And now is the perfect time for picking.

These sweet, fuzzy gems, harvested from late July through late September, are perfect in August. Here's where to go and what to look for when you're picking.
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