Word: jacks
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Dick (John Lithgow '67) heads to a family reunion expecting all-around love, and walks into a 40-year feud. Harry (French Stewart) becomes Uncle Abe (Jack Carter) for a day, complete with raspy voice and love for cigars. Sally (Kristen Johnston) finds sisterly love in cousin Michelle, and Tommy (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) can't understand why cousin Janine gets grossed out by his romantic advances...
...this does little to alleviate the show's unending teen angst. Dawson's dad (John Wesley Shipp) moves into a new apartment, Pacey (Joshua Jackson) finds out he may have to repeat his sophomore year, Dawson watches Jen (Michelle Williams) get trashed and trashy at a party, and Jack and Joey go out on a date, much to Dawson's consternation...
...seasoned East Coast corporate lawyer (let's call him Jack) is accustomed to getting his way. But at the mention of his older brother, he becomes agitated and taps a table furiously. Jack's brother pummeled him regularly when he was a child, and though his parents were aware of the hostility, they never intervened. His mother told him that someday he'd be big enough to fight his own battles. "I don't know what she was thinking, and I don't know if my father knew," says Jack, 44, who hasn't spoken with his brother in years...
...sappy lady and her yappy little dog appear--mischance absurdly personified--and ruin everything. Remember 1964's Dr. Strangelove as well. How delicately the title character and his ilk poised the balance of terror, how little they considered the possibility that there might be someone out there like General Jack D. Ripper. Best of all, think of heedless Barry Lyndon, sparing no thought for mischievous mischance, which ever haunts him and which too soon brings him to his foolish...
...ready for another Dr. Death spectacular. On Monday jury selection began in the fifth death-related trial of Dr. Jack Kevorkian, this time on first-degree murder charges. Having escaped conviction four times before for helping terminally ill patients commit suicide, Kevorkian may be facing his most sensational legal battle yet. It combines shocking TV drama -- Kevorkian?s videotaped killing of Thomas Youk, a 52-year-old suffering from Lou Gehrig?s disease, which was aired on "60 Minutes" last year -- with a high-stakes legal issue: Should Kevorkian be found guilty on charges of first-degree murder...