Word: eder
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Simon attacks not only players and plays but also fellow critics. This fall he accused the New York Times's Richard Eder of such "tergiversation, equivocation, doublethink and simultaneous talking out of both corners of his mouth as took his predecessor, Clive Barnes [now at the New York Post], years of painstaking practice to master." Colleagues are quick to pan Simon in return: "The Count Dracula of critics!" (Andrew Sarris, the Village Voice); "The Transylvanian vampire!" (Robert Brustein. Yale Drama School); "Personally offensive!" (Brendan Gill, The New Yorker). Many of Simon's critics, however, would not dispute...
...superiors explain that it was easier to find a new theater critic (second-string Times film reviewer Richard Eder) than to replace Oxford-schooled Balletomane Barnes as dance expert, the job for which he was imported from London in 1965. There were other possible reasons: many in Manhattan's theater community resented Barnes' immense power, and some disliked his tendency to review plays as works of literature rather than live performances. Barnes, 49, has also starred in local gossip columns concerning some marital problems, and his bosses at the Times were thought to be not amused, a prudishness...
...leased and operated by the New Haven Railroad, but after the Penn Central acquired the New Haven in 1966, it instructed its new subsidiary to cancel the lease because the P & W did not earn enough money. P & W President Robert H. Eder, an ex-paratrooper and Harvard Law graduate, fought the move, but the ICC decided in favor of Penn Central, and the Supreme Court upheld the decision. The P & W got bank backing and filed a petition with the ICC to operate independently, but the Penn Central about-faced and tried to block the move, claiming that...
...naysayers did not take into account Eder's vision and nerve. He struck up such a close friendship with United Transportation Union Leader George Cahill that Cahill now sits in on P & W board meetings. Eder pays a flat, guaranteed annual wage of $16,460 to each of his trainmen, $4,640 a year better than the Penn Central pays, and he plans equal bonuses, regardless of salary. Eder, who earns $60,000 a year, will collect no more than an engineer...
...Sailor." The word comes across like "freak." or "nigger"-"The only possible advantage in being a sailor," said Seaman Fred Eder, "is that it's maybe the only way a white can experience something of what it's like being black. In uniform, you're a marked dude. You're prey to all sorts of people trying to fuck you out of a dollar or your watch or your sanity for Christ sake. You can't eat in a good restaurant, no decent-looking chick will talk to you. Man, you find yourself on even ground with all the other...