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Monitor articles for August 30, 1985
- Lawsuit to target aid to parochial schools. US education secretary accused of trying to evade high-court ban on parochiaid
- Digging into history. Children go back in timeat Indianapolis musuem
- South African spotlight shifts to black miners. Decision to strike shows growing power of black unions
- Trend away from alcohol causes restaurants to rethink strategies. As bar profits fall, restaurants stress elegant dining out
- Water for the Southwest/ Concern for quality. Salty irrigation water threatens crops, wildlife
- Excitement in early US Open tennis play; Zola Budd in top form
- Two-year college in Boston builds future for a community
- Peter J. McGuire, the founder of Labor Day
- Bay State lawmakers unlikely to finish session before Christmas
- Britain's leftist unions suffer blow. Vote by train guards not to strike signals a new realism
- `He's SAFE!' Coleman steals another one for the record
- Jobs and workers
- Freeze Frames, a weekly update of film releases
- Western governors urge a free-trade policy with Pacific Rim. They say US barriers would invite retaliation against West's exports
- The African famine
- `A walking monument to labor'
- My father was a miner
- Citizens' group works to preserve Colorado's open land
- US turns closer scrutiny on banks in money laundering
- Israeli raids in Lebanon warn, and help, Amal
- Home fix-up
- Big business's role in politics is key issue in `Flick affair' trial
- Politics or media warfare? Three looks at '84 election
- Unrest in South Africa begins to take serious economic toll. At issue: how long can Pretoria contain unrest if the economy falters
- God controls
- Remembering Samantha
- The Blues. Unexpectedly joyous, uniquely American; from backwoods to nightclubs, it thrives
- `Enchanted Musical Playhouse' series fills gap in home video for children
- Experimental films show signs of a creative stirring