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Monitor articles for August 30, 1984
- Busing in Boston schools - 10 years after
- Towns near shopping malls try to untie their traffic tangles
- Cloud over Hollywood: xenophobia darkens 'Red Dawn'
- As the artist sees it
- Pro football preview (Part I): Raiders the team to beat in AFC
- State lotteries: at any odds, a bad bet
- Battle for Texas Senate seat highlights party tug-of-war over control of South
- Typewriter in the woods
- One election - two jobs
- Russian emigres.
- Student catering company: learning the business
- Boston Stock Exchange bounces out of a stodgy corner.
- JAMAICA. Its take-charge leader is running a race between development and discontent. Edward Seaga has reversed Jamaica's economic slide and won mor...
- News In Brief
- Our simple and important part in a 40-year debate
- Helping to heal criminal insanity
- Poet dishonored in own country, till now
- Libya and Morocco - nods to the center
- Efforts renewed to put marijuana growers out of business.
- Despite setbacks, Solidarity still offers hope for Poles
- Rosy economic outlook
- From 'Portraits of Swedish poets'
- News In Brief
- Sunken ship spurs doubts about French nuclear stand
- South African Indians, Coloreds shun polls and new Parliament
- Tough times for those knocking German detente
- Hometown voters in Vancouver may turn on Turner
- News In Brief
- News In Brief
- Lemkin and Trifa: memory and justice
- Times change, but county fair is 'still the place to see everyone'
- News In Brief
- Writer vis-a-vis totalitarian regime
- News In Brief
- Lemkin and Trifka: memory and justice
- John Curry Skating Co.: drama on (and off) the ice; Thompson Twins
- News In Brief
- Sending signals
- National move to require balanced budget stalls in California
- News In Brief
- Two transatlantic insurance firms to go fishing for an errant satellite
- Economy loses steam.
- New state museum may not be best place to house priceless documents
- Revisionist life of Cotton Mather shows him flawed, not diabolical
- News In Brief
- Alan Paton's beloved country still cries