"Some day soon you're going to be sorry... you'll recognize us... I'm going to finger you... put a contract on you with the New York women's lib groups." — Author Barbara Howar to John Mack Carter, then editor of Ladies' Home Journal, at a 1970 dinner party, as reported by Washington Post columnist Maxine Cheshire.
Cheshire wrote, "There are those at The Ladies Home Journal who blame Washington's Barbara Howar for the magazine's troubles with the women's liberation movement. And she isn't denying it."
"Wasn't it a groovy idea?" Cheshire quoted her as saying.
Specifically, Cheshire was linking Howar to a famous incident on March 18, 1970, when a large crowd of "militant feminists" laid siege to Carter's office for 11 hours, smoked his cigars, and presented their demands, including his resignation.
In addition to many contemporary accounts, the episode is described in some detail in Lenore Hershey's 1983 memoir, "Between the Covers." Hershey was on the scene as Carter's second in command and succeeded him as editor of the Journal several years later. Hershey's successor, Myrna Blyth, writes in her 2004 book, "Spin Sisters," that, "I can tell you, he [Carter] was more worried that they would not let him out of his office for bathroom breaks than anything else."