Content Map > May 1982 > May 17

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Monitor Archive for May 17, 1982

That SALT bird
New plan in South Africa
Network TV seeks protection from cable
Yugoslavia has its first woman prime minister
Taking leave before dawn
Departure
Finland Communist leader raps Soviet meddling
Mom and Pop stores: an ongoing tradition
As the news is rung out: from an old, old schloss
A biochemist's case against the new nerve gas
Grin-and-bear policy
Morocco's King: US-bound to talk Mideast peace
More, not less high school Latin
Argentina loses faith in US
What does video art look like? Sometimes it can be a sculpture
Australia's Fraser in US to discuss coming summit
Recession blues deflate big spenders at black-tie auction in Texas
Dominican vote follows pre-election violence
Falklands solution gets urgent new deadline
The Moon
Habib meets Reagan, but won't return to Mideast
Mid-Atlantic States; Stumping amid a slump
Brazil's low-key Falklands role
What about Chisanbop -- who's using it?

Reagan's arms reduction plan gets nod of approval from Mid-America
How PLATO introduces Chippewa young to Ojibwa
Haig in Athens, Luxembourg
The Sea
An 'onstage' view
Reagan, in radio talk, hails Armed Forces Day
Little applause for S. African racial power-sharing plan
Zaire rejoins Israel; will set up shop in Jerusalem
A young couple helps computers talk to each other
Joe Williams, a name synonymous with the blues
The $9.5 billion road to a sea of red ink
How energy boom can turn into bust
A more global world view essential for young Americans
Philadelphia brokerages wary of being taken over
No black holes of despair
A mere dream
The new is already obsolete
One federal rule scallop fishermen don't mind at all
They loved him in Eureka
Volcanoes
Letting children know we are glad to have them
Snow
Thai opium king still eluding global anti-narcotics drive
Palestinians and leftists skirmish in south Lebanon
Alien sport of ice hockey gains Australian beachhead
If the Iranians stop now
US airline competition: the sifting has begun
Deciding how much money the government will spend