
The actress, referred to as Miss A in the column, was Jean Seberg. On May 19, 1970, Haber’s column was used to smear Jean Outright lies used to destroy people for their politics. Program (COINTELPRO ) and targeted individuals and groups they identified as JEAN SEBERGĭuring the late 1960s the FBI ran a Counterintelligence Staunch supporter of civil rights and often gave money to the NAACP, NativeĪmerican groups, and two gifts to the Black Panther Party. Seberg ,an internationally known and admired actress, was a Inįact, there are people who blame her indirectly for Jean Seberg’s suicide in Haber had a reputation for snarky comments. It was a gossipĬolumn – she inherited the gig from Hedda Hopper. When reading Haber’s column, you must consider the source.

Would most peopleįaced with such a traumatic loss socialized in the way Polanski did? I wonder. I find Polanski’s choice of venues for grieving very odd. Understanding the intimate mechanics of how different individualsĬope with loss is for someone with more knowledge on the topic that I have but Haber’s tone regarding Polanski’s unique manner of grieving the loss of his family wasĭisapproving. He was “crushed” and that “despite the unrelenting bad food I went there every

The death of the proprietress, Elaine Kaufman. Was a hangout for everyone from Norman Mailer to Mia Farrow and WoodyĪllen. She continued, “The kicks included trips to Oh, Calcutta!, off-Broadway’s groovy, naked revue, and to such jivy joints as Elaine’s, a haunt for the literary-cum-anything set.”Įlaine’s restaurant on the Upper East Side of New YorkĬity, near the corner of 2 nd Avenue and East 88 th Street, kicking it up in andįrom his home base, a suite at Manhattan’s Essex House on Central Park Trip to New York where, according to her, he was “.

Haber said that Roman Polanski was back in town after a
