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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.

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Monitor Daily
June 18, 2025 A revelation in the Rockies

Big-power summits highlight what the leaders of the world order are doing – or not doing – to help nurture stability. Nations’ goals will always vary, but it helps when there’s some unity of purpose. Sara Miller Llana traveled west from her Toronto base to cover the Group of Seven meeting in Kananaskis, Alberta, that ended last night. 

“Setting this summit in the Rockies was a master stroke,” Sara says, the sheer majesty lending inspiration. On a lunch break, she scrambled up a trail, her media pass swaying. At the top was a sign. “It said something like, ‘Life is frantic, slow down,’” she says. “I took that as a message for my larger purpose.” Calmly take in the big picture.

Perhaps others did, too. “This was a high-stakes G7,” Sara says, with interrelated global crises and observers watching for schisms. “In the end, it showed a strengthening of alliances, and commitment to getting the work at hand done.” Read her wrap-up report here.

˜
Editor’s note: We won’t publish tomorrow, the Juneteenth holiday in the U.S. Watch for your next Daily on Friday.

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  1. CONTENT MAP
  2. January 2000
  3. January 14

Content map

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

Monitor articles for January 14, 2000

  • The spy who came in from Silicon Valley
  • New shows in the house!
  • The Monitor Movie Guide
  • Celebrities paint outside the lines of acting, singing careers
  • Why we're here
  • Baseball biopic hits a home run
  • What's On TV
  • Brave new media world
  • Planting hope, instead of dope
  • Another cloning first: This time, a monkey
  • Women key to victory in Chile's vote
  • Today's Story Line
  • Challenging teachers unions
  • New face of racism in America
  • A collection beyond point-and-shoot
  • Act Now to Aid Colombia
  • Long time coming
  • Hipness makes way for values at prime time
  • Refugees target of Russian ire
  • Bochco's new beat: black TV drama
  • Tennis 2000: Colorful characters, tough competition
  • Debates aren't a real test
  • Can soccer do what diplomats can't for US and Iran?
  • Hospital drama tackles class, political issues
  • 'Edge of World' still cuts it
  • Mother Goose rhyme time
  • News In Brief
  • Why we still love 'The Simpsons'
  • News In Brief
  • Karmapa may follow yet more footsteps of Dalai Lama
  • News In Brief
  • How sweet it is - Tiger's winning swing
  • Virtual (un)reality
  • Brief careers at sea for me and the Abberrance
  • Window
  • On stump, talk of poverty is again the rage
  • A French tutor's first lesson
  • News In Brief
  • Shooting highlights racial inequities in South Africa
  • Imports take on morally complex themes
  • Sausage, snails, and crawfish tails: Elyse chef cooks all
  • Borderline Politics on Trucks
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