Word: lynch
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...crinkly, spouting sentimental songs and blarney-encrusted stories, the face of a certain kind of jolly theatrical performer used to be referred to as "the map of Ireland." For a revised and updated emotional cartography, audiences are advised to stare long and hard into the physiognomy of John Lynch. A young actor of Roman Catholic stock who grew up in Ulster, he plays the title role in Cal, a brooding, subtle film that dares to make the only valid response to the endless violence of life in Northern Ireland today: a sort of strangled horror...
Sallow and sharp-featured, his unkempt hair a veil that flops down to hide the anguished confusion that haunts his eyes, Lynch's Cal is superficially a Belfast archetype. He is an unemployed adolescent from a broken home, trying to draw a curtain of rock music between himself and the terror-ridden streets, where glibly impassioned rhetoric is punctuated by the sound of explosions. Still, there is time on his hands and an emotional need to fill, so he drifts, convictionless, into the I.R.A.'s orbit, driving getaway cars for their "revolutionary" crimes. One of these forays results...
...Allstate Insurance division, which was founded in 1931, as well as a Sears Savings Bank in Glendale, Calif. But the new subsidiaries put Sears squarely into the mad swirl of financial services. Sears intends to compete not only with banks like Citicorp and Chase Manhattan but also with Merrill Lynch and American Express in offering services like lending and selling stock. Last year the Sears financial-services divisions earned $703 million...
...expansion into financial services is bold, and Sears is now aggressively going after this market. While it has let go a few analysts, Deari Witter nonetheless plans to add 1,200 account executives this year, at a time when other brokers are holding firm or cutting back. Merrill Lynch, for example, has laid off 1,000 people, and 1,500 more are scheduled to follow by year...
...Indiana lowered the rates they would pay for some types of U.S. crude by as much as $2 per bbl., to $26. The trend may force two big producers, Britain and Nigeria, to mark down the official price of their crude. Said Constantino Fliakos, oil analyst at Merrill Lynch: "If that happens, OPEC ultimately would suffer and have to lower its official price again...