Word: polish
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...University took extraordinary steps to publicize the news. Before the release was sent out to the media, Robin Schmidt, vice president for government and community affairs, hand-delivered copies of it to two journalists spending the year at Harvard on Nieman Fellowships: Andrzej Wroblewski of the Polish monthly Organization Review and Charles Sherman of the International Herald Tribune. Sherman filed a story on the announcement that afternoon...
...words in the UPI interview held the key to his reluctance to travel: "I cannot go without being sure whether I can come back or not." The real obstacle to Walesa's visit, experts said, did not center on obtaining a visa to the United States, however much the Polish authorities may have disliked the prospect of the labor leader decrying the Communist regime in a well-publicized Western speech...
Wroblewski speculated further that Polish officials had possibly struck a deal with Walesa, promising increased leniency towards Polish laborers--several of whom faced trial at the time--in return for a turndown to Harvard from Walesa...
...likelier explanation for Walesa's change of mind, suggested the scholar, was the mounting tension from two imminent events in which he had a crucial stake: a string of major demonstrations planned for May Day and the mid-June visit to Warsaw of Pope John Paul II, a former Polish cardinal...
...kept a fairly low profile, but the April meeting and its subsequent wide publicity appeared to signal a new defiance on the labor chief's part. "It seems to indicated that Walesa is ready and willing to take a more active part in the resistance," observed Tadeusz Szafar, a Polish visiting scholar at the Russian Research Center. "I don't know what it achieves for him, but it's certainly not permission to go to Harvard...