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Monitor articles for October 11, 1985
- Going to court -- sometimes
- Mert Shindon helped with the hard parts
- Reagan brings tax reform campaign to a close
- Home fix-up
- A sculptor's eye on mass production
- Radicalism on both sides endangers Mideast peace prospects
- Letters to the Editor. Politics -- American style
- Israel launches media campaign to blame hijacking of ocean liner on PLO
- Update, The African famine
- Parents advised to find a center with same values
- Nuclear power rebounding in US as delayed plants come on line. New construction seen early in 21st century as builders learn from past
- E. B. White: an appreciation. The self-depreciating stylist has left a legacy well worth remembering
- INDIA Monitor staff writer Arthur Unger took a round-the-world trip on a frequent-flyer bonus plan recently. This article chronicles the third leg o...
- Black colleges say it's too early to write them off, despite problems
- Polish leader faces make-or-break test. Sunday's elections will be key indicator of his popularity at home
- Director Liviu Ciulei doesn't believe in embalming the classics
- Socialist's Rocard: loved by the people, but not by his party
- US arms expert sees pluses and minuses in Soviet proposal
- A living laboratory for Sizer's ideas. Brooklyn school uses creative back-to-classics curriculum
- Travel tips. From Ireland to the Orient: fall shopping trips at special fares for bargain hunters
- A new economic nationalism
- Playoffs thrown a curve as teams reverse roles in early going
- S. Africans blas'e about US sanctions
- Bygone days tumble from pages of Papa Small storybook
- Letters to the Editor. Kurdish insurgency
- French Socialists debate their future. The troubled party, facing widespread voter disapproval, may battle over finding a more moderate, pragmatic p...
- Capital punishment -- Bay State backers are ready to try again
- Where three countries meet: Igua'u, world's widest waterfall
- Touring Australia's quiet, cultured answer to San Francisco
- Sen. Cohen, a Renaissance man and poet
- China's Guilin, favorite of tourist and native alike
- News In Brief
- Gorbachev's shuffle of advisers seen as effort to boost economy
- Freeze Frames, A weekly update of film releases
- Airline merger dramatizes new union clout
- In `A Year of the Quiet Sun,' images do the talking
- Grief can be healed
- A visit to Nashville, the country-music capital
- Wrestling with the deficit. Balanced budget by '91 may not do the trick
- Soviet-US dialogue isn't limited to `jaw-jawing' at Geneva summit. Budapest cultural forum will gauge USSR mood prior to high-level talks
- Diverse groups gear up for US apartheid protests
- The Afghan front
- Bush goes to China to talk turkey on joint economic relations