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Conservative Challenger Alfonse D'Amato, 43, the presiding supervisor of Hempstead Township (pop. 800,000), attacked Javits for supporting SALT II, the Equal Rights Amendment and Government-paid abortions. With questionable taste, D'Amato also made issues out of his opponent's age and health. Javits admitted that he suffers from motor neuron disease, which is slowly withering his muscles. One D'Amato commercial showed a wrinkled Javits poster slowly falling to the ground as an announcer intoned: "And now, at age 76 and in failing health, he wants another six years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Senate: A Thoroughbred Stumbles | 9/22/1980 | See Source »

...lovely wooded area of New Jersey known as the Pine Barrens, more than 100 wells have been poisoned by chemicals leaching from the 135-acre Jackson Township dump. James McCarthy, who had drunk well water for ten years, had one kidney removed in 1977, and now has trouble with the other. Tara, his daughter, died in 1975 of a kidney cancer when she was nine months old. A 16-year-old neighbor lost a kidney to cancer; another neighbor is on dialysis for kidney problems; a third also has a kidney ailment. No scientific link has been established between...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Poisoning of America | 9/22/1980 | See Source »

Four years ago, the worst rioting was concentrated in Soweto, the huge black township outside Johannesburg, and in other black communities near the major cities. This time, Soweto seemed merely to be the fuse. The police were fearful that a new explosion might erupt on June 16, the anniversary of the 1976 riots-which has become a day for black mourning and political demonstrations-and the government banned all ceremonies. Inevitably, that action provoked blacks into acts of defiance. Buses were overturned, shops burned and cars stoned in the black townships. Seven thousand black workers went on strike in Port...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOUTH AFRICA: Nights of Rage and Gunfire | 6/30/1980 | See Source »

...festive mood was marred by only a few minor incidents. Two people were killed and 27 wounded by a grenade thrown by youths in a township outside the capital; 234 inmates overpowered their jailers and escaped from Salisbury's Central Prison. Nonetheless, the majority of Zimbabweans, black or white, probably agreed with Soames' assessment that "this has been nothing less than a series of miracles. The greatest among them is that there is now the positive promise of rebuilding this country, with Mr. Mugabe encouraging everyone to help...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ZIMBABWE: Festive Birth of a Nation | 4/28/1980 | See Source »

Instead of concentrating their organizing efforts on black academics, intellectuals or the young, as they have in the past, the leaders of black activist groups in Port Elizabeth and Soweto, the black township outside Johannesburg, are now focusing on factory workers. Because black labor is essential to South Africa's economy, strikes by blacks constitute a potentially powerful weapon. Though Thozamile Botha, who heads the Port Elizabeth Black Civic Organization (PEBCO), concedes that Ford is perhaps the "best" employer of blacks in the country, he has been prodding its management to respond to a long list of demands...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOUTH AFRICA: Strike Tactic | 12/17/1979 | See Source »

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