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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.
Explore values journalismAbout us
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Monitor articles for August 12, 1985
- In semester at sea, students are immersed in marine studies
- Rounding bases on money issues -- a look at earned-pay averages
- Adults find a high school education is better late than never
- On watching what we watch
- All sides in Nicaragua play to US public. Abduction of US activists is latest example of how `contra' groups and ruling Sandinistas themselves try t...
- Baseball's back but on going woes temper the joy in Mudville
- Florida prompts US to keep Cuban criminals in custody
- Feeling the touch of Love
- I am beginning to notice more about my own city
- Why Challenger's engine shut down
- `Swan Lake' in Little Rock: Baryshnikov & Co. brings ballet to down-home USA
- TV spots will urge Americans to take role in reporting crime
- Wall Street eyes retail sales pace for signs of economic upturn
- Federal judge places legal roadblock across New York's Westway
- News In Brief
- A `GI Bill' to recruit America's teachers
- Rebel leader Museveni angles for power in post-coup Uganda
- Americans and Arabs
- Sleuths may have solved `hum'-dinger of a mystery in Sausalito. A strange noise has been vexing houseboat residents
- Shocking defeat deflates Becker; Philadelphia's baseball follies
- US is slow off mark in effort to play role in China nuclear industry
- `Karl Bodmer's America'. 19th-century painter's watercolor record of frontier life
- Soviet message to reporters. Harassment of Monitor writer seen as part of effort to keep reporters from covering sensitive subjects
- White House order mandates closer oversight of regulations that govern everyday life -- from food processing to mortgage insurance to air quality. P...
- Arab summit contributes little to Mideast peace effort. It stresses need for Arab unity, but fails to endorse Jordan's peace plan
- Sarney sets Brazil on the road to stability
- Life slows down in New York steel town
- What's Yupdoc? Find out on `West 57th,' CBS's slick new newsmagazine
- Battling the Soviet bureaucracy to reclaim confiscated notes
- America's parks
- Israeli warnings on Jordan-PLO ties dim hopes for Mideast peace
- Three Africas -- a legacy of tribalism and colonialism