Content map
Please see our Site Map for a guide to site content.
Monitor articles for December 05, 1983
- Spacelab know-how likely to help West Europeans in the future
- Popular marine studies program stays afloat through cooperation
- Romanians harvest Yugoslav crops - then go shopping
- News In Brief
- New Zealanders protest nuclear weapons with canoes and zoning
- US signals Syria with an air strike
- 'Batter up' at 1984 Olympics for tournament field of six teams
- Love notes help kids learn to write
- Little Baby Robin
- News In Brief
- It'll be a Hollywood film - with Chinese stars
- Well-intentioned 'Choices' lacks credibility
- Teacher fellowships
- Own your own home? Fewer Japanese can
- Favored nations
- News In Brief
- Women state legislators compare gains at nationwide caucus
- Yugoslav government foots the bill for private enterprise
- Possible successors to Marcos: wife, technocrat, business crony
- It takes courage to be a poet during China's decades of tumult
- Crime is widespread, but not thriving unchecked, study shows
- An invasion of analogy
- How Schools Change
- How to boost US productivity: produce more pragmatic engineers
- 'Hallelujah! Hallelujah!': sing-along choruses tune up for season's joyous 'Messiah'
- Speaker O'Neill opens House door to immigration reform
- Family history -- a ready source of heroes, heroines for children
- US unemployment rate drops; need for work skills persists
- A look at the life of a science fiction writer
- Israel holds secret talks on pullback in south Lebanon
- Will computers squeeze out books by 1990?
- Good: it's already yours
- Uncle Roland: the almost perfect guest, but not necessarily the best example; Uncle Roland, the Perfect Guest, by Phyllis Green. Illustrated by Mary...
- A bizarre but resonant saga of a country that's not quite Pakistan; Shame, by Salman Rushdie. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 319 pp. $13.95.
- Plan to thin deer herd sparks moral debate
- Corruption in Nigeria: can it be ended in land of greased palms?
- On the road in Sri Lanka: bridging a divide
- Keeping Pentagon out of wild blue yonder. Escalating arms costs have experts hunting ways to wring out excesses
- Winter
- The cliche competition awards
- Mrs. Malaprop would mark them 'A'
- Tentative settlement in Greyhound strike
- Film bureaus successfully lure moviemakers out of Hollywood
- Smithsonian, other groups, reach out to seniors
- California farmers find that what helps workers helps productivity
- David Edgar's powerful mix of politics, drama
- Arafat bearded
- California to hit bad-check writers in wallet
- Soviet violinist: taxi was the first step to freedom
- The palace of Moscow's 'privileged class'
- Smithsonian recalls 1st manned (balloon) flight
- Building a backyard skating rink requires care and patience
- News In Brief
- Barbara warned us
- Maine Democrats hunt Senate candidate to challenge Republican Cohen in '84
- Black boycott of Soweto election rebuffs South African 'reform'
- The Met brings opera to schoolchildren
- News In Brief
- That year-end rally may be averted by longer-range doubt
- News In Brief
- In Bay State, persistent Republican takes on Democratic senator
- News In Brief
- Peace Corps volunteer's life in Botswana: hard, but happy
- News In Brief
- Arms and politics
- The brilliance that is Dance Theater of Harlem
- Phone-age beeps and blares
- News In Brief
- Las Vegas computer show has exploded into biggest of them all
- An exceptional gallery - and realism vs. abstraction
- US-USSR summit urged by Europeans - analysis
- Rediscovering what makes a classic
- Korchnoi's victory over Kasparov in Round 1 of the semifinals
- A guided tour through the powerful poetry of Langston Hughes
- In Brazil's northeast desert, it rains only at election time
- News In Brief