Letters.Red Hollywood Three cheers to Kenneth Lloyd Billingsley for exposing Hollywood's failure to come to grips with the subject of Soviet communism ("Hollywood's Missing Movies," June). He did not mention, however, Darryl Zanuck's fine anti-communist films of the late '40s and early '50s for 20th Century Fox. The Iron Curtain Iron Curtain Political, military, and ideological barrier erected by the Soviet Union after World War II to seal off itself and its dependent eastern European allies from open contact with the West and other noncommunist areas. (1948) was a suspenseful and dramatic film detailing the desperate attempts of Igor Gouzenko Igor Sergeyevich Gouzenko (January 13, 1919, Rogachev, Soviet Union – June 28, 1982, Mississauga, Canada) was a cipher clerk for the Soviet Embassy to Canada in Ottawa, Ontario. He defected on September 5, 1945 with 109 documents on Soviet espionage activities in the West. , a Soviet clerk in Ottawa, to make contact with the Canadian government and media about the extent of Soviet espionage in the West. Two other films, Diplomatic Courier (starring Tyrone Power, 1952) and The Night People (starring Gregory Peck, 1954), were directed principally against Soviet espionage in West Germany West Germany: see Germany. , with no holds barred. All of these are intense and powerful films, but unfortunately none of them is currently available on video. No Hollywood film, as far as I know, describes any aspect of the Gulag--only a few fleeting moments with Anthony Quinn
Anthony Quinn (April 21, 1915 – June 3, 2001) was a two-time Academy Award-winning Mexican/American actor, as well as a painter and writer. at the opening of The Shoes of the Fisherman. Solzhenitsyn's three-volume The Gulag Gulag, system of forced-labor prison camps in the USSR, from the Russian acronym [GULag] for the Main Directorate of Corrective Labor Camps, a department of the Soviet secret police (originally the Cheka; subsequently the GPU, OGPU, NKVD, MVD, and finally the KGB). Archipelago will provide endless material for tense and dramatic cinematic treatment. The film One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch treats the miseries of camp life but doesn't touch the massive, life-destroying cruelty of the Gulag projects. The first chapter of volume one of the Gulag, on the construction of the Balmoral Canal, has enough heavy drama for any number of movies. There is an abundance of material on the Soviet system now available, much of it cinematic dynamite. Think of just one incident in Shostakovich's autobiography, Testimony: Stalin plays cat and mouse with him by telephone, encouraging him one day and threatening him with execution the next, then sends him to New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of to spread Soviet propaganda to American correspondents. As Shostakovich speaks, he tries with subtle cues and gestures to make the reporters detect the truth concealed by the words he is made to utter, but none of them sees through the propaganda. They are too excited at finally seeing the great Soviet composer in person. What an opportunity that one scene would present to an able actor and an imaginative director! Yet today, years later, it remains only a small incident in a powerful book, thus far (and perhaps forever) untouched in any film. John Hospers John Hospers (born 9 June 1918) is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Southern California. Hospers earned advanced degrees from the University of Iowa and Columbia University and taught in the fields of philosophy and aesthetics. Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , CA I read "Hollywood's Missing Movies" with great interest. I would like to bring your attention to one small mistake: Hitler's invasion of Soviet Russia--called Operation Barbarossa--began June 22, 1941, and not in September 1939 as you stated. You have inadvertently confused the attack on Russia with Hitler's invasion of Poland (September 1, 1939). Eric Mowrey Bursins, Switzerland Kenneth Lloyd Billingsley replies: John Hospers is one of many to unearth anticommunist films I neglected to mention, including Escape from East Berlin, a European effort. Boat People, about the exodus from Vietnam, is another. Perhaps yet another reader will help these films appear in the video market. I thank Eric Mowrey for his comments and for pointing out the inadvertent transposition transposition /trans·po·si·tion/ (trans?po-zish´un) 1. displacement of a viscus to the opposite side. 2. of dates for two of Hitler's invasions. Local Guns Kenneth Smith's article on the news media and guns ("Loaded Coverage," June) helpfully exposes the biases of the national elite press. I suspect, however, that similar analysis of the local media would paint a more attractive picture. The local media are likely to be more responsive to (and share) local community sentiments on guns (pro or con), to be more connected to police and prosecutors than to organized interest groups such as either the National Rifle Association National Rifle Association (NRA) Governing organization for the sport of shooting with rifles and pistols. It was founded in Britain in 1860. The U.S. organization, formed in 1871, has a membership of some four million. Both the British and the U.S. or Handgun Control Inc., and to be more concerned with the facts of the story than with making a political point. Smith himself points to the reporting of the Rankin County News on the school shooting in Pearl, Mississippi. Similar stories of less high-profile events probably abound at the local level. The Houston Chronicle, for example, reported on an event that would never have attracted the attention of the national media. In 1994 a deputy sheriff was shot during a traffic stop of what turned out to be a group of teenaged car thieves. His life was saved by a passing motorist who pulled his own gun and returned fire. The motorist the REASON NEWS We are pleased to announce that Sara Rimensnyder, our Burton C. Gray intern this summer, will be joining the staff as an assistant editor with this issue. Chronicle hailed as a "good samaritan" noted that the car thieves learned the useful lesson "that other people have guns, too" and "that guns can fire two ways." He could have been a poster boy for the NRA NRA (National Rifle Association of America) organization that encourages sharpshooting and use of firearms for hunting. [Am. Pop. Culture: NCE, 1895] See : Hunting : a Korean War Korean War, conflict between Communist and non-Communist forces in Korea from June 25, 1950, to July 27, 1953. At the end of World War II, Korea was divided at the 38th parallel into Soviet (North Korean) and U.S. (South Korean) zones of occupation. veteran and retired gun shop owner on his way to the shooting range when he came across the besieged be·siege tr.v. be·sieged, be·sieg·ing, be·sieg·es 1. To surround with hostile forces. 2. To crowd around; hem in. 3. officer. Such reporting may not be heard in Washington, D.C., but it undoubtedly helps shape how average people think about these issues. Keith E. Whittington Assistant Professor of Politics Princeton University Princeton, NJ Planning Pittsburgh As a person who has lived and worked in Pittsburgh, I was most intrigued by Bill Steigerwald's article ("Death By Wrecking Ball," June). While in the main I agree with his conclusions, I'd like to present a different spin on Pittsburgh's redevelopment efforts. Such yuppie-style redevelopment is unfortunately inevitable. I say unfortunately because I love the old-style city: shops, streets, independent businesses, the variety and diversity that can be found only in the core of a major city. I've lived in Pittsburgh, and I loved it for its people, its hills, its neighborhoods, and, most important, its being urban (not urbane, but urban). Unfortunately, I'm in the minority and I've had to witness the centers of many fine cities become "yuppifled." I'm not saying that re-gentrification or redevelopment per se are bad; rather, the problem seems to be that the city fathers are jumping the gun on both the market and the economic realities. It's actually a civic version of keeping up with the Joneses "Keeping up with the Joneses" is a popular catchphrase in many parts of the English-speaking world. It refers to the desire to be seen as being as good as one's neighbours or contemporaries using the comparative benchmarks of social caste or the accumulation of material goods. ...and an expensive version at that. Pittsburgh has evolved dramatically over the years. While it lost thousands of blue-collar jobs in the steel industry, it has gained thousands of white-collar, high tech, and office jobs in their place. To a certain degree, there must be an out-with-the-old, in-with-the-new mentality, but the city fathers are throwing out the baby with the bathwater Baby with the Bathwater is a play by Christopher Durang about a boy named Daisy, his influences, and his eventual outcome. Act I Two parents who are completely unprepared for parenthood bring home their newborn baby. The two cannot seem to name the baby. . Many other rust belt cities are not destroying their blue-collar past; rather, they are turning their past into a tourist-oriented future, a future with the small(er) businessman in mind. On the other hand, the same small businessmen could be facing very similar problems even if the redeveloper were a private business and no taxpayer funds were involved. Perhaps a good example of this would be Rockefeller Center in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. . We now see a modern, urban multi-use commercial complex; however, hundreds of small(er) businesses were forced to relocate so that Rockefeller could build this monument to his ego. Times change, and the laws of supply and demand should be allowed to guide the transition. Unfortunately, many of the taxpayer-funded, municipally ordained or·dain tr.v. or·dained, or·dain·ing, or·dains 1. a. To invest with ministerial or priestly authority; confer holy orders on. b. To authorize as a rabbi. 2. redevelopment agencies know nothing about the laws of supply and demand. There's no need to worry about economic realities when you've got your paws in the taxpayer's wallet! Fred Bluestone bluestone, common name for the blue, crystalline heptahydrate of cupric sulfate called chalcanthite, a minor ore of copper. It also refers to a fine-grained, light to dark colored blue-gray sandstone. Lauderhill, FL |
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