Dear Sir:

In his book Levitt alludes to just enough of his seamy past to deflect more serious inquiry. But since he was fired, Levitt has been in and out of court on multiple occasions for forgery, fraud, grand theft, failing to file income tax returns, stealing his own cars and has had 28 known judgments against him for nonpayment of debts which totaled well over $100,000.

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Kerson’s admission that he worked ten years as a publicist for labor who welcomes a peek behind “enemy” lines and works as a propagandist claiming the high ground for his “side” clearly establishes him as a biased and partisan observer who lives in the pre-Jurassic days of adversarial labor relations.

N. Clark

Sheridan’s problem with me is that I am not objective and therefore not entitled to write a “legitimate” book review. In effect, Sheridan is arguing that people with opinions different from his own shouldn’t be allowed to have their articles published.