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Monitor articles for July 01, 1985
- Wall Street's prominent no-no group has taken a turn for go-go
- Canada's cool school
- Still missing
- Japan moves to cut tariffs but fails to impress trade partners. US calls it `a good first step' and prods the nation to open its markets further
- W. German youths take eye-opening trips across border
- Traveling without terror
- Scientists gain key insights on comets by mining old data from now-silent satellite
- America's Winter Olympic effort points north to Alaska in 1992
- A different workplace case, a different outcome
- How to be a perfect houseguest
- Explosive motion, exquisite stillness: two enriching exhibitions
- The Lebanese prisoners held by Israel
- Not everyone is wild about wildflowers
- Seniors send aid to US
- While driving to work at 7 a.m. through the Watchung Reservation
- Israelis relieved by release of US hostages. Israel didn't explicitly meet hijackers' demand, but is reportedly set to free prisoners
- What goes down . . .
- Preview to Yalta: analysis of 1943 Tehran talks
- How to rebuild public support for military strength
- Inside view of Congress's budget conference. Negotiators agreed there was a crisis, but that's where accord stopped
- Extinct species* tongue twisters
- Correcting meadow-lawn myths
- Women are winning elections to city, county, and state offices in ever growing numbers
- News In Brief
- Issues in suit by United pilots are still up in the air
- Scenic Nepal: in search of unity
- Board rooms put on notice over job safety by convictions of film-laboratory executives
- London theater heats up for record-breaking summer
- NATO sets itself another nuclear snare
- Geneva arms-talks impasse. Session is half over -- but hasn't got `off dead center'
- If this bumper sticker were outlawed, would only outlaws own it?
- How Syria extracted hostages from power struggle
- US hostages on way home
- Crossing swords over defense budget. Congressional panel must close gap on several issues
- '85 economy has eased, the outlook is upbeat, but problems persist