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Monitor articles for July 22, 1985
- US businesses map out their own route to hiring more minorities. Corporate approach tries to blend hiring goals and training programs
- Wall Street's investors and OPEC's sheikhs
- Sons of two hostages still held in Lebanon find strength in unity. They are trying to work with other families to free remaining captives
- Jordan awaits next US move on talks with Palestinians
- No protectionism
- After years of economic gloom Europe finds a lot to smile about
- Trials of travel
- Untraditional teachers needed to lift schools, says Harvard dean
- Useful tool -- Scholastic Aptitude Test
- Hall of Famer Arthur Ashe still a mover and shaker in tennis
- Filipinos angered by report of leaders' foreign investments. Scandal elicits calls for Marcos's impeachment
- Cliffhanging putts must be tapped in without delay
- Li's visit to US raises hopes for warmer ties. China's President has Taiwan on his agenda
- $5 billion mystery in East Germany
- Joy, passion, and rage at women's meeting
- Meet the Vendors/Kingpins of a mobile food emporium sell falafel, gelato, wursts, and more
- S. Africa tries to put a lid on unrest. But `emergency' highlights strength of black activism
- Florida aims to rein in fast growth. New law will control building on beachfront, tie growth to services
- News In Brief
- Reagan's back in the saddle again. President returns to ride herd on issues that could cause him trouble
- As E. F. Hutton tries to restore its image, regulators looking at it even more closely
- America's teachers
- Eight words that redirected the USPS
- The subject of the sentence
- Gas price puzzler
- When I took those pictures of Dizzy, we were both in Cab's band
- US labors to bring TWA hijackers to court. But if diplomacy fails to work, even abducting gunmen isn't ruled out
- McAuliffe dedicates her shuttle flight to the `common man'
- Miller's nomination to OMB reflects desire for a low-key budget chief. White House trying to exert tighter control over the Cabinet-level post
- Guggenheim Museum highlights major art trends of past 40 years
- Grand Kabuki may be traditional, but it pours plenty of energy into here and now
- Capitol-designer's capital drawings of early America