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Word: zofia (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Zofia A. Nowakowski '93, who was visited by Duehay last week, was impressed with his defense of rent control...

Author: By David S. Kurnick, | Title: The Student Factor: When Cambridge goes to the polls, how much do we matter? | 11/5/1991 | See Source »

That is easier said than done. Dour and ascetic, commonsensical and un imaginative, intensely secretive about his private life-his wife Zofia has never been interviewed-Gomulka is totally a product of Poland's experience with Socialism. He was born 65 years ago in the small industrial town of Krosno, the son of an oilworker who had returned to the homeland after failing as an emigrant to America. The family was poor; young Wladyslaw left school at 14 and became a locksmith and a Socialist almost simultaneously...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Gomulka: The Man Who Meant Poland | 12/28/1970 | See Source »

...then the Communists began to take a bigger share of the farm's produce. There were interminable, time-consuming party discussions, but little fertilizer, no tractors. Because they had collaborated with the Communists, the farmers of Victoria were ostracized by their neighbors. "They called us Soviet pigs," says Zofia Szczygiel, president of the Victoria collective...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLAND: The Farmer Goes West | 7/8/1957 | See Source »

...last October the quiet revolution came to Morawice. The people of the village heard newly appointed Party Secretary Wladyslaw Gomulka say on the radio that no more money would be spent subsidizing collectives. Says Zofia Szczygiel: "Everybody out in the fields threw down their tools and went home for a drink of vodka. Then they went and got their tools again and started marking out their claims to private property." A village committee soon ironed out the boundary disputes, and by the time Gomulka got around to acknowledging the end of forced collectivization, Victoria had ceased to exist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLAND: The Farmer Goes West | 7/8/1957 | See Source »

...loudly as he once did. Reading in isolation has improved his grasp of ideas. It was always said of him that he was a man without humor. "There are no funny stories about Gomulka," says Peasant Leader Stanislaw Banczyk. He is essentially a lonely man. He and his wife Zofia, a member of an old Russian Bolshevik family (purged by Stalin), live quietly in a tiny apartment in the Warsaw suburb of Praga, have no social life. A 26-year-old son, an engineer, lives in the same house. Gomulka's sole recreation: walking his dog around the block...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLAND: Rebellious Compromiser | 12/10/1956 | See Source »

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