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Search resuls for: "Andy Kifer"


2 mentions found


Small Town ‘Tradio’ and More: The Week in Reporter Reads
  + stars: | 2023-07-14 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
In 1973, a young man named Uri Geller appeared on one of the BBC’s most popular television shows, “The Dimbleby Talk-In,” and announced that the laws of Newtonian physics did not apply to him. A handsome 26-year-old Israeli, dressed casually and flanked by a pair of academics, Mr. Geller performed a series of bewildering feats using nothing more, he said, than his mind. Then he appeared to bend a fork simply by staring at it. Because at the core of his performance was a claim of boggling audacity: that these were not tricks. ◆ ◆ ◆Written and narrated by Andy Kifer
Persons: Uri Geller, , , Geller, , Andy Kifer
Outgoing, funny, and athletic, he is described by those who knew him as the opposite of neurotic. Sherwin, a history professor and the author of one previous book, had agreed to write a full-scale biography of J. Robert Oppenheimer two decades earlier. He’d done plenty of research — an extraordinary amount, actually, amassing some 50,000 pages of interviews, transcripts, letters, diaries, declassified documents and F.B.I. But Cameron, who had published Sherwin’s first book at Knopf — and who, like Oppenheimer, had been a victim of McCarthyism — insisted. So on March 13, 1980, Sherwin signed a $70,000 contract with Knopf for the project.
Persons: Martin Sherwin, Sherwin, J, Robert Oppenheimer, he’d, Angus Cameron, Oppenheimer, Cameron, Knopf —, Organizations: Knopf
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