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Monitor articles for January 10, 1985
- Slapstick -- and substance -- in an irreverent story. Also, `It Don't pay . . .,' a modest new 16 mm film offers strong performances and audience fun
- It is the same with other things . . .
- Slumping gold price is no mystery; it's a function of deflation
- Detroit's lessons for American competitiveness
- Geneva seen as solid gain, especially for U.S. Question remains: Can both superpowers overcome past antagonism to reach accord?
- Deft handling of difficult story in new Mark Medoff play
- Connecticut, early into the defense industry, aims to stay in front line
- Congressional deficit cutters look at touchy social security issue
- Figuring out the dos and don'ts of career switching
- Middle East: aid and superpower influence
- Amtrak investment
- `Tartuffe' spoof; Rachmaninoff at BSO; American Ballet Theatre
- International labor chief says world employment `deteriorating'
- Earl Yancy deals in coal, but his specialty is caring
- Japanese Women in a Male Society. Bound by tradition, women struggle to take on responsibility at work while society still expects them to leave the...
- Keverian has House gavel now -- and a handful of promises to keep
- Adding and dividing up tax figures
- Willing to lay everything on the line
- Kenya leads Africa in recovery, but long-term outlook is clouded
- Mideast peace prospects hinge on enlarged US role, top Egyptian says
- Black schools in S. Africa face new tests
- Connecticut's military alliance with Uncle Sam
- Annulling `laws' of chance
- Geneva seen as solid gain, especially for US. Buoyant officials on American team express satisfaction with US-Soviet agreement on talks
- Geneva framework: ambitious, hopeful
- An American Indian teaches respect. Young people learn importance of sharing, giving thanks, honoring elders
- Edge of a new era
- `The sunflower is mine, in a way'
- Brock, Wilhelm ushered into Cooperstown; pair of noteworthy dunks
- What to do when you picture yourself in a brand-new career