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...youngest sibling, Tommy (Dennis Christopher), forms the crux of the conflict. Tommy suffers from a hereditary kidney ailment, and needs a transplant--preferably from within the family--to survive. His only prospects are Brother Earl (Gary Kian), an over-aged, childlike buffoon; brother James (Pat MacNamara), a reformed alcoholic and aspiring academic; and Harry (Frank Converse), the only realistic possibility, a Beacon Hill lawyer married into wealth and long ago estranged from the family. Compounding the tension is the elder McMillan (Carroll O'Connor), an aging Irish head-of-the-local who believes firmly in organized labor, romanticizes the good...

Author: By David B. Pollack, | Title: Thicker Than Water | 9/28/1983 | See Source »

Though parts of the play get bogged down, most of the dialogue is incisive and clever. The combination of snappy one-line's from Earl about sex interspersed with old man McMillan's wisdom and expostulations contribute to the crafty exposition and ambiguity that Sibbard weaves throughout the drama. When Jim accuses James and Harry of becoming too uppity, we don't know whether to resent him for destroying his family with pedagogical union philosophy or pity him for living in a world that no longer exists. And, although Earl comes across as little more than an overgrown child...

Author: By David B. Pollack, | Title: Thicker Than Water | 9/28/1983 | See Source »

There are a few signs that state governments, despite their continuing financial woes, understand the important economic role played by their public universities. Democratic Governor Anthony Earl of Wisconsin set aside $1 million in his 1983-85 budget to boost the pay of outstanding professors at the university's 13 campuses. In June, Illinois passed a one-year increase in income, sales and gas taxes, which will provide the Urbana and Chicago campuses with $26.6 million more this year. But for the foreseeable future, public universities will be at the mercy of the political priorities and economic conditions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Cash Squeeze on Campus | 9/5/1983 | See Source »

Since 1969, Presidents Nixon, Ford and Reagan have appointed six new U.S. Supreme Court Justices, starting with Warren Burger, in the open hope of reversing the liberalism of the Earl Warren era. So how conservative is the Burger Court? As the Justices last week completed one of their most vigorous terms in the past decade and a half, they seemed to have ruled the question irrelevant. Says Stanford Law Professor Gerald Gunther, after considering the term's work: "They are beyond left or right description and therefore unpredictable." Concurs Professor G. Edward White of the University of Virginia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: Going Thisaway and Thataway | 7/18/1983 | See Source »

...Mercouri, 57, of her heady days as one of Europe's leading actresses. But in her current role as Greece's Minister of Culture, Mercouri was seeking publicity not for herself but for a favorite cause: the Elgin Marbles, which were the Acropolis Marbles before the Seventh Earl of Elgin removed them in 1801 with the agreement of the occupying Turkish Ottoman Empire. Athens says it wants them back; the British say that the Greeks have, terribly sorry, permanently lost then-marbles. During her tour of the museum, Mercouri admitted that the priceless sculptures were "very well kept...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: On the Record: Jun. 6, 1983 | 6/6/1983 | See Source »

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