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...about toughness in a very tough business." He also learned, as an adolescent rent collector, that he didn't much like that kind of work. "It's much easier," he says now, "to sell an apartment to Johnny Carson or Steven Spielberg for $4 million than it is to collect a couple of dollars of rent in Brooklyn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Flashy Symbol of an Acquisitive Age: DONALD TRUMP | 1/16/1989 | See Source »

That is not a problem with the system designed by Thermedics in Woburn, Mass. It uses jets of warm air to collect vapors given off by either luggage or the clothing of passengers, who would be required to step into a three- sided booth. The vapors are then subjected to six different computerized chemical tests that together take about 25 seconds. In a five-day trial run at Boston's Logan Airport last October, the system, which would cost roughly $250,000, nabbed 50 out of 50 test samples sent through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Deceptive Killer | 1/9/1989 | See Source »

...protect" the foreigners and their possessions from theft by jealous Chinese students. The Africans objected in a letter to university officials, denying any need for protection. Then they tore down the wall. The Chinese deducted the cost of the damages from the $75 state stipends that the black students collect each month. In reply, 54 African students occupied the campus bank that handled the penalty transaction, dispersing only after the university president promised full reimbursement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: China Beat The Black Devils! Racial troubles in the streets of Nanjing | 1/9/1989 | See Source »

Take Chris Renner, 26, who helped create Food Partnership Inc. outside Los Angeles. It troubled him that food banks were spending a fortune in transport fees to collect donations. With the help of the California Trucking Association and United Way, he worked out a method for trucks to transport food between donors and food banks when they were returning empty from a long haul. So far, the program has carried nearly 4 million lbs. of food and saved the food banks $55,000 in trucking fees...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: For Goodness' Sake | 1/9/1989 | See Source »

...waterfall. But the sleek municipal building in Machida, a bustling city in central Japan, is not a pristine botanical garden. The enticing entrance is merely the facade of a $65 million facility built to handle a dirty job: recycling the wastes of the city's 340,000 residents. "We collect roughly 100,000 tons of garbage a year and convert it back into valuable materials," says a smiling Kenichi Usui, a city waste-management official. He has good reason to be boastful. Japan, which is fast becoming the world's premier industrial power, is also in the forefront of effective...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Planet Of The Year: The Good News: Japan Gives Trash a Second Chance | 1/2/1989 | See Source »

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