Word: kleine
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WHILE FILMING UNION MAIDS, a documentary on labor struggles in the 1930s. Julia Riechert and James Klein unearthed questions about the Communist Party in America that they felt compelled to answer. Reichert and Klein began to chip away at the wall built during the McCarthy era which segregated, or some would say protected, American society from communists. They did not find what they expected--malicious communist spies in long trench coats, or "Rats," as they were described by Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon. But they did find Americans they could emulate. With archival films and the clippings of more than...
SEEING RED makes it obvious that its main characters could be our neighbors or even our relatives. But in removing the stereotypical connotations of the word "communist," the movie refrains from exposing many flaws of the communist movement. Klein explains, "We felt it was more important to convey to the audience on a broad, conceptual level, what we felt were the most basic flaws of the communist movement, rather than each and every specific historic moment when it may have gone wrong...
...From what we understand, the dogs' owners drive a big truckload of dogs out to Rhode Island and shot them," said Stephen A. Klein, staff counsel to the Joint Counties Committee...
...surprising statistic about the Summer School is the average age of its students. Last summer the typical student at Harvard was 23 years old, according to James A. Klein, Assistant Dean for Activities...
...make these sometimes murky matters pertinent, interesting and understandable. It achieves this by stressing in its stories the role of the people who make and administer major economic decisions, and by employing the colorful charts and graphs of the Art Department's Nigel Holmes and Renée Klein. Says Business Editor George M. Taber: "Baseball fans are crazy about statistics, but most people are turned numb by business numbers. Our task is to make economic statistics as interesting as those of baseball...