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Monitor articles for May 23, 1985
- French steel could feed `chunnel' project
- Sorry, right number
- Imports snatch wider hold on US industry. Among one analyst's remedies: cut value of dollar, reduce federal deficit
- Dole: behind one-liners, an intensely dedicated man
- Communism, go away
- Drama reveals angry underside of the peaceful 1950s
- `Rambo': machismo, malice, and mayhem
- Wrangle over party line fragments British communists
- Simpler ways to talk to Cuba
- Books on South Africa: one message, two perspectives
- Wheat price is latest issue to sidetrack EC. This time it's Germany that puts agriculture ahead of European unity
- Families turn to them more for business than pleasure
- Flight
- Gandhi reaffirms Soviet ties before US visit
- British Telecom calls on North America
- Reagan's Imprint on FOREIGN AID. Congress wrestles with foreign-aid bill
- Street tensions turn to trust as police and teens test wilderness skills together
- Garden bird guide shows even starlings are darlings
- Oil glut could hurt Western security interests. Jordan, Pakistan, and Egypt are three areas of concern
- Democrats scrambling in once-solid South. Party leaders hunt ways to stop steady voter slide toward Republicans
- Questions about nations'nuclear ability make US policymaking complex
- Religious Right aims to build on political gains of '84 elections
- Chicago's Hull House continues to raise hopes, challenge youth. Nearly 100 years later, Jane Addams's life-work lives on
- New Caledonia: paradise turned battleground
- Helping teens find a toehold in the job market
- Facts about almonds
- Finding a summer job
- A decade later, `Quarry' still packs musical wallop
- Reagan's Imprint on FOREIGN AID. US helps strengthen Turkey's military for NATO's defense
- Supertrain network, global port projects boost French steel
- Education chief tries to draw consensus out of controversy
- Weinberger's new task: deciding between weapons
- Reagan's Imprint on FOREIGN AID. From coffee to cucumbers: Costa Rica uses US aid to diversify its exports
- Should court put limits on telling the truth?
- Reagan's Imprint on FOREIGN AID. Under Reagan, US foreign aid is tied more tightly to national security
- Gradual rise in air fares and fewer discounts expected. Airlines increasingly work with economics of volume
- The United States and Nicaragua: which policies?
- `Herbert Bracewell'fondly recalls 19th-century theater The Return of Herbert Bracewell Play by Andrew Johns. Starring Milo O'Shea, Frances Sternhage...