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Monitor articles for February 09, 1983
- Sagas of today's South; Shiloh and Other Stories, by Bobbie Ann Mason. New York: Harper & Row. 247 pp.
- Florence Eiseman: dressing children for 40 years
- Japan's voluntary car quotas
- Iran continues offensive, arrests key Communists
- Commercy madeleines considered the best
- Fog and structure
- Israel after the inquiry
- Poor writing sinks new ABC sitcoms
- Israeli massacre report makes waves
- After Shultz visit, mistrust lingers in China-US ties
- US plans no prosecution of EPA head in contempt
- Inside 20th-century music
- Nicklaus bringing new enthusiasm to 22nd pro season
- Home improvements: some add much more value than others
- US critical of S. African rights record
- States ask taxpayers to volunteer a few extra dollars for wildlife projects
- The fabulous foods of China on Taiwan's small island
- Chocolate delights for Valentine's Day
- Geneva moment of decision: arms control or all-out race?
- Mexican auto workers halt work to protest austerity
- Recycling ribbons for computers prints out PROFIT
- Renting quality skis makes sense for some
- Now we know
- Economical rice dishes ideal fare for winter
- History's straight man; George Mills, by Stanley Elkin. New York: E.P. Dutton. 508 pp. $15.95.
- Sparsely populated Alaska has bulging prisons
- US surveys 'rights' around world
- Tax-paid lobbyists
- Heavy '82 trade deficit seen for OPEC members
- Preserving neon 'landmarks' -- roadside Americana
- The scattered Palestinians
- Peace groups to plan joint strategy
- Dr. Dolittle, you're needed . . .
- High-tech wares win Denver's heart
- South Carolina lawsuit could slow the buildup of US nuclear arsenal
- PLO to embrace caution at long-awaited summit
- Pretoria ends its monetary incentive for foreign investors
- Federal union leaders rap social security inclusion
- A wistful Elgar violin concerto; Making discoveries in music -- with Yehudi Menuhin
- The Andropov problem
- A tale of two novels inspired by Dickens - one of them a tour de force; Magwitch, by Michael Noonan. New York: St. Martin's Press. 222 pp. $11.95. T...
- Beattie's bleak, vivid galaxy; The Burning House, by Ann Beattie. New York: Random House. 256 pp. $12.95.
- Mexico worries that oil price cut could ignite social unrest
- Economists interpret cheaper oil as good for US
- World Bank head says US should take lead in reviving world economyaid
- Pray for your marriage
- Soviet officials begin crackdown on theater
- A 'professional worrier' sees progress on world's biggest problems
- Zimbabwe treason trial seen as signpost on nation's political future
- Slash in US arms outlays sought by a House leader
- Favoring the rich -- without aiding the economy
- Also of note in the Alaska
- Ex-boll weevil Phil Gramm may make the Republicans squirm, too
- Human rights report could touch off disputes over aid
- An invitation