Word: implicit
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Dates: during 1980-1980
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...best? If you had lived a great part of your life in so intimate a place, one where sustained deceit is impossible, wouldn't you have promised to make them proud of their share in you, their contribution to the shaping of your faculties? That was surely implicit...
...resolution includes the following "interpretation" added on at the end: "The Faculty regards it as implicit in the language of the Resolution on Rights and Responsibilities that intense personal harassment of such a character as to amount to grave disrespect for the dignity of others be regarded as an unacceptable violation of the personal rights on which the University is based...
...skeptical about Kama's intentions, the Polish people appeared somewhat more optimistic about the prospects for economic and political reforms. Conscious of their new-found power, the workers felt they probably could meet any attempt by the government to renege on the basic concessions with renewed strikes. The implicit threat was not lost on the authorities. Said Tadeusz Fiszbach, party boss in the Gdansk area: "Only cooperation with the new unions will make our survival possible in a difficult situation...
...member and first secretary of the local party in Konin. Grabski had complained bitterly in 1978 of the "chaos and confusion in our economy." That candor, widely circulated in the underground press, provoked his ouster from the Central Committee last year. The reinstatement of Grabski and Olszowski was an implicit condemnation of Gierek's disastrous economic record, marked by a $20 billion foreign debt and severely declining growth in 1979. To compound his humiliation, the Party Leader was forced in a nationally televised speech to praise "those comrades who perceived earlier the growing irregularities and tried to counteract them...
...those excerpts of the sermon that called for order, patience and moderation. In one key passage the politically sophisticated Wyszynski had reminded the nation of "the difficulty with which we regained our freedom after 125 years"-a reference to Poland's long domination by foreign powers, and an implicit warning against provoking a Soviet invasion. The broadcast, and a subsequent transcript in the party daily, made it appear that the church was supporting the government against the strikes. But the Polish Episcopate later complained that the edited version of the sermon had been used without its authorization...