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Monitor articles for October 29, 1985
- Where fields of cotton once grew, rare animals now roam free
- Letters to the Editor. Affirmative action
- Spymaster Walker pleads guilty to help son he enticed
- Bulwer-Lytton on a resort city
- US policy shifting on low-income housing. Less new construction, more private dwellings
- A tale of automation, risky tax reform, and industry's future
- The Geometric Context. Two views of art stripped down to essentials
- Jay McInerney enters the literary fast lane. Now he can pay off his Visa bill, but success `hasn't changed my values'
- A hard look at GNP shows official hopes for '85 will fall short
- In the garden. Nov. Mulch trees; try an indoor garden The Monitor's monthly garden calendar is based on length of growing seasons.
- St. Louis schools and four mayoral races top Midwest election list. Incumbent mayors appear to be shoo-ins in their respective cities
- Eastern US can identify its faults, but has trouble pinpointing quakes
- Though rains have come to Africa, serious problems remain. Crop harvests threatened by pests and millions of people still homeless
- Prague peaks out through scaffolding. Restoration aims to save city from ravages of pollution
- From the first line
- Alice's latest adventure in a locked black box
- I have seen trees go mimsy
- A country in trouble looks for solutions
- Energy, equanimity, and perspective
- PLO's options narrowing
- What's a nuncle, anyway?
- Tariff politics
- Righteous judgment heals
- A Royal blue season
- Arms control: arguments in Washington
- Sending Turkeys to Texans raises a squawk
- The urgency of a halt in nuclear testing
- Tunisia's unity threatened by pro-, anti-West rivalries
- Mounting frustration and anger in Uganda. Government leaders, rebels, can't get together
- Corporate giving rises sharply
- Chinese, American ballet dancers meet to swap steps
- A proposal for unifying China
- In up-to-date Kansas City, Royals have gone as far as they can go
- Selling seeds. A business that knows no borders
- West European leaders concerned about US pre-summit stance
- The writer at half past five