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Monitor articles for December 01, 1987
- The subtle art of Ikebana. A master gathers carefully, arranges quickly, deftly
- Latin chiefs form alliance to tackle regional issues
- Learning an ancestral tongue
- Congress wants to bulldoze trade's uneven playing field
- US embargo on Iran oil takes a bite out of Tehran's exports
- Ethics and the Reagan team - evidence shows a mixed record
- Why wait till 7? Fast changing channels. The future of TV news. Part 2
- Geography lesson
- The Soviets come clean on Cuba
- An insider tells the full story of the making of USA Today
- News In Brief
- New Orleans finally has team worth trumpeting; Giant demise
- California refuge cleanup is key to wildfowl poisoning problem
- Fear and frustration in Haiti capital
- Spiritual self-reliance
- US role in Haiti comes under fire. Officials seek ways to avoid further anarchy
- Gorbachev's visit
- Mr. Gorbachev - and free emigration
- Falling dollar lures some manufacturing back from abroad. Companies find it is cheaper - and easier - to produce in the US
- Everyone listens to Bob Strauss
- After Holmes `a Court's retreat from Texaco, what's his next move?
- Turkish premier scores comfortable win. Rifts within opposition help boost Ozal's party
- Warming up to polar bears' solar secrets. Studies of their hollow fur may lead to more efficient solar energy technologies
- Japanese firms cope with soaring yen. Tactics include shifting production overseas and cost cutting
- Chemical farm shows more erosion than organic field
- Cap Weinberger's controversial legacy
- New law aims to woo foreign investors. SANDINISTAS CHANGE TUNE
- Poland's failed referendum
- The carbon in seabed rocks may unlock Earth's early history
- Gorbachev's interest in ending Gulf, Afghan wars
- Parental-leave bill alarms business. But supporters see it as offering a minimum in needed coverage
- East Germany: liberalization, but with limits. Government reins in political activists linked with Protestant church
- Still a glow
- The trade gap. Living beyond its means, US looks for ways to balance what it buys with what it sells