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Ben-Dror Yemini (Hebrew: בן-דרור ימיני; born April 17, 1954) is an Israeli journalist. He has worked for the daily newspaper Maariv , and in Spring 2014 began writing for the daily Yedioth Ahronoth .
He took a job processing emigration applications for Soviet Jews [5] and in 1973, he immigrated to Israel with his wife around the time of the Yom Kippur War. [5] He changed his last name to Sapir while in Israel [citation needed] and moved to the United States, first to Louisville, Kentucky, where he learned English and worked as a bus driver, janitor, and a loader, and then to New York City ...
Leonard Bertram Naman Schapiro CBE (22 April 1908 in Glasgow – 2 November 1983 in London) was a British scholar of the origins and development of the Soviet political system.
In the Netflix documentary about Ben's work with Rolling Stone, Ben states that some may have wrongly thought his brother was with law enforcement. [ 7 ] He conducted interviews for Rolling Stone of entertainment figures including Bob Dylan , [ 5 ] the Rolling Stones , comedian Steve Martin and Linda Ronstadt 's first cover story in 1975.
Francine Shapiro (February 18, 1948 – June 16, 2019) was an American psychologist and educator who originated and developed eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), a form of psychotherapy for resolving the symptoms of traumatic and other disturbing life experiences.
The Far Arena is a 1978 novel by Richard Sapir, writing under the slightly modified pen name of Richard Ben Sapir. It chronicles the adventures of Eugeni, a Roman gladiator from the age of Domitian, who, due to a highly unlikely series of events, is frozen in ice for nineteen centuries before being found by the Houghton Oil Company on a prospecting mission in the north Atlantic.
Ban This Book is a 2017 children's novel by Alan Gratz.Inspired by a viral Internet story from the mid-2010s, it tells of an African-American North Carolina girl student's fight against book censorship.
But Sapir's father was a dentist, and one of his patients was a secretary at Pinnacle Books, which agreed to show the manuscript to a Pinnacle editor. [7] The novel was eventually published in June 1971, spawning a highly successful adventure series with over 30 million copies in print by the late 1990s.