"Kathleen Clark" is an American playwright whose plays include Southern Comforts, In the Mood, Secrets of a Soccer Mom,Banner. and Awilda.

Her play Southern Comforts, directed by Judith Ivey and starring Penny Fuller and Larry Keith, was produced at Primary Stages in NYC following a production at the Coconut Grove Playhouse with Dixie Carter and Hal Holbrook. Numerous regional productions of Southern Comforts followed, including the International City Theatre with Miss Michael Learned. Secrets Of A Soccer Mom, directed by Judith Ivey, was produced off Broadway and has since been produced throughout the U.S. "Southern Comforts" was a finalist for the Susan Smith Blackburn Award.

Ms. Clark was twice selected to attend the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center/Eugene O’Neill National Playwright Conference with her plays Southern Comforts and Banner; her play "Awilda" was a semifinalist for the 2014 O'Neill National Playwrights Conference. She is a guest lecturer for the low residency MFA Writing for Stage and Screen program at the New Hampshire Institute of Art.

website: kathleenclarkplaywright.com

More Kathleen Clark on Wikipedia.

Did he say that? What was he thinking of? How did he know to tell the trustee to sell it [his HCA stake] if he didn't know that he had it in the first place?

There have always been questions about whether Congress can police itself. The situation in the House removes all doubt. The House is not policing itself.

It certainly suggests a kind of corruption, not the kind of corruption that can be prosecuted under the bribery law but the kind that shows a manipulation of system.

Prosecutors investigate, and sometimes they don't indict.

The one-way traffic is kind of a pain, but if it meant losing parking, I wouldn't like it.

We are really working to set up what can be a one-stop shopping center (for permits), ... all for the purpose of helping us meet demand.

The question is, are these government officials using their leverage over the university's budget and other things to extract a personal benefit to them that is inappropriate? I do think there is an ethical problem with this. But I would be surprised if this sort of practice is not widespread with sports franchises generally.

Let the voters know. If they don't like it, they can kick him out.

It's not a blind trust. I think that's a complete misnomer, an inaccurate or at least a misleading term.