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Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The Christian Science Church, and we’ve always been transparent about that.

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Monitor Daily
May 16, 2025 Mulch ado about nothing

Every day here in the newsroom of The Christian Science Monitor, we roll up our sleeves, sharpen our elbows, and take on the hard questions in order to bring you, our readers, clarity about the world we share. Today’s problem: “Anybody got a joke about compost?” Debate ensued organically.

“What’s humus about that?” said one.

“Break it down for me,” replied another. 

“Keep digging.”

“Oh, for peat sake.”

OK, so maybe we’re better at headlines than at punch lines. But since April showers have given way to May flowers, we’re ending the week with today’s photo essay by Riley Robinson from New England’s premier annual flower show. We hope that like a world-class orchid, you’ll be Tickled Pink.

~
Here’s an audio bonus: Our “Why We Wrote This” podcast, featuring conversations with Monitor writers about their work, returns today. In this new episode, Stephanie Hanes talks about her reporting on sustainable living in a high-tech age.

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The Christian Science Monitor is an international news organization offering calm, thoughtful, award-winning coverage for independent thinkers. We tackle difficult conversations and divisive issues–we don’t shy away from hard problems. But you’ll find in each Monitor news story qualities that can lead to solutions and unite us–qualities such as respect, resilience, hope, and fairness.
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  1. CONTENT MAP
  2. May 2000
  3. May 09

Content map

Please see our Site Map for a guide to site content.

Monitor articles for May 09, 2000

  • States grapple with grounding elderly drivers
  • Elian's family heads to court this week
  • Crime keeps dropping, but for how long?
  • News In Brief
  • Cash 'ventures' on campus
  • Love without a crash
  • Today's Story Line
  • Sharing an idea, or two, on the job
  • Lockerbie trial: last act of old era
  • News In Brief
  • Going home again is difficult for Kosovars
  • What's New
  • Kosovo casualty: environment
  • Bug-watching on the Internet
  • National ID = Naive Idea
  • Quietly, vast bill reveals green side of Congress
  • CORRECTION
  • Remembering Wallace
  • World's 10 largest opera Houses
  • When criminals get help from the Web
  • Web Smarts
  • Castro's once-staunch Latin allies lose patience
  • Mapping a nation one step at a time
  • Treatment of Afghan women needs attention
  • How bugs avoid becoming lunch
  • Weighing the long-term value of a college's 'brand'
  • News In Brief
  • News In Brief
  • Robot bugs on other planets
  • Portrait of the artist as a young student
  • Lebanon beckons tourists
  • Canada: Soldiers have right to refuse anthrax vaccine
  • A step off the beaten track
  • Census's most invasive question isn't about toilets
  • Brother, can you spare me a college counselor?
  • Rural teachers tackle big-city issues with a personal touch
  • 'Beyond Use' in N. Ireland
  • Many tribes, one goal: college
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