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...later they will feel obliged to honor their own commitments. On the contrary, they try to ignore the agreement, or at least to cheat their partner. The Western observers, excited about the August "social contract," fail to notice that not a single one of the agreements signed in Gdansk shipyard was fully observed by the government in the first year of Solidarity's existence. During that time Solidarity was reiterating earlier demands. The first demands that were really new were made only last month at Solidarity's first Congress: but it was perfectly natural to put them forward...

Author: By Stanislaw Baranczak, | Title: Dangers the Poles Are Prepared For A Dissident's Explanation of Polish Resistance | 10/23/1981 | See Source »

...could handle, and won the Trident contracts with bids it knew to be impossibly low. Says Congressman Emery of the company: "I think they're overtasked there. A lot of questions arise when one of the best yards in the world has so many problems." Yet that same shipyard is responsible for turning out seven more of the submarines that are supposed to play a critical role in the nation's defense...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Trials of a Supersub | 7/27/1981 | See Source »

...extraordinary gathering was dominated by new faces, new ideas and new expectations. The members came from all over Poland: brawny shipyard workers from Gdansk, deeply tanned farmers from Poznan, professors from Cracow. Their average age was only 40. They had been chosen by secret ballots in elections at their local party units; 91% had never before taken part in such a referendum. But when the 1,955 delegates converged last week on Warsaw's Palace of Culture and Science, a towering marble-and-granite edifice given to the Polish people by Joseph Stalin in the 1950s, they seemed determined...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poland: A Flowering of Democracy | 7/27/1981 | See Source »

Strikes. Economic debacle. Invasion jitters. It might seem at a quick glance that nothing much had changed in Poland since those turbulent days last summer, when an obscure electrician named Lech Walesa clambered over the gates of Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk to take control of a burgeoning national strike. In reality almost everything is different. The 1980 strikes shook the Communist world to its roots, engendering the Soviet bloc's first independent trade union, Solidarity, and launching a far-reaching process of reform and re-examination called odnowa (renewal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poland: More Renewal | 7/20/1981 | See Source »

Swing. Splash. Surprise. No one was more surprised than First Lady Nancy Reagan, 59, at the successful christening of the 560-ft. guided-missile cruiser U.S.S. Ticonderoga at the Ingalls shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss. Said she: "All I could think of was 'Lord, I am going to go down in history with Mrs. Truman!' " First Lady Bess Truman had struck out when she tried to crack a champagne bottle against the nose of the C-54 U.S. Capitol in 1945. Though that plane got no kicks from champagne, this ship did. Nancy, a righty (natch), uncorked a swing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jun. 1, 1981 | 6/1/1981 | See Source »

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