Content Map > July 1982 > July 29

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Monitor Archive for July 29, 1982

Can Congress force itself to balance the books?
A note to our readers:
What should I buy?
Forging a style of a higher order
Radioing Cuba: leave it to the Voice of America
At the sound of music Japan expects fish to leap into nets
Scientists wait to see if volcano brings early winter and argue over whether CO2 buildup will warm up the Earth
Britain employs new ideas to reduce unemployment
Wall Street all ears over a new way to rejig debt
Postman politics
Light summer salads at the Waldorf-Astoria
Seeing tomorrow's world today
Iran and Iraq sparring at important oil port
The way to perfection
HUD employees complain of racism; Pierce denies claims, orders probe
How Turkey revitalized its lagging export trade
Critics call it 'coward's way out'
Learning the language; Hmong refugees adjust to a new life
The siege of Beirut -- and the reluctant Israeli colonel
Panama raps GI exercises conducted with Honduras
Mangoes
Scientists wait to see if volcano brings early winter . . .
Reunification of both Chinas? Taiwan sees Peking offer as propaganda ploy
House panel goes directly to joint talks on tax hike
Beneath tranquil Swiss scene, root causes of youth revolt lie unsolved
Pro-Cuban Grenada signs for Soviet aid package
Economic expert named for State Department post
Long Island town, defying US, says 'nyet' to Soviets
Fewer sign up for draft now than during Vietnam
Oxfam dismisses report on Salvadoran land reform
Passing the bucks
A rite of summer: a seaside picnic with lobsters
Why Arabs fear the Iranian revolution
Welcome step on cluster bombs
ALSO OF NOTE IN BRITAIN
California prunes off to Russia
The privilege of drinking in life's beauty
How to hatch miracles
Carl Lewis sets sights on world record long jump
Washington vicering sold data to spies, panel told
'82 governors' races: tough track for GOP
In post-modern dance, old rules are out -- almost any movement has its value
Consumer 'hot lines' answer customer appliance questions
GBS doing well on the shores of Lake Ontario
France's welcome mat for refugees grows tattered
Foreign films: an alternative to the summer blockbusters
Japan's car exports sag again
The siege of Beirut -- and the reluctant Israeli colonel
The $110 billion (or is it $160 billion?) deficit

African summit off-on-off again
Two-pronged pressure on PLO
The tribulations of Mr. Watt
Egyptian ambassador hints at new moves in UN on Lebanon
Afghan towns reported wiped out
Southern governors' concerns mirror problems of US
What Should I Buy? In Search of the American consumer: nine views
History of WWII, revised by Japan, angers neighbors
How the amendment would work
New inflow of mortgage money