Word: yorkers
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Does the defense really want an impartial jury? Earlier this month Garry eagerly appeared on TV's David Frost Show to attack M.I.T. Political Scientist Edward Jay Epstein, author of a recent New Yorker article disproving Garry's claim that U.S. police have murdered 28 Panthers in one year. Garry labeled Epstein a "racist" and "paid agent of the CIA." Such intemperance could hardly be expected to do Seale any good. If any of his jurors saw the TV interview, it might be hard to forget-although they are dutybound...
...languid ease customarily provided by Balanchine's company, but it did project an affecting awkwardness and feeling entirely appropriate to a story about young dancers. Especially entrancing as the girl who stirs a narcissistic ballet student (Clover Mathis) from his daydreams was Lydia Abarca, 19, a native New Yorker who has been dancing for less than two years. Lithe and feathery, she exuded a quality of virginal nubility-and she displayed the eye-commanding presence that is the mark of a potential star...
...want to get into the argument between Mr. Epstein and Mr. Garry (CRIMSON, March 3). However, I have read Mr. Epstein's article in the New Yorker and heard Mr. Garry here last week. I also saw the last 15 or 20 minutes of the David Frost show on Monday, and I cannot blame Mr. Garry if he shows his impatience with a middle-class white person who in 1971 suggests that Mr. Garry settle "for a mostly white middle-class jury" in the trial of Bobby Seale, when this same person can speak of the shooting of black persons...
Epstein, a 35-year-old political-science instructor at Harvard, was assigned to track down the truth of the police-Panther issue by New Yorker Editor William Shawn. He not only deflated the Garry figure but also took the press as a whole to task for failing to carefully check claims that enthusiastic partisans such as Garry make for their cause...
That she would include her son's work in her own narrative-helpfully adding the source-gives an idea of how naive her writing can be. Mrs. Updike has published several stories in The New Yorker since she took up her new career ten years ago, but her "novel" is really a semidramatized memoir...