Word: williamsons
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...their pleasures," observes an Irish Liverpudlian in The Reckoning. Sorrier still it is to see the dislocated Hibernians at theirs. For the ancients, there is the public house where they undergo the peculiar process Yeats called "withering into truth." For the film's protagonist, Michael Marler (Nicol Williamson), there is London pyramid climbing-ascending corporate strata by using the bow-and-scrape to superiors and the knee-in-groin against competitors...
...such a man literally get away with murder? He can-and he also makes a good deal of money and a good many women in the process. The Reckoning offers no consolation and no solution. Williamson, however, does. For this remarkable performer always carries with him a moral force...
From this photograph, I believe, it can be shown that Mr. Fink was not part of the group which obstructed Mr. Williamson in that he did not stand in front of the doorway and did not link arms with those who did, all of whom have their arms linked...
...even acted out pushing a wet string on the table. He told the accused girl to have patience, be reasonable, keep trying. Two days later, the Committee informed the same girl that non-violently standing on the steps of University Hall with 150 other people while Samuel R. Williamson tried to get into his office had earned her a suspended requirement to withdraw. It seems that a wet string can move very fast sometimes...
...other cases the CRR is not even so very concerned with the empirical facts. Dale Fink was an undergraduate accused of blocking Williamson and Donald Anderson when they tried to enter Holyoke Center on May 16. At his hearing Fink testified that he was present at Holyoke Center that morning, but that it was not his intention to block anyone, and in fact, he had stood away from the door to make his intention clear. Williamson testified that he saw Fink standing in front of the door in the third row of demonstrators. This situation is common in criminal cases...