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Monitor articles for October 16, 1986
- Cosmic battle -- star gazers vs. a furry red relic of the Ice Age. Astrophysicists eye new perch for world's largest telescope
- The agent who fell to earth
- `I'm Ed Bradley'. Emmy Award-winning reporter on CBS's `60 Minutes' has come a long way since his first job on the air as a radio disc jockey
- Did summit boost Reagan politically?
- Exhortation to a canticle
- Once awash in oil dollars, New Orleans faces $10 million deficit
- Soviets place summit blame at Reagan's feet. But tone of regret rather than recrimination leaves door open
- World Series memories leap to mind for veteran broadcaster. Mays's catch, Lavagetto's hit stand out
- PBS presents eight new series, many specials
- The Paris Bourse belies France's socialist cast
- WORTH NOTING ON TV
- 2 key OPEC nations push even lower prices as long-term ploy
- Arms control focus now shifts to Geneva. Momentum from Iceland summit stressed
- A touch of the past
- `Groucho' blends the antic and nostalgic in a stage tribute
- Terror victims' SOS answered
- The digging work
- Food for the world
- China's space program fires up for foreign customers and currency
- A few states hold out on drinking age. States allowing drinking under 21 begin to lose federal funds
- New Zealand: full steam ahead with plan to save its geysers
- Immigration bill on move. But neither friend nor foe likes the compromise
- How academic freedom fared under McCarthyism
- Penny wise and pound foolish on Embassy Row
- Glasnost: change of style but not substance
- Japanese give thumbs up to US position at Reykjavik meeting
- Economic woes test Venezuela's commitment to press freedom. Changing oil fortunes puts government at odds with critics
- Dining in my presence
- What do you mean, a `private' operation?
- West Europe to consider further sanctions against S. Africa
- Manet in Moscow, Matisse on the Hudson
- Microcomputers helping to reshape Kenyan government
- When it comes to new music, audiences like a helping hand
- Voyager project is NASA's shining star
- S. Africa will pay to evade sanctions. Enterprising middlemen willing to help Pretoria circumvent restrictions are likely to score big profits
- The substance we're truly dependent on