Content Map > November 1986 > November 24

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Monitor Archive for November 24, 1986

Commodity exchange staff may lose trading power
Wall Street recovers some aplomb after the Boesky bomb
Immigration reform: foundering in a sea of vacillation
Paris Op'era gains from smallish hall, but sound isn't all
PAINTING IN THE LATE '80s. Shock and novelty are out. Accessibility, technical skill, tradition are coming back in.
Salmon trollers' gourmet market threatened by fish farmers. Trollers mount drive to foster preference for ocean-caught salmon
Africa's journalists battle uphill to get and keep press freedoms
The voice of American English. California teacher gives English lessons to millions in China
The Bible unites us
Persistence paid off in Barcelona's 70-year quest for Olympics
Human rights trial poses painful questions for Argentines. At issue is how far down the line responsibility for `dirty war' crimes lies
In nuclear world, hope is most important, all experts agree. A world without nuclear explosives would not necessarily be free of war or superpower t...
`Lily Dale' continues Horton Foote's chronicle of family life. New play set in Texas brims over with feelings
Getting rid of unsafe truckers. Federal law sets national licensing, drug penalties
PBS shows trace animal migration and display a snapshot of the US
When `student-athletes' are drug-free but hardly studious
Future star
There're diamonds in them there hills. But residents have doubts about commercial mining
Britain spurns Argentina's overtures
What put the Feds on Ivan's trail. Clues on Boesky sniffed out by CIA-like ferrets, CPA-like routine
Private corridors outdoors
Two aldermen indicted in Chicago corruption case
A step to the East, a step to the West
The thrill is gone in Dick Francis's newest thriller
It's merging traffic for Fiat and Alfa
Raising Haiti's world profile
Health secretary's plan to pay for long-term illness faces revision
An India pulled to West and East awaits Soviet leader
Plant that turns waste into energy gives depressed town a charge. Little-known technology burns coal-mining residue efficiently
Open and nonaligned, Yugoslavia prospers. But Balkan nation has large foreign debt and high inflation
A composer listens to his own music
Need a whatchamacallit for your car? Here's how to find it
Salvador: peace is distant
Nicaraguan contra war forces Hondurans to flee border homes
At Oxford: the case for women's colleges
Shallow voyagers through a vivid future landscape
Japanese executive talks up US-Japan ties in high-tech. He cites benefits of `hot debate' in research
Club offers `capitol' chance to ex-cons
Talents pirouetting in their midst. The Robinsons.