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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. January 2001
  3. January 05

Content map

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

Monitor articles for January 05, 2001

  • A long wait to point of no return
  • Privatize Social Security before cutting taxes
  • News In Brief
  • In Democratic Party, stirrings on the left
  • Fed to the rescue - but in time?
  • A summer memory sneaks up on me
  • News In Brief
  • Thailand readies for cleanest-ever election tomorrow
  • Critics' prizes can serve as a counterpoint to Oscars
  • Football's last race barrier crumbles
  • Mesh metal walls and 'Alumi-Nuts'
  • London power station plugs in to hip art
  • IN MIDEAST, SMALL IS HOPEFUL
  • 'Jazz' CD set offers musical chestnuts, plays it too safe
  • 'Last of the Thorntons' stirs the heart
  • The envelope, please
  • Exhibit 'aluminates' exotic uses of a ubiquitous 20th-century material
  • TO OUR READERS
  • Two exciting new CDs will delight jazz fans
  • Democracy for the 21st century
  • News In Brief
  • Clearsighted ethics
  • Clinton's celebrity a double-edged sword
  • 'No excuses' needed: Oklahoma back at top
  • Horton Foote enjoys a triumphant 'second act'
  • Reality and cops ring in new year
  • 'We have far to go'
  • New in label-conscious Japan: bargain hunting
  • Top 10 Grossing, 2000
  • News In Brief
  • 'Jazz' completes a TV trilogy on American life
  • A brief, personal historyof the 20th century
  • Movie Guide
  • Disarm workplace violence
  • Case may put Prozac on trial
  • Today's Story Line:
  • The temptations of Martha Stewart
  • SHOWS WORTH NOTING FOR JAN. 6 - 12
  • Movies 2000: Best is yet to come?
  • Peru's growing social activism
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