The interview format used by the Oliner team had over 450 items and consisted of six main parts: a) characteristics of the family household in which respondents lived in their early years, including relationships
among family members; b) parental education, occupation, politics, and religiosity, as well as parental values, attitudes, and disciplinary approaches; c) respondent's childhood and adolescent years - education, religiosity, and
friendship patterns, as well as self - described personality characteristics; d) the five - year period just prior to the war — marital status, occupation, work colleagues, politics, religiosity, sense of community, and psychological closeness to various groups of people; if married, similar questions were asked about the spouse; e) the immediate prewar and war years, including employment, attitudes toward Nazis, whether Jews lived in the neighborhood, and awareness of Nazi intentions toward Jews; all were asked to describe their wartime lives and activities, whom they helped, and organizations they belonged to; f) the years after the war, including the present — relations with children and personal and community — helping activities in the
last year; this section included forty - two personality items comprising four psychological scales.
At the moment, there are nine films on Amazon's slate for 2017, though it should be noted that the studio was a major buyer at
last year's Sundance Film Festival (where they acquired Manchester, Love &
Friendship, and the documentary Oscar contender Gleason,
among others), so that number could be beefed up by month's end.
Jenkins, a Washington Post columnist who has co-written memoirs by Lance Armstrong (It's Not About the Bike) and Dean Smith (A Coach's Life)
among others, wrote movingly
last summer about her
friendship with Summitt and the devastating news that she had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's at the age of 59: