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Monitor articles for March 10, 1981
- Fish exporting fights rough waters
- Uncertainty for Warsaw Pact; Polish Army: how loyal -- and to whom?
- Reagan vs. environmentalists: first puff of smoke in clean air battle
- New USDA budget: treading minefield between consumers and farmers
- Technology, skills put Boston on a one-way street -- up
- The many masks of modern art
- Lowell leads the way in job search
- Defections erode strength of Thai Communists
- Task force to urge voluntary quotas on autos
- Mondale in '84: he may run if Jimmy Carter doesn't
- Shortsighted seamanship
- Massachusetts skills mean quality in Britain
- Six oil nations plan Gulf area common market
- Court skips parental rights case
- The gold mutuals -- a gentler slide
- Watt takes issue with US rules on strip mining
- Iraq to resume oil exports via pipeline across Syria
- Midsummer strike by postal unions?
- Bay State firms could gain from more defense spending
- A surprise called 'high tech'
- Executives question tax priorities
- It's business almost as usual in tense El Salvador
- 'Friendly' governments shop Itek for high-tech wares
- Islands are born
- Florida's polo country: "This is a fantasy world"
- Moscow's 'winning streak'
- Marching coal miners epitomize human problems of budget cutting
- Is the MX necessary?
- Skyrocketing growth spells new challenges for Wang
- Taipei art: bringing the past to life
- Rain helps parched wheat fields, low reservoirs, but more needed
- A stay in an American paradise ST. JOHN
- Reagan takes Ottawa by surprise
- Oil use cuts lead US in energy savings
- Pakistan okays assault on jet hijackers
- THE AGE OF THE 'INTELLIGENT' MACHINES
- A computer stitched up those fancy cowboy boots
- Nina Schneider; Late-blooming novelist finds that ripeness is all
- NAACP mounts drive against cuts in programs
- Boston banks keep trade lanes open
- Factories where everybody wins
- Quick draw zaps sea law panel
- US military advisers in San Salvador find press is the greatest threat
- Agriculture could be hurt; Exotic birds: report cites dangers of imports
- Rehabilitation puts a new lilt in old streets
- Mutual fund for bonds also caters to small investors
- Few surprises expected in Reagan's formal budget
- Commonwealth chops away at 'Taxachusetts' image
- Knowledge jobs take lead in state economy
- Indiana slayer dies in the electric chair
- Denver mutual fund charts steady course through fiscal seas
- Gamesmakers leap nimbly into electronics era
- Complaining doesn't help
- Cut in interest rates expected in Britain
- E. Africa drought threatens many with starvation
- Computerized laser swiftly carves circuits for microchips
- Egypt and Israel scowl at each other but are pledged to keep peace process going
- Schools become high-tech resource
- King assesses his 'pro-people' Bay State governorship
- Why Jaeger is a winner
- Reagan fires second budget salvo from Rose Garden
- Money funds for retirement planning
- Iran leaves door ajar for more peace negotiations with Iraq