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Monitor articles for December 30, 1986
- Weizmann biography sees through the myths
- Reagan presents Voyager pilots, designer with citizen's medal
- A first-class ski resort few Americans have found
- Moon in lowest path of century may raise high tides worldwide
- Now fizzy and flavored milk
- The arms race
- Preserving `heirloom' crops Down East
- A generation in hock: Debt and the college degree
- News In Brief
- Reporter takes wintry walk through Moscow writers' colony. Warmer official climate allows more interest in out-of-favor poets
- Return of the natives: restoring lost wildlife species in Britain
- With a crank and a jump
- Israelis, Palestinians alike decry expulsion of editor
- No fear of flying - or falling. Skateboard champ zooms his sport to new heights
- Booming Northeast examines ways to avoid energy shortfall. Region debates big power plants vs. conservation
- Moscow's long, patient pursuit of Iran
- Isaac Asimov on visiting Trantor
- Poland's newest (and youngest) protest group. Movement takes on issue once considered taboo: the military
- Man's unprejudiced perfection
- Legislators jump to identify themselves with issue of US competitiveness in trade
- Why Reagan can make it back
- Avoiding recession once more next year
- .Queen bee of capitalism? New female head of Quebec business group eases Anglophone bias
- A driving lesson with one of racing's greats
- Forecasts are bright for Madison Avenue in 1987
- Jimmy Carter
- Pretoria sets new curbs on black schools. S. African crackdown aims to undercut black militants
- Dinosaurs and drama blend in educational show
- In West Germany, even museums take on political overtones. Government faces modern problems in chronicling history
- Vigilantism strikes a chord
- New general manager Phil Esposito seeks to rebuild Rangers
- Time plays a key role in sports - for athletes and broadcasters
- Uruguay human rights amnesty shows fragility of civilian rule
- Why I write science fiction
- Refugees find sanctuary in Canada. `Overground Railroad' helps Central Americans get around US law
- Suburbs will have to change to accommodate older population. Federal study looks at 260 communities and their services
- President with a dream
- A `cookbook' of recipes for advertising
- Iran's `unique' politics?
- Cuts in federal aid will force cities to tighten their belts. But they may share in state windfalls from US tax reform