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Monitor articles for May 13, 1983
- Western nations explore formulas for saving cities
- Awards gala honors newcomers
- Correction
- A week of Middle East alarum bells, Western economic wrangling
- Old newspapers may find new niche -- in the garden
- Agency puts cold water on breeder reactor plan
- Lions, snails, wild babies, oh my!; The Lion Upstairs, by Stephen Krensky, illustrated by Leigh Grant. New York: Atheneum. 40 pp. $10.95.
- Poetry highlight of the month; Creeley -- complete; The Collected Poems of Robert Creeley - 1945-1975. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Pr...
- Iraq missiles strike southern Iran city
- West Europe revs up no-lead gas campaign
- Semijust deserts
- A zucchini bonanza calls for creative cooking
- CORRECTION
- Drought, few jobs: South African blacks face bleak winter
- Fraser and last of the old-guard UAW leaders prepare to step down
- Laker role player Kurt Rambis travels bizarre route to NBA
- Blacks can progress without appealing to fear
- Lyrical tale of uprooted immigrants; Voyage, by Adele Geras. New York: Atheneum. 193 pp. $10.95.
- Europe's electronics firms plan to team up on US, Japan
- Syrians don't want war, willing to pull out -- a Soviet view
- Books to engage a child in reading; Talk Along Books - Help Jumbo Escape, Name Patty's Pets, Name Lizzy's Colors, Count the Possums, by Dick Punnett...
- Bonn legislators detained for A-protest in E. Berlin
- Ordinary Afghans stage silent protest against Soviets
- Spoils of success force adjustments in Silicon Valley
- Does Sweden's social net save or entangle family life?
- A modest complaint
- Kampuchea's Viet settlers: binding Hanoi's rule or avoiding it?
- Biography -- hefty, colorful, detailed, and possibly biased; Manchester takes on ChurchillThe Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill: Visions of Glory...
- Senate bucks leadership on '84 budget proposal
- Well-worn rabbit reappears in four new version; The Velveteen Rabbit, by Margery Williams, illustrated by Ilse Plume. Boston: David R. Godine. 31 pp...
- Growing up in an orange grove; Hazel Rye, by Vera and Bill Cleaver. New York: J.B. Lippincott. 178 pp. $11.50 .
- Two enjoyable choices for beginning readers; The Longest Float in the Parade, by Carol Carrick. New York: Greenwillow Books. 55 pp. $7.95.
- Blackfoot legend in new colors; Star Boy, retold and illustrated by Paul Goble. Scarsdale, N.Y.: Bradbury Press. Pages unnumbered. $12.95.
- Grasses
- Sakharaov kin still hope for exit
- Newbery medalist aims at 'realism' for youngsters; Cynthia Voigt: family comes first
- Minister says right wing interferes in French riots
- Accord on Israeli pullout is ready for final touches
- Stepping gingerly on Capitol Hill; Tussle over foreign policy role
- Carpentry for kids; Woodworking with Kids, by Richard Starr. Newton, Conn.: The Taunton Press, Box 355, Newtown, Conn. 06470. 205 pp. $18.95.
- New use for the MX
- Daniel Webster would have been different on television
- Rockets boost satellite closer to proper orbit
- Soviets, Poles trade journalistic salvos -- a warning to Polish regime?
- Playing soccer and being a girl do mix; Scrappy, by Osmond Molarsky. New York: Dodd, Mead. 127 pp. $8.95.
- All aboard the last privately run passenger train in US
- No lack
- Behind Soviets' low-key response to diplomats' expulsion
- More adventure with Soup and Rob; Soup in the Saddle, by Robert Newton Peck. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 110 pp.
- Eclecticism in modern design
- Americans who put off vacations last year plan to hit the road in '83
- The trouble with US farms -- is not Europe
- Z particle: last link that joins 2 forces of matter
- Jacobo Timerman's story of an Argentine prison
- Science fiction: heavy on adventure; Warriors of the Wasteland, by Douglas Hill. New York: Atheneum. 130 pp. $9.95.
- High-tech's perks for building teamwork
- No-holds-barred talks shed new light on race relations
- High-tech's perks for building teamwork
- A dissident Soviet historian's view; Khrushchev's life, times; Khrushchev, by Roy Medvedev. Translated by Brian Pearce. New York: Anchor Press/Doubl...
- Where have the good children's biographies gone?