"That's the market coming to them, " says Kevin Tynan, an analyst at Argus Research.
In addition, Mr. Tynan was a superficial thinker who donned ideas as if they were suits.
Tynan apart, Burton's criticism reinforced what many other London critics felt about the Ensemble's first visit.
"If this latest restructuring round isn't successful, it won't be five years before something dramatic happens, " Tynan says.
The two men were killed at their home, Tynan Abbey on the border in County Armagh in 1981.
As for the size of possible restitution, it could cut into capital for future products, according to Tynan.
"As difficult as it was for him at GM, it'll be even more difficult at Ford, " Tynan says.
Tynan says the company's lagging stock price is likely tied to the suit.
Born in 1927, Mr. Tynan dreamed of becoming a director but soon discovered that his real gift was as a writer.
Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and the Rabbi Harold Kusher will give readings, while Irish tenor Ronan Tynan will sing.
The accusation was itself reckless, though it was perhaps the price Tynan paid for a style whose intention was to shock.
"There has to be more to it than a purely passive play, " says Kevin Tynan, an auto analyst at Argus Research.
The diaries give no indication of Tynan's spirited counter-offensive which led to the Times printing a correction and paying his legal costs.
If it is wrong, Tynan is sure financial restitution would be devastating to share prices, but not a sign the end is nigh.
As a record of his bravura style, the diaries are a poor account compared with the collected letters and with Kathleen Tynan's biography.
When Mr. Tynan was good, he was better than any other drama critic of his generation, and that is why his reviews are still readable.
Postwar England was gray, genteel and ultracareful but not so the flamboyant Mr. Tynan, who had the indispensable critical gift of being able to communicate enthusiasm.
"He owns it cheap, " Tynan says of Kerkorian's Ford holdings.
If reports that the shareholders have documents showing Daimler-Benz was calling the merger a takeover are true, then officials at the then-German-owned company misjudged American corporate culture, says Tynan.
The seller's grandmother, Lady Ethel Margaret Stronge, left the vase to his mother Mrs Rose Ethel Richardson of Tynan Abbey, County Armagh, Northern Ireland, who gave it to her son.
The private members' bill, sponsored by Labour MP Bill Tynan, will also make the noisiest fireworks illegal and impose stricter rules on the training of those who give professional displays.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Wales | Firework victim wants tighter controls
Many critics are too cautious to hurl their hats in the air, but Mr. Tynan poured his excitement straight onto the page, and his reviews crackled with a sense of occasion.
While Tynan made Brecht acceptable to the British theatrical establishment, he also hampered his reception somewhat by assuming that audiences had to share Brecht's anti-capitalism in order to embrace the plays.
Richard Nelson's play, adapted in collaboration with Colin Chambers from Tynan's own diaries, has anecdotes to spare, as one might expect, and a degree of pathos which one might not anticipate.
As an advocate of new drama and an opponent of censorship, Tynan ought to be remembered as one of the more benevolent dictators of English cultural taste after the second world war.
In Scotland we never seem to stop having elections - last week it was Hamilton with a superb candidate in Bill Tynan - we won - again, just as we did in Wigan.
Watching Corin Redgrave embody the one-time wordsmith, wit and apparent sexual fetishist Kenneth Tynan is to open one's eyes to a kind of genius that is both scintillating and not a little sad.
The diaries are lightly edited by John Lahr, who says that among the few cuts he made were Tynan's remarks about Test cricket a pity, because cricket was one of the few things he continued to enjoy.
He wrote satirical left-wing ballads for the Establishment Club, mixed with Ken Tynan and Lindsay Anderson on the edge of London's shocking 1960s theatre scene, set his poems to jazz, uncovered pseuds and bizarre news stories for Private Eye.
ECONOMIST: Christopher Logue, poet, died on December 2nd, aged 85
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