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Monitor articles for October 20, 1983
- Primary debates . . .
- News In Brief
- News In Brief
- Boston has plenty of history, culture, hotels - but not enough tourists
- Efficiency: not to be viewed as an end in itself
- Refocus and refresh
- Out of the haze of desert dust - Egypt's Cairo
- Small favors
- Want to buy a bridge? Turkish politicos spar over future of span
- Skyjack to Cuba
- Britain's Tories adopt stiffer penalties for violent crimes
- Don't let the wall between church and state crumble
- ...and the race itself
- Correction
- Jimmy Stewart looks back at 'Hitch,' Hollywood of old
- Swiss tackle air pollution to keep forests green
- News In Brief
- In a switch, Canada weighs agreements with US to free up trade with its big partner
- Minority firms try to move from government aid to mainstream
- What they fight for
- Parrying between Glenn and Mondale heats up campaign
- Oregon upwardly mobile; Duke's invisible man
- News In Brief
- Habib says US marines should stay in Beirut
- Pushy Syria, wobbly Lebanon complicate Mideast diplomacy
- News In Brief
- New prospects for action in Tijuana-San Diego sewage dispute
- Legitimizing the Armenian massacre
- News In Brief
- Enter Peter Sellars and Shakespeare Company; 'Doonesbury'; 'Belle'
- Reagan looks for big gains from coming trip to the Far East
- Sarajevo this fall
- The defiant bulldog of Japanese politics
- Stranded or not, cosmonauts face trouble
- Football and Rugby: kissing cousins of sport
- South Africa's threats against neighbors show rising military influence in white-ruled state
- A rollicking trip through time; Max and Me and the Time Machine, by Gery Greer and Bob Ruddick. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. 114 pp. $11.95....
- Designer Gianfranco Ferre: from architecture to suede and satin
- THE MANY MASKS OF MODERN ART; The unsung revolutionaries
- Boston's traffic snarl; Commuters ride subways, vans, boats to beat the expressway blues
- Machines haven't really lessened women's work, says new book
- Household candidate
- Early fan of bank decontrol looks ahead
- Pawtucket's creche shifts to private park
- US cyclist takes Europe by storm, but gets few accolades at home
- NYC's Columbus Avenue: the mixed blessing of being discovered
- Polish Communist Party tries again to woo workers but ignores Solidarity
- 'This nation couldn't afford the loss of New York's library'
- Helpful hint for next Boston mayor: mend fences with State House
- News In Brief
- Choreography
- News In Brief
- Newhouse: from crushing poverty to a towering media empire; Newspaperman, S.I. Newhouse and the Business of News, by Richard H. Meeker. New Haven an...
- Sweden's bold gambit
- News In Brief
- Cyclotron unlocks secrets surrounding Gutenberg
- Governments may come and go, but Italy-US friendship endures
- Lakers go out on a limb with risky trade designed to add strength in the pivot
- Jackson-Vanik: it has worked well
- Monthly Movie Guide
- News In Brief
- US-Japan traffic in students and education is still a one-way street
- News In Brief
- A place where women on welfare can build a new life