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The Christian Science Monitor - CSMonitor.com

Why is Christian Science in our name?
Why is Christian Science in our name?
Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that.
The church publishes the Monitor because it sees good journalism as vital to progress in the world. Since 1908, we’ve aimed “to injure no man, but to bless all mankind,” as our founder, Mary Baker Eddy, put it.
Here, you’ll find award-winning journalism not driven by commercial influences – a news organization that takes seriously its mission to uplift the world by seeking solutions and finding reasons for credible hope.
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Monitor articles for February 18, 1982
- Cherry cobbler for Washington's birthday
- Druze strike continues in Golan Heights protest
- A special French method of cooking duck at home
- Coppola savors breaking the moviemaking rules
- Freedom, and lessons in fortitude
- Portugal bolsters its foreign trade as it steers toward EC membership
- Angola cracks a barrier with new diplomatic tie
- States ready to haggle with Reagan on 'new federalism'
- Vietnam will have to negotiate on Kampuchea -- eventually
- Jordan makes it clear it won't be the 'alternative' Palestinian state
- Townspeople help bankrupt college begin a new life
- Social Democrats put all British parties on their guard
- Walesa speaks out, disavows extremists, encourages moderates in regime and union
- Veteran political team -- labor and Democrats -- plans '82 comeback
- Reagan's ex-Treasury deputy: Reaganomics is not supply side
- Big US banks raise their prime rates
- Vietnam has strong reasons to hold on to Kampuchea, despite military and economic burdens
- The sustaining power of Love
- Can you catch a falling Shah?
- Begin appears to accept US word on an arms edge
- Freedom, and lessons in fortitude (1)
- Reaganomics faces political, economic crunch
- A different way to score basketball; tennis tales; and baseball deals
- When pro tennis was fun
- The rosy torch
- Champion of Mount Carroll, Ill; Laurie Scott helps turn a little town around
- Producer Stanley Jaffe; CHILDREN ARE HIS CINEMATIC THEME
- Reaganomics faces political, economic crunch
- Mr. Reagan's political strategy
- EC leader meets Reagan, complains of high rates
- Autos lead sag in US output
- A 'horror show' on classroom indoctrination
- Nancy Reagan's tour
- West Germany's election campaign: confrontation takes the floor
- Dinner for one: an elegant meal which is fun to prepare
- South Africa: to learn from a tragedy
- Baseball's lopsided deals
- Let us wage love
- Black women in history: a new look at forgotten lives
- Wanted -- a generation without a label
- Quebec leader shelves separatism . . . for time being
- Stir mounts over death of S. African labor leader
- The arms merchants
- Sri Lanka joins Asian lands luring West with free-trade zones
- Corsican separatists take responsibility for bombs
- McCloskey: too liberal for Hayakawa's Senate seat?; California congressman outlines views on defense, economy, Mideast
- 'Mean Joe' bows out of Pittsburgh's 'Steel Curtain'
- Catching up with parents who don't pay child support
- US readies peacekeeping force for Sinai
- 3,500 arrested as Warsaw runs test of martial law
- West Bank closing sparks protest
- Japanese women poke holes in men's claims to inventors' fame
- Despite leader's absence. . .; China says reforms will push ahead
- SWAT teams belie their shoot-'em-up TV image
- Getting a grip on cross-country ski techniques
- Zimbabwe premier fires rival, two other ministers
- West Germany speaks softly on Poland, but wields bigger stick