I'm back to you on that....
A long long time ago even before I had the honour of meeting you T.O.P I for some reason followed the revolution of solidarity in Poland at the time of its origins.
A lot was made of the Gdansk Tractor Factory and the Big Strike. At the time not munch was made of the demographics of Warsaw and Poland where I was watchingfrom. As I said it was one of those things that stick in your (my) memory for some unknown reason. Knowing little about the layout of Poland and Warsaw itself.
But yes of course you are correct....
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WARSAW — Poland's two-week wave of labor unrest spread to the capital today, with workers demanding recognition of the Solidarity trade union staging a partial stoppage at a giant Warsaw tractor factory.
The outlawed union simultaneously called for urgent nationwide stoppages to back striking shipyard workers in Gdansk and deter authorities from using force against them.
Work in three departments of the Ursus tractor factory outside Warsaw halted pending a reply by the management to six demands presented by a strike delegation, workers said.
The three departments employed 6,000 of the factory's 15,000 workers. A four-man strike committee and 120 supporters had occupied a canteen after a march around the plant, the workers said.
In Gdansk, strikers at the Lenin Shipyard rebuffed official peace offers, repeating demands for recognition of Solidarity, and the management said the yard might have to close.
Reuters correspondent Michal Broniatowski reported from Gdansk that an offer from the authorities, including a promise to free some political prisoners and rehire activist workers, was turned down at a strike rally.
Where Union Was Born
"There is no freedom without Solidarity," workers shouted in response. The Lenin Shipyard was the birthplace of the free trade union during a 1980 strike wave, and its leader Lech Walesa is with the strikers
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Solidarity it will be T.O.P and power to the Sharks.