AS ROH TAE WOO PREPARES TO DEPART South Korea's Year of Confrontations DONALD KIRK SEOUL THE WORKERS occupying the Hyundai Motors plant in the industrial city of Ulsan last January were in a...
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BEDSHEET BALLOTS As Italy Goes to the Polls BY SILVIO F. SENIGALLIA ROME NOT LONG AGO a noted Italian journalist, half in jest, admonished the voters here not to turn the country's next...
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THE CSCE AT TWENTY Helsinki's Uncertain Future BY WILLIAM KOREY As THE Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) enters its 20th year with a climactic three-month review session...
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TRANSATLANTIC COMPETITION The Limits of the Airbus Challenge BY PIERRE-HENRI LAURENT TO HEAR MANY who follow Such matters in this country and across the Atlantic tell it, the latest proof of...
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The Dismal Science THE KEY TO CONSUMPTION BY GEORGE P. BROCKWAY LAST TIME I reported why our present economic muddle should be called a "contained depression.'' The term is the coinage of S Jay...
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Writers & Writing TOO CLOSE TO CALL BY ROGER DRAPER Soviet COMMUNISM collapsed last December not with a bang but with the very mildest of whimpers. Yet this was certainly the most important...
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The Cost of Ethnicity The Disuniting of America: Reflections on a Multicultural Society By Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. Norton. 160 pp. $14.95. Reviewed by David M. Oshinsky Professor of...
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A Predilection for Pop Culture Monkey Brain Sushi: New Tastes in Japanese Fiction Alfred Birnbaum, editor Kodansha International. 304 pp. $18.95. New Japanese Voices: The Best Contemporary...
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On Stage MINING THE MASTERS BY STEFAN KANFER THE SPECTERS of Fred Astaire and Claudio Monteverdi are currently haunting Broadway. Astaire's footprints are all over Crazy for You, a restyling of...
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