Content map
Please see our Site Map for a guide to site content.
Monitor articles for July 28, 1982
- Why Reagan plans to ship grain to the Soviet Union
- Patrol
- Banking on gold price rebound, Swiss aim to remain gold center
- Today's uneasy art world
- Black common market proposed to solve minorities' financial woes
- Inventive History
- A top Chinese fired for graft
- The $400 billion safeguard
- A new collection of contemporary literature; Fixx on fame; Jackpot, by James F. Fixx. New York: Random House. 175 pp. $12.50.
- Social security: ways to get past the wrangling
- Antique prices take a plunge
- Sefton the horse: a new British war hero--with a taste for mints
- Castro: Cubans in Angola would resist S. Africans
- Salvador reforms back in US spotlight; Reagan certifies human rights progress; Congress wants more
- Horses and computers in latest Francis book; Twice Shy, by Dick Francis. New York: G. P. Putnam & Sons. 307 pp. $13.95.
- Art in American embassies
- How to thaw icy roads without rusting cars
- Qaddafi's hopes for OAU summit--and prestige--begin to crumble
- Sakharov's relatives enjoy US, but worry about Soviet dissidents
- Pete Rose on hitting and other subjects; Babe Ruth's pitching feats recalled
- Nicaragua extending state of emergency
- 'The system must be brought into balance'
- Why Israel is considering a longer stay in Lebanon
- Long drought ahead for US research
- Peru says it's interested in buying F-16 fighters
- Socialist economics criticized in France
- Going with the grain
- 'Packaging American Wars': how propaganda machines work
- The US vs. Texas: Which shall sponsor the whooping crane?
- Why Americans shy from criticizing Israel
- Hinault's fourth Tour de France win reaffirms his spot among the greats
- Governors admit that South still sticking with Reagan
- The butler didn't; The False Inspector Dew, by Peter Lovesey. New York: Pantheon. 251 pp. $12.50.; Uneasy Lies the Head, by Robert Tine. New York: T...
- The third world's Archie Bunkers
- Audit! That dreaded IRS demand needn't be so intimidating
- Why Europe defies US on the pipeline
- Canada's top oil company in dire need of federal bailout
- The Left-Handed Rabbit
- Airlines raising fares again on Europe, Atlantic runs
- Poland says it has freed 1,200, but not Walesa
- Why put a general at helm of US planetary space program?
- Seedling time
- A neutral Lebanon?
- True story with intrigue of fiction; Mole, by William Hood. New York: W. W. Norton & Co. 317 pp. $15.95.
- US extends cluster-bomb ban
- Buoying the Habib mission
- Mercenary trial hints S. Africa may have played role in Seychelles coup
- ''Send in the clowns and the children''
- Reagan should woo Mrs. Gandhi
- A higher authority
- How Thailand turns slum dwellers into home owners
- Four Argentine generals relieved of commands
- Salvador reforms back in US spotlight; Farms given to peasants make gains . . . and losses
- The Monitor's View: Quote
- Califano to head inquiry on Capitol page charges
- Pontiac leans into the sporty in quest to define its market
- A new collection of contemporary literature; Fixx on fame; The Random Review, edited by Gary Fisketjon and Jonathan Galassi. New York: Random House....
- US letting Japan build an advanced torpedo
- Senator asks Begin to spare Beirut
- US highway officials ponder ways to meet big repair bill
- Kenya editor or sacked after attacking detentions without trial