2018
February
09
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 09, 2018
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

The stock market got whipsawed. The federal government flirted with another partial shutdown. A domestic-abuse case roiled the White House inner circle.

Amid all of that a private rocket soared.

More powerful than anything since the Saturn V that carried Apollo missions on its back, it took along a red Tesla Roadster as its test payload. Perhaps the most enduring visual of the week was that car, the big blue marble behind it, a spacesuited mannequin projecting a casual bliss from the driver’s seat.

Elon Musk is no citizen scientist. More like Earth's deep-pocketed chief innovation officer. But workaday scientists at the root of great advances keep quietly pushing at the boundaries of thought. This week a team studying the DNA of a skeleton found in 1903 in a cave near the village of Cheddar, England, discovered that the 10,000-year-old “Cheddar Man” would have had dark-pigmented skin.

As one archaeologist on the project told The Guardian, “these imaginary racial categories that we have are really … very recent constructions, that really are not applicable to the past at all.”

In the United States more than 60 PhD candidates in STEM fields – science, technology, engineering, and math – will reportedly be running for political office at some level this year. That can be cast as a wave of “resistance.” Or it can be seen as an encouraging trend: deeper social engagement by men and women committed to the steadying hand of demonstrable truth.

Now to our five stories for today, chosen to highlight the importance of clear intentions, of casting a critical eye on "progress," and of recognizing the power of connection.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Petr David Josek/AP
North Korea's Hwang Chung-gum and South Korea's Won Yun-jong arrive under a flag promoting a unified Korea during the opening ceremony of the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, Feb. 9.
Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Czarek Sokolowski/AP
Survivors attend a commemoration event in the so-called sauna building at the former Nazi German concentration and extermination camp Auschwitz II-Birkenau, on International Holocaust Remembrance Day in Oświęcim, Poland, on Jan. 27.
Jacob Turcotte/Staff

The Monitor's View

AP Photo
A woman walks past a mural in Tehran, Iran, Jan. 3.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

©R.C. HICKMAN; R.C. HICKMAN PHOTOGRAPHIC ARCHIVE, BRISCOE CENTER FOR AMERICAN HISTORY
Children swam in Dallas’s Exline Park on Aug. 6, 1957. The photographer, R.C. Hickman, became interested in the art form during his World War II military service, leading to him becoming an official Army photographer. Mr. Hickman became best known for his photos of the civil rights movement. But during a long career in Dallas he also documented the daily lives of the city’s dynamic African-American community in the decades following World War II. “Hickman was an outstanding photographer whose work will remain a permanent visual record of a significant transitional era in the history of the African-American community in Dallas,” says Don Carleton, executive director of the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas at Austin, which houses Hickman’s photography archive. Click the button below to view a gallery of Hickman’s work.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for being here today. Have a great weekend, and check back on Monday. We're working on a story from Florida. A federal rebuke of the state’s arbitrary system for restoring voting rights to felons could draw national attention to Florida’s next move, and to the impact of voting rights on political outcomes.

And a quick note: If you read us on mobile, click here to learn how to place an easy bookmark for the Daily among your apps, and jump straight to the latest enriched version anytime. 

More issues

2018
February
09
Friday
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