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Monitor articles for September 30, 1987
- Slimmed-down World Bank plots strategy against global poverty
- Loan yields piped-in water
- For many, the fastest food is back at home
- Adjustable mortgages that can shift to fixed rates gain appeal
- ANC's Tambo tells blacks in S. Africa to stop fighting each other
- The price for protest goes up
- Banking on the poor. Changing the face of foreign aid
- Lost dignity restored
- Congressman calls for unified US foreign policy. Solarz sees potential for bipartisan effort on such issues as Gulf war
- Rumors were wrong - Soviet leader was writing speech
- Move to full democracy apt to be slow, gradual. Change seems just ahead for Mexico's authoritarian political system. But just what shape the change...
- Mexico awaits the big decision
- DNA - it's changing the whole economy
- Tricks of the food styling trade
- On Poland visit, Bush boosts both government and opposition leaders
- Americans step up social activism. Climate of civil disobedience reflects a turning point in the nation's consciousness as Reagan era wanes
- Only the velocity remains
- Ingmar Bergman stages Strindberg. Swedish director makes American debut with powerful `Miss Julie'
- Pastels that show why the medium deserves respect. Subtle, delicate effects not the only possibilities
- Some bewilderment greets new Trisha Brown dances
- Ireland: consensus on austerity
- When it looks good enough to eat. How food stylists perform their behind-the-scenes wizardry
- In-flight smoking under fire. Passengers, airline employees push for congressional action
- Revisiting `Ezuversity' in two new biographies of Ezra Pound
- Coupe with a wink
- Philippine rebels deny grand design behind bridge attacks
- Popping off proves a troublesome path for sports figures to travel
- Managua glasnost
- ARMS CONTROL. A change of pace: beating nuclear weapons into scrap
- Nitze assesses Soviet `star wars' offer. Says discussing new proposal won't hurt SDI research
- Ford settlement may well rule out a strike at General Motors, too
- Spotted owls vs. the timber industry