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Monitor articles for April 04, 1985
- Khmer Rouge. Group that killed a million Cambodians change its tactics.
- Humor, pathos, and Jessica Tandy
- Cambodians' decade of turmoil: war, poverty, and massacre at the hands of their leaders
- Law and Society. China struggles to create rule by law, not rule by party
- Economic squall in Singapore brings on bankruptcies and widespread job cuts [BY]By Geoffrey Murray, Special to The Christian Science Monitor
- Women in technical careers
- Kollwitz's knobby contours; a rich evening of dance; Cho-Liang Lin
- After three lively Broadway hits, Webber goes for a serious note
- US investors looking overseas. Dollar's slippage is seen as good for foreign stocks
- France's Socialists put schools on `back to basics' course
- Scientists' second look at role of `dust' in forming life on Earth. Clay may have triggered processes that led to creation of living organisms, rais...
- Down the garden path
- God has given us the victory!
- Three terms not enough for gregarious Massachusetts attorney general
- Democrats in disarray,Kennedy, Carter, and Kirkpatrick take party (and each other) to the woodshed
- Freeze Frames. A weekly update of film releases
- In car-loving L.A., 22 miles of rail may be boon for mass transit
- Will the artist win out over the gimmickry?
- Europe considers selling unprofitable land-mapping service to private firms
- Combating stereotypes, arriving at solutions
- Katherine Weems: an artist who succeeds with sense and sensitivity
- Maine's shoe industry struggles to survive. Determined to stay in business, firms look to Washington for some help in competing against imports
- McKinley: looking after Americans
- Useful or not, antipoverty programs are still being trimmed
- Brazilians grudgingly coalesce around Sarney as Neves sidelined
- Anti-abortion groups buoyed as US cuts UN funds
- Price of free speech is sometimes dear
- Recycling, energy conversion seen as responses to overflowing dumps
- Tired of being stuck in poverty rut, one man rebelled and pushed free
- Pioneer women lawyers: oral history of a trend that began in the 1920s
- Word processing comes slowly to the land of high technology. Japan tries taming its language on a keyboard
- Honduras
- Hiring programs that favor minorities come under Justice Department attack
- Mrs. Marcos, the Filipino `ghostbuster'