home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
/
TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
/
1980
/
80
/
80capr.7
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-02-27
|
15KB
|
288 lines
<text>
<title>
(1980) Others Who Stood In The Spotlight
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Highlights
</history>
<link 00205><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
January 5, 1981
MAN OF THE YEAR
Others Who Stood in the Spotlight
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Shaking the Foundations of Communism
</p>
<p> Karl Marx could hardly have imagined that a socialist empire
based on the "dictatorship of the proletariat" would one day be
shaken to its core by a son of the working class. Yet in 1980
an unemployed Polish electrician, Lech Walesa, rose from the
masses to become one of the Communist world's most charismatic
figures. When he scaled the gates of Lenin Shipyard in the
Baltic port of Gdansk last August, Walesa did far more than
seize the reins of an angry strike movement. To millions of
Polish workers, he became the symbol of their dreams for a
better life. In the process, he helped launch a bold experiment
to bend the rigid lines of Communism in a new direction--and
hurled a defiant challenge at Moscow's control over its East
European satellites.
</p>
<p> Walesa did not personally launch this revolution like some
latter-day Spartacus. The strikes themselves made him a leader,
just as the country's catastrophic economic condition had
engendered the protest. Standing only 5 ft. 7 in., with a
drooping, reddish-brown mustache and an impish twinkle in his
eye, Walesa, 37 speaks the simple, sometimes, ungrammatical
language of the Polish worker. His education was limited to
high school level vocational training; his leadership abilities
were honed during years of underground labor organizing--activities that eventually cost him three jobs and landed him
in jail on several occasions.
</p>
<p> But from his first appearance in the striking shipyard last
August, Walesa showed an instinctive ability to inspire crowds
and win their trust. Standing atop the shipyard gates, a
microphone in one hand, the other raised in a clenched-fist
salute, he mesmerized his audiences with a mixture of folksy
quips and deadly serious admonitions.
</p>
<p> Walesa proved equally adept at hard-nosed political
bargaining. After eight days of tense face-to-face negotiations
with Polish Deputy Premier Mieczyslaw Jagielski, he won a
historic agreement that made Poland the only Communist country to
have independent trade unions. It was a daring deviation from
Marxist-Leninist orthodoxy that potentially challenged the
Communist party's monopoly of power and set a dangerous precedent
for the rest of the East bloc.
</p>
<p> Fresh from that triumph, Walesa became the leader of
Solidarity, the 10 million-member union federation, and led a
tough legal battle to get its status recognized by a Warsaw
court. As Solidarity moved toward new confrontations with the
Warsaw government, 55 Soviet divisions massed on the Polish
frontiers, a chilling reminder that Moscow would tolerate only so
much innovation and defiance.
</p>
<p> Walesa insists that he is simply a "union man" and not a
politician. Yet the labor upheaval that toppled Party Boss
Edward Gierek also made Solidarity's leader one of Poland's
three most powerful people. The other two--new Party Boss
Stanislaw Kania and Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, spiritual leader
of Poland's 32 million Catholics--now confer with this
diminutive union man almost as if he were a high state official.
Walesa takes his dizzying rise to eminence in stride. Says he:
"I am not concerned with fame in the least. I have a job to
do and I do it." So far, he has done it remarkably well.
</p>
<p>Shaping the Future of Life
</p>
<p> Though they seldom command the daily headlines, scientists by
their deeds sometimes possess the potential for the greatest
impact upon the world's future. Consider such works as the
green revolution, the transistor, antibiotics, computers: in
the past few decades, all emerged rapidly and unexpectedly to
alter the course of civilization.
</p>
<p> No individual scientist symbolized the new maturity of this
arcane art more than Herbert Boyer, 44, a curly-topped,
rumpled-looking biochemist at the University of California at
San Francisco. In the 1960s Boyer was taking part in antiwar
protests in the streets of Berkeley. Last year he led a
different type of demonstration: the parade of scientists who
are taking gene engineering out of the laboratory and into the
marketplace, where it promises a host of wonders, from new drugs
and foodstuffs to pollution-gobbling bugs.
</p>
<p> Boyer first came to public attention in 1973, when he and
Stanley Cohen of Stanford University helped point the way to
such miracles. They devised a relatively simple method of taking
genes--which contain instructions for one or more inherited
characteristics--out of one living organism and splicing them
into the genes of another. The resulting hybrid usually a
variety of the common bacterium E. coli, then makes the
substance ordered up by its new gene. So powerful a tool is
recombinant DNA, as it is called, that the rapidly proliferating
bugs can act like little microbial factories churning out great
quantities of material.
</p>
<p> Three years later, Boyer joined with a young entrepreneur
named Robert Swanson, then 28, to exploit this amazing--and, in
some eyes, dangerous--new technology. Only lately has their
firm, Genentech Inc., begun to turn a profit. But its prototype
bacterial factories have been extremely busy. They have already
produced half a dozen different substances, including insulin,
human growth hormone and interferon, the antiviral agent being
investigated as a cancer cure. Genentech (pronounced jeh-nen-tek)
has also paid off handsomely for Boyer (his initial investment:
$500). Offered publicly last October, its stock shot up within 20
minutes to $89 a share from an initial price of $35. Even near
year's end, after it settled back to around $40, Boyer's own
holdings were worth $37 million.
</p>
<p> Though Genentech was the most prominent of the new
biotechnology firms to go public, it is only one of many
contenders in this rapidly expanding business, which got a
strong boost last year by the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling that
new life forms are patentable. (The first gene-splicing patent
was for Boyer and Cohen's work.) Nor is Boyer, who remains at
the University of California, the only academician with
commercial ties. In 1980 dozens of scientists signed up with
gene-engineering firms.
</p>
<p> Some of Boyer's colleagues carp that the Genentech connection
has tainted his reputation as a "pure scientist." There has
also been talk that it cost Boyer a Nobel Prize--one of the
1980 awards was shared by Stanford's Paul Berg for recombinant
DNA research. But Boyer, whose only real ostentation is a new
Porsche, has every reason to shrug off the criticism. After
all, he argues, the full benefits of genetic engineering--say,
the curing of diseases--can never come out of a university
setting alone. "Business is more efficient," he says. "It will
bring benefits to the public much faster."
</p>
<p>Pursuing His Three Strategic Principles
</p>
<p> He is living proof that those tough old men in the Kremlin
often thrive on adversity. A year ago, Moscow was rife with
rumors that he was on the brink of retirement if not death, that
a faith healer from the Caucasus was treating him for
mysterious, possibly terminal ailments, that his colleagues on
the Politburo were bypassing or overruling him on key decisions.
</p>
<p> It began with the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan and ended
with the threat of an invasion of Poland. In between came a
plague of humiliations: outpourings of international protest
over Afghanistan; a partial boycott of the Moscow Olympic Games;
reports of brief but ominous incidents of labor unrest in SOviet
factories; the second disastrous harvest in a row; new tensions
with China; the collapse (at least temporarily) of arms control
negotiations with the West; the election of a new American
President whose rhetoric is explicitly anti-Soviet; and finally
the Polish crisis, which posed the most serious challenge to the
Soviet empire since World War II.
</p>
<p> Brezhnev came through those difficulties physically more
vigorous and politically more powerful than before. On his
state visit to India earlier this month, he had to be helped up
and down stairs, but otherwise looked alert and vital. In
February he is expected to preside over the 26th Communist Party
Congress, which will sing his praises as it sets the tone and
direction of Soviet policy for the next five years.
</p>
<p> In recent years Brezhnev has gained enough authority and
prestige to put his portrait and quotations on propaganda
posters all across the U.S.S.R. Yet so far he has avoided
responsibility for chronic failures of the economy and
agriculture. That onus he thrust upon other comrades,
particularly his longtime partner Alexei Kosygin, who died in
late December, less than two months after his resignation as
Premier. Now more than ever, the gerontocratic leadership of
the U.S.S.R. is dominated by Brezhnev appointees and proteges,
with neither an obvious heir nor a challenger in their midst.
</p>
<p> Despite the embarrassments and rebukes that followed the
Afghanistan invasion, Brezhnev and his colleagues have hewed
unswervingly to a foreign policy based on three principles.
First, they seek detente with the West in the form of trade,
arms control agreements and cordial political atmosphere--as
long as these goals can be achieved without compromising what
the Soviets see as their security interests. Second, they are
always looking for--and frequently finding--ways to weaken
and distract Moscow's main adversaries, the U.S. and China. And
third, once they have decided that the Soviet Union's vital
interests are threatened, they exert force massively, without
compromise or vacillation.
</p>
<p> In 1980 all three principles were in evidence--and sometimes
in conflict. The 85,000 Soviet troops "invited" into Afghanistan
a year ago are hunkered down for a long occupation despite the
profound damage that the invasion did to relations with the West
and the Third World. In conciliatory meetings with Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt of West Germany last summer and with Senator
Charles Percy near year's end, Brezhnev said that he was willing
to call a truce in the new cold war and make a fresh start in
1981.
</p>
<p> Events in Poland will largely determine if that is possible.
The Western Europeans are eager to preserve "Eurodetente"
regardless of the tensions between Moscow and Washington; yet
they clearly could not maintain a business-as-usual approach in
the face of another Soviet invasion, this one chillingly near
by. Brezhnev and his Kremlin comrades would love to seduce the
Europeans from Washington's orbit, and to maintain Communist
rule in Poland merely by the posturings of force. But no one
doubts that if necessary they will resort to its use, just as
they did in Afghanistan last December and in Czechoslovakia
twelve years ago.
</p>
<p>Dominating American Thought and Policy
</p>
<p> His blindfolded face has become a symbol of both personal and
national agony--the continuing ordeal of the 52 American
hostages remaining in Iran, and the grinding frustration of a
U.S. that has been unable to win their release from almost 14
months in captivity. But to the millions who see his often
published picture, he is a man without identity; the unknown
hostage. The State Department will not disclose his name, for
fear of upsetting his already distraught family.
</p>
<p> That too is symbolic: as individual human beings, the hostages
have all but vanished from the world's sight. No outsider has
seen the main group of hostages since April 6, when a number of
AMerican clergymen held Easter services in the seized U.S.
embassy. There has been no reliable word on how they are being
treated since July, when the Iranians released Richard Queen,
who is suffering from multiple sclerosis. Queen reported that
for a while after the embassy seizure the hostages were often
bullied, and even threatened with execution, by their militant
captors, but that early this year the militants eased off and
the hostages' main problem was coping with the boredom of
sitting in small rooms for endless hours with nothing to do.
It is no longer known where they are being held. They were said
to have been dispersed from the embassy to 15 cities throughout
Iran last spring, and are now, so the Iranians boast, in Tehran
hotels. The militants say they have turned over the hostages
to the Iranian government, but the government has never
confirmed it.
</p>
<p> Out of sight, however, in this case is the very reverse of out
of mind: never before has a largely anonymous group so
dominated American thought--and polity. Jimmy Carter confessed
that early in the year he had been obsessed with the hostages'
fate, and his first words when the Iran-Iraq war broke out
concerned not only the threat to world oil supplies and the
menace of expanding Soviet influence in the Middle East, but
also the possibility of trading military spare parts for the
hostages' release.
</p>
<p> All year long, efforts to win that release were frustrated. A
U.N. initiative broke down in March, and Ayatullah Ruhollah
Khomeini said the fate of the hostages would be decided by the
Iranian parliament. He later insisted on an American "apology"
for "crimes" against his nation. A military rescue attempt in
April left eight dead in flaming wreckage on the Iranian desert
and an impression of U.S. incompetence and impotence in millions
of minds abroad--and at home. When at last the Iranian
parliament on Nov. 2 voted to set conditions for the release
that looked to be a least negotiable, its act only reminded many
Americans of the bitter humiliation of the preceding twelve
months. Far from helping Carter, the news added force to the
Reagan landslide two days later.
</p>
<p> Just before Christmas there seemed to be new hope.
Negotiations focused on technical financial questions of
returning frozen Iranian assets, canceling U.S. claims against
Iran and disposition of the late Shah's wealth--if it can be
found--that should be solvable. But Iran's highhanded demand
that the U.S. deposit $24 billion in Algeria raised anew the
question of whether the often irrational and always faction-torn
Tehran government can summon the political will to free the
captives. After so many disappointments, few Americans will
believe that it can until all the hostages are actually on a
plane that has cleared Iranian airspace.</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>