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Monitor articles for January 06, 1984
- Dwindling labor force eases US joblessness
- News In Brief
- The new American poetry; Summer Celestial - Poems by Stanley Plumly. New York: The Ecco Press. 52 pp.
- News In Brief
- Prosecutors' racial bias may be factor in death-penalty cases
- Britain chooses space shuttle to launch military satellites, infuriating France
- Scholarly publishing at crossroads
- Saroyan novel becomes charming pop opera; The Human Comedy. Musical adapted from the William Saroyan novel by composer Galt MacDermot and librettist...
- Checking up on aluminum wiring; restoring faded redwood siding
- Deploring deployment
- Militant Islam makes war
- Stakes in Namibia raised as Angola-S. Africa conflict flares. . .
- Novelist Shen Rong and the art of literary survival in China
- How computers are quietly conquering America's classrooms
- News In Brief
- Poland's inner freedom
- UCLA's 'walk-ons' ran quite a show in Rose Bowl
- Final 1983 UPI football ratings
- Japanese may launch computer offensive in US by year's end
- Fuel-stingy Z stove: Could it be the answer for fuel-poor third world?
- News In Brief
- Soviet refrigerators leave buyers cold as Andropov calls for better workmanship
- The itty-bitty night fight
- The arresting issue of nuclear warfare
- Your news from overseas may get squeezed in UNESCO rift
- An end for Zuckerman; The Anatomy Lesson, by Philip Roth.New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux. 291pp. $ 14.95.
- Upscale 'supers' tout lily root gooseberries and fancy price tags
- No money, no easy answers for bondholders in WPPSS default
- Coming close together through books
- US and China: readying for visits
- Jacob's Cattle without marching bands
- The price of liberty: Will the university survive us?; The Western University on Trial, edited by John W. Chapman. Berkeley, Calif.: University of C...
- Banking on books as art
- How TV is treading on former taboos
- Protecting Australia's Great Barrier Reef
- A harvest
- Grandpa changes roles with the kids; What's Under My Bed?, by James Stevenson. New York: Greenwillow Books. 30 pp.
- Goalie-turned-author Ken Dryden offers keen insights on hockey
- Grace, not guns, helped Jackson win in Syria
- News In Brief
- Hunger costs tallied as commission readies its report
- Shareholders back Gulf, but maverick oilman refuses to give up
- El Salvador
- Cable TV show puts people on the air to sell their cars
- The gap at Pentagon's No. 2 spot
- News In Brief
- News In Brief
- Susan's Turkish was the bridge
- Zimbabwe Cabinet shuffle seems meant to mollify West
- Pain - an unreal master?
- Stakes in Namibia raised as Angola-S. Africa conflict flares. . . but UN observers see progress toward a solution
- News In Brief
- Why hotel's modern fire system failed
- A former ballerina, she now choreographs a condo project
- How Polish spy agency got secret data on US Minuteman missile
- For richer, for poorer . . .; Stones For Ibarra, by Harriet Doerr. New York: The Viking Press. 214 pp. $14. 95.
- French plan for gradual self-rule stirs unrest in South Pacific colony
- A finale for Martins on NYC Ballet's opening night
- News In Brief
- Nigeria military tries to do what civilians didn't
- News In Brief
- The tragedy of Northern Ireland put poignantly in perspective; Cal, by Bernard MacLaverty. New York: George Braziller. 170 pp. $12.95.
- News In Brief
- Between soft covers: a nuclear warning, Tom Wolfe, private eyes
- Taking a New Year's fitness program very seriously
- Crime and the '84 election