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Monitor articles for March 04, 1988
- Cities use scholarship money - plus mentors - to cut dropout rate
- Urbanite answers call of wild and becomes top dog sled racer
- When the hero is Character itself. Rereading `Lord Jim'
- Three quit teen pregnancy panel
- Microwaves, more microwaves, and more microwaves
- `And if elected, will you care about kids?'
- `Babette's Feast': tasteful screen fare. France, Denmark make a fine film team
- A capitalist showcase for China? Chinese face hurdles wooing funds for island ventures
- In Geneva talks, Afghanistan agrees to speedier Soviet withdrawal. Offer doesn't address key Pakistani concern on transition government
- A speech is not an essay on legs. Advice from Charles Osgood
- Missile miscalculation in Gulf war? Iraqi raids on Iranian cities complicate UN bid for unified arms embargo against Tehran
- Grammys sometimes surprised, dismayed. Artistic merit: not always the yardstick
- On the trail of Rimbaud, `the man with the soles of wind'. Pursuing a poet
- Portraits of hope. Scott Barrows draws missing children with age progression process
- FREEZE FRAMES
- State of the state in an age of bigger bureaucracy. A hidden branch of government
- US scrapes the rust off Big Steel
- Playing politics with pictures: seeing (on a TV screen) is believing. Media messages
- Henry's pet squirrel
- For a more dynamic Europe
- The story of Britain's colorful, contradictory publisher Gollancz
- TV campaign in South wraps up. Candidates fire final volley in Super Tuesday air war
- How the Hitler myth took hold in Germany. Manipulating masses
- Microwave ovens: cooking basics for kids of all ages
- Presidential PR and leadership in the Oval Office
- Emotion up, gestures down; joke a lot, don't wear brown
- Spiritual resources and our needs
- `Probe' blends science fiction and detective story. New series stars Parker Stevenson as the offbeat sleuth
- US Jews in turmoil over violence in Israel. American Jews in turmoil. SPEAKING OUT
- Folksy and friendly political portraits. Campaign biographies
- Centers of power on the Potomac