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- <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>
-