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Monitor articles for December 04, 1987
- How Americans view the USSR
- Reform opens new chapter in Soviet literature
- Summit likely to speed talks on strategic weapons. Experts see outline emerging for cuts in long-range forces. SUPERPOWER SUMMIT
- Columns and columns of gifts
- Amid Haiti's chaos and poverty, visitors glimpse unusual resolve
- The lion and the gypsy
- Barn doors
- Journalistic scoops
- Historical photography alters our perception of time. The imaging of nostalgia
- The film that was shelved until glasnost. Soviet epic `Repentance' tweaks tyranny with satire, surrealism, and more
- A time for cooperation
- Planning a house for the two-career family
- Congress moves toward limiting employer use of lie detectors
- Other carriers happy to fill in while Air Canada is on strike
- The true story behind zinc-lined grain bins
- Three books now in paperback
- The world according to Disney Studios. The imaging of celluloid
- Healing fear of the future
- It's Britain vs. rest of Europe in subsidy row
- News In Brief
- Gorbachev's London stopover is nod to Thatcher status in West
- Sid Shiff's art books take as long as he wants. The imaging of fine art
- CBS reports on South Africa's future
- A context for democracy. California requires public school study of one of histories harder lessons: Armenian genocide
- Chicago: succession and reform
- No joke, US now a tax haven. Americans may gripe, but after-tax pay is high
- Superpower summit: misery loves company
- `Barring the CIA'
- A letter to readers about letters to the editor
- A photographer's pick of world views. The imaging of life
- Once-rejected AIDS initiative gets back on California ballot
- WORTH NOTING ON TV
- US to press Gorbachev for progress on southwestern Africa
- FREEZE FRAMES
- Massachusetts clamps a $1,000 lid on PAC contributions
- Big year for dome-based teams; Heisman vote may be close after all
- Glasgow's domestic time machine. The Tenement wafts you back to the cluttered gentility of 1910 - thanks to a woman who never threw anything away
- Verity sees new market in Soviet Union
- ARTS SCENE