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...characters are confused. Mary herself is usually slack-jawed with bafflement-about her sister, who has fallen in with the local massage-parlor king; her grandfather, "the Fernwood Flasher"; and most of all by her stolid and truly enigmatic husband Tom. Though he is having an affair with Mae, a comely co-worker at the plant, he is impotent with Mary. The situation makes him terse and glum. If he can't do it, poor, dead-voiced Mary wants to talk about it. In one of the show's more venturesome scenes, written by Lear himself, Mary complains...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary | 2/23/1976 | See Source »

...serving basically as a chorus line, and one of the 'girls' was quitting. I filled the vacancy." Cagney, who eventually grew from vaudeville chorine to cinema mobster, says he never felt quite at home with his tough-guy image. That famous grapefruit-in-the-face scene with Mae Clarke in The Public Enemy (1931), he complains, followed him for years: "Invariably, whenever I went into a restaurant there was always some wag having the waiter bring me a tray of grapefruit. It got to be awfully tiresome." So which of his 62 films did he enjoy the most...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jan. 26, 1976 | 1/26/1976 | See Source »

...against the city's ethnic-oriented, working class neighborhoods is especially regrettable, since one of the principal motivations of the whole Convention effort was to begin to move away from the bitter, regressive class cleavages which have poisoned Cambridge politics for over a generation. The surprising victories of Sara Mae Berman and David Clem, two liberal candidates from neighborhoods east of Harvard Square, indicate a partial success here. The overwhelming broad-based neighborhood support for Frank Duehay and the courageous candidacy of Steve Buckley, a member of a longtime name appeared on none of the "liberal" slates that year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ELECTION COVERAGE | 11/22/1975 | See Source »

...fallen liberals, Charles Pierce and Peter G. Gesell, will be replaced by Independent David A. Fantini, a former committeeman and the second strongest winner in this year's contest, and Sara Mae Berman, the liberal candidate who drew attention to her campaign by literally running through city neighborhoods with leaflets and supporters at her tail...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: In Progress | 11/15/1975 | See Source »

Finally, of course, the whole process has to be repeated for the school committee vote. CANDIDATES FOR SCHOOL COMMITTEE BERMAN, Sara Mae +GESELL, Peter G. 23 Fayette Street 62 Hubbard Avenue BUCKLEY, Stephen D. HOLWAY, David J. 147 Prospect Street 52 Park Avenue CATAVOLO, George +KOOCHER, Glenn S. 202 Elm Street 114 Trowbridge Street CENTANNI, Ralph T. +MAYNARD, Joseph E. 60 Sixth Street 214 Harvard Street ELLIS, Priscilla +PIERCE, Charles M. 24 Francis Avenue 85 Chilton Street FANTINI, Donald A. RAVANIS, Theodore D. 15 Day Street 35 Lopez Street +FITZGERALD, James SHUMAN, Charles H., Jr. 137 Otis Street 124 Webster...

Author: By Christopher B. Daly, | Title: Riding the Trolley Car Of Proportional Voting | 10/30/1975 | See Source »

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