Word: costerized
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Consider then Act I: It's nine o'clock in the morning as Emily (played by Sada Thompson, who'll also assume the other three female roles as the play progresses) moves into her new, four-room apartment with the aid of Frank, her mover (Nicholas Coster). Emily has lost her husband. A widow then? Frank asks. "Well, I don't mean I lost him on the street," she quickly answers. I am, myself, divorced, Frank hastens to explain. And with that the two enter into a conspiracy to fill each other in on the details of their lives before...
...women are all relatives under the skin, yet there is never any danger of the four characters melting into one. All the men involved--particularly Oakland, Bain and Haines--approach their roles with a similar respect for the tribulations of the middle class, although in the case of Coster the results are possibly too casual to force the latecomers to hurry to their seats...
...about the specter of widespread assault on the men in blue. Says James Riordan, chief of the patrol division for the Chicago police: "People believe that an attack on policemen is really an attack on society. It's the symbol of authority that's being attacked." Clarence Coster, of the Justice Department's Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, agrees: "It's this whole confrontation with the Establishment, and the policeman is the most visible part of that Establishment...
...uglier neighborhoods around Manchester, and he from the ghetto of London's Stepney and Bethnal Green. In the nature of things, the stories of their own brief lives are more manifesto than reminiscence. Delaney pokes out her pert proletarian tongue at the Establishment; Kops throws a whole coster's barrowful of dead haddock. Both have produced fascinating documents and useful items for those who like to plot the course of British society now that the imperial ballast is gone, and the old class compass is out of whack. Both work in the theater; Delaney's A Taste...
...team they must play boasts a coster fully as impressive as its record. Defenseman Tom Martin, all all-American last year, may well be as good as any player to skate on Watson ice since the clearys, and the linemen he plays behind are all excellent in their own right: Billy Daly, B.C.'s first line center and high scorer, is a strong contender for all-American honors this year, and Owen Hughes, whom his coach describes as the "best defensive wing in college hockey today," has the distinction of turning in a hat trick against St. Lawrence. The third...