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Monitor articles for July 30, 1982
- Barking officer gets his man
- Unions: plan to relax child labor laws may undercut minimum wage
- Public access to cable
- Ford counting on a bold leap in automotive design
- Ask the gardeners
- Britons plug in Bombay computers
- Harsh financial notes at the symphony
- Also of note in the Rocky Mountain states
- The sometimes cruel world of Kabuki -- and your right to use cable TV
- Fragile experiment in free enterprise
- Farming co-ops poised to come of age in the '80s
- Many Taiwanese prefer the 'authoritarian' China to the 'totalitarian' one
- Changing our view
- Polaroid introduces an SLR
- S. Africa getting cold feet on Namibia freedom?
- When military arms are close to home
- China's open door
- Portrait of pleasures, out of chaos
- US vs. Japan firms: prosecution or persecution?
- Second Person Rural: More Essays of a Sometime Farmer, by Noel Perrin. New York: Penguin Books. 152 pp.$4.95.
- Abrahams' corn technique confirmed . . . removing leaves from tomato vines . . .
- Gandhi talks of free enterprise, India's hopes, politics
- Bankers and funds fire away at plan to withhold dividends
- Inside Report (2)
- Inside Report (1)
- Seychelles coup leader sentenced for air piracy
- Indian myths; Spirits, Heroes & Hunters From North American Indian Mythology, by Marion Wood. Illustrated by John Sibbick. New York: Schocken Books....
- Industry fosters 'Two is Enough' in family planning
- A leading Democrat on Republicans and the'land ethic'
- Inside Report (7)
- Reagan's world: why China cools, Gandhi smiles, Europe glowers
- Repaying student loans
- Inside Report (6)
- They're putting apartment leases in p-l-a-i-n language
- Perils of the golfer: wrists are too flexible
- Inside Report (5)
- Hardy biography from newly discovered materials; Thomas Hardy: A Biography, by Michael Millgate. New York: Random House. 637 pp. $25.
- Vatican refuses notices on possible bank action
- Compound 1080 -- the best way to control coyotes?
- Tata: business, the public, and conscience
- The touch of the heart
- Mrs. Gandhi's US visit: broadening her options
- Inside Report (4)
- US, India mend diplomatic fences; Mrs. Gandhi seeks to change pro-Soviet image
- A Lebanon peace plan with concessions for all
- Africa's off-on-off summit looks on again with rebel compromise
- Bustle on the stock exchanges alters financing of businesses
- Low tide
- Of arms and patience
- India's energy posture looks good -- on first glance
- Colorado's quality of life fades in a changing West
- Birla: India will be No. 1 in Asia
- The anguish of Lebanese-Americans
- The 1982 election: 'patience' vs. the 'Reagan recession'
- When a couple of dozen Rolls-Royces purr up to a club meeting
- Oakland's champion base stealer's secret: he's just faster than others
- US, India agree to end row over A-fuel supply
- How about a pinch o' parsley salt?
- How much money will US get by arm-twisting?
- Inflation vs. recession: ticklish postwar effort may be paying off
- A plea to UN on Ulster terror
- India at a glance
- And now the BBA
- A colonel's conscience
- The Soul of a New Machine, by Tracy Kidder. New York: Avon Books. 293 pp.
- Also of note in the Rocky Mountain states
- PLO move to Egypt? Idea tantalizes Mideast watchers
- MacNeil reports . . . on own career; The Right Place at the Right Time, by Robert MacNeil. Boston: Little, Brown & Co. 333 pp. $13.95.
- Venture capital running strong for fledgling businesses
- Denver's Elitch Gardens -- a family affair from the start, 91 years ago
- Israeli colonel dismissed
- Britain adopts new, unorthodox industrial profile
- The Rockefellers and Du Ponts in giant industries
- Inside Report (3)
- Reliance on US may ease, Salvadoran President says
- The economy's black underside
- The Oak and the Calf: Sketches of Literary Life in the Soviet Union, by Alexander I. Solzhenitsyn. Translated from the Russian by Harry Willetts. Ne...
- House OKs start-up funds for big civil defense plan
- Also of note in California
- Business tradition was set when the British pulled out
- Historical markers across US give travelers a glimpse of America's past
- Years of suspicion over Western investment yield to a new welcome
- Public sector is on defensive, but almost sure to grow
- The cuckoo and the harvest