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...mirror. The danger now is something that seems new and ominous: an indifference to language, a devaluation that leaves it bloodless and zombie-like. It is as if language had ceased to be important, to be worthy of attention. Television undoubtedly has something to do with that. With its chaotic parade of images TV makes language subordinate, merely a part of the general noise. It has certainly subverted the idea of reading as entertainment. A recent study by A.C. Nielsen Co. found that Americans watch a numbing average of 3.8 hours...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: CAN'T ANYONE HERE SPEAK ENGLISH? | 8/25/1975 | See Source »

...Chaotic Scene. Others fled along the seacoast to Lobito and across the borders to South Africa and South West Africa. In the north, more than a half-million black Angolans, who had fled to Zaire during the guerrilla war and returned in anticipation of independence, were cut off from food supplies and threatened with starvation. Luanda was a chaotic scene as people fled the fighting in the slums and suburbs and crowded into the downtown area in search of protection. Thousands of blacks jammed the beaches, waiting for steamers bound for the still tranquil ports in the north, while whites...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ANGOLA: The Agony of Becoming Free | 8/18/1975 | See Source »

...city grew haphazardly as speculators, darting through loopholes in the zoning laws, did most of the building. Classrooms are so scarce that some city schools operate on triple shifts. Traffic is so chaotic that it takes some workers five hours to get to and from their jobs. Novelli intends to streamline and reduce the municipal bureaucracy; he also wants to add 2,000 new classrooms and improve housing. Financing all this will be hard because recession hit Turin heavily. Today unemployment is up 25% from a year ago and is still rising as further cutbacks loom. Transportation will be especially...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: Red Rule in Fiat City | 7/28/1975 | See Source »

...Chaotic Sameness. He concedes that it is impossible to tear down all the jerry-built construction and start anew. But he hopes to "give the city back its face and character." The mayor, who still lives in the working-class quarter of Borgo San Paolo, remembers his youth: "My parents used to take me to the Piazza Sabotino for ice cream. They met their friends; I saw my schoolmates. There was a hedge row we called the Vialle dei Sederi ["Bottom Boulevard"] because of the great row of buttocks of people sitting there talking. Nowadays Piazza Sabotino looks like...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: Red Rule in Fiat City | 7/28/1975 | See Source »

...lead and shift back to fixed rates. Says Treasury Secretary William Simon: "The old system was abandoned | for one simple reason. It didn't work." Clearly, it did not work at all well during the late 1960s and early 1970s, when the industrialized nations I lurched from one chaotic monetary crisis to another. Members of the International Monetary Fund meeting in Washington next month are expected to study ways of refining the floating-rate system, but they are unlikely to decide to put the world back on strict fixed rates any time soon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MONEY: Floating Furor | 7/21/1975 | See Source »

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