Contents: Introduction • Election Watch • Women's Project • Research and Literature • Labor Desk • The Africa Fund's program work in 1994 to date focused primarily on protecting the South African elections. It is the only organization that is keeping information and action suggestions flowing to vital U.S. constituency for social progress in Africa, including Congressional, state, and city legislators, community, religious and labor leaders, and other long-time activists. Interviews were given to Business Week, National Public Radio, Newsday, The New York Times, Pacifica Radio, Time magazine, WABC-TB, WNBC-TV, Nightline, The McNeil-Lehrer Newshour. The report mentions ACOA (American...
Contents: Introduction • Election Watch • Women's Project • Research and Literature • Labor Desk • The Africa Fund's program work in 1994 to date focused primarily on protecting the South African elections. It is the only organization that is keeping information and action suggestions flowing to vital U.S. constituency for social progress in Africa, including Congressional, state, and city legislators, community, religious and labor leaders, and other long-time activists. Interviews were given to Business Week, National Public Radio, Newsday, The New York Times, Pacifica Radio, Time magazine, WABC-TB, WNBC-TV, Nightline, The McNeil-Lehrer Newshour. The report mentions ACOA (American Committee on Africa) and its Board, the House Subcommittee on Africa, Bill Lynch, David Dinkins, State Department official April Glasoue, Bethuel Maserumule, the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA), Dumisani Kumalo, Rep. Charles Rangel, the ANC (African National Congress), voter education, Nelson Mandela, the United Nations Centre Against Apartheid, Commission on the Status of Women, National Public Radio, the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Center for Development and Population Activities, MADRE, the Episcopal Church, Methodist Office for the UN, Black Workers for Justice, Rachael Kagan, International Women's Day, the South African Women's Charter, National Council for Negro Women (NCNW), Natal Metalworkers, Mike Mabuyakhuku, human right attorney John Willis, Bill Lucy of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists (CBTU), Richard Knight, Admiral Bobby Inman, Owen Bieber of the UAW (United Auto Workers), the Labor Election Watch effort, Don Stillman, Mike Fleshman, and letters to De Klerk and Clinton.