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Monitor articles for March 27, 1984
- Pentagon seeks broader use of lie detectors
- Turkish leader gets vote of confidence and two-track opposition
- 'Logistical nightmare' blocked big Salvador vote
- Disability cuts on hold
- Seeing Nepal through the eyes of a Sherpa
- Japanese films take a broader focus and win a larger audience
- Australian state Labor Party owes win to prime minister
- Off the streets and back to learning and employment
- Memory of 1982 massacre casts a pall over Hama, Syria, as town rebuilds
- Robert Ludlum's newest is more than a mere thriller;
- News In Brief
- Mainers sound off about federal nuclear evacuation plans
- Female blues singers who weren't so blue
- Screening high-tech exports
- The duchess of D.C. hoteldom learned from dust ruffles up
- News In Brief
- Stopping untimely book ends
- Supply-side economics still needs its day in court, proponent says
- Is this the year for a woman VP; Neither presidential nominee seems likely to name a woman as his running mate in '84, but for the Democratic Party...
- Salvador's vote
- News In Brief
- God is not an absentee landlord
- News In Brief
- Brock urges north-south trade parley
- News In Brief
- How far Gary Hart had to come
- How Southeast Asian refugees have fared in American schools
- News In Brief
- News In Brief
- News In Brief
- News In Brief
- Tree of the universe
- Dark horse champion possible in NBA; Rozier moves on to pros
- Observers split on validity of Salvador vote
- Steelworker vote may key on candidate's nationality
- Probe of Aquino killing begins to contradict version of Marcos government
- Mondale, Jackson scrabble for ethnic vote in California
- Hibiscus: a dense, decorative hedge you can grow from seed
- News In Brief
- Batter up
- Hart's on-again, off-again 'Yuppie' vote
- Spotlight on German premier
- Japan and China try to forge bond lasting in the 21st century
- Why concerts are boring
- Mr. Chernenko isn't interested
- 'The loose-leaf library'
- One tree can bear more apples than Granny Smith ever dreamed