Sailors' unreliability prompts the Dalmor deep-sea fishing enterprise to seek recruits at villages and kolkhozes but new recruits are unlikely to prove more reliable

Item based on interviews conducted with defectors and immigrants in Western refugee camps and immigration offices, or Western travelers returning from stays in East European communist countries, supplemented with information collected through Radio Free Europe (RFE) correspondence with anonymous sou...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty Research Institute (RFE/RL Research Institute)
Institution:Open Society Archives at Central European University
Format: TEXT
Language:Polish
Published: 1954-03-05T00:00:00Z-1954-03-05T23:59:59Z
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10891/osa:f9b376c6-c218-4e99-9225-3f502d3b4d3c
Description
Summary:Item based on interviews conducted with defectors and immigrants in Western refugee camps and immigration offices, or Western travelers returning from stays in East European communist countries, supplemented with information collected through Radio Free Europe (RFE) correspondence with anonymous sources from behind the Iron Curtain. This item was transmitted from the Frankfurt field office. This field report was assigned the following topical and geographical subject headings by the RFE/RL: Poland; Industry -- Fishing (1714); Industry -- Manpower; Labor -- Recruiting of Manpower; Exile (1200) -- Escapes
Published:1954-03-05T00:00:00Z-1954-03-05T23:59:59Z