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Wellesley's "D" shut off the passing lanes for the break and pressured the ball as the 'Cliffe guards brought it upcourt, forcing numerous turnovers. "Our passing killed us," said Coach Carol Kleinfelder. "They set traps and we went right into them," she added...

Author: By Bob Baggott, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: 'Cliffe Cagers Bop Wellesley | 2/8/1977 | See Source »

Though prompt application of new flexible splints and pressure bandages lessens scars and skin contractures, burn victims are often left with disfiguring features that even the best plastic surgeons cannot eliminate. Says In-Service Education Director Carol Fulton of Boston Shriners: "They don't go home like Cinderella and live happily ever after." To prepare patients for re-entry into the outside world, many burn centers have added psychiatrists, psychologists and other therapists to their staffs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Sickest Patients You'll See' | 1/24/1977 | See Source »

...second half was a team effort. Coach Carol Kleinfelder shuffled the bench, perhaps to keep her charges from contracting pneumonia from the freezing drafts that blew through the fieldhouse...

Author: By Bob Baggott, | Title: 'Cliffe Hoopsters Thump MIT, 57-25, As Team Effort Overcomes Elements | 1/13/1977 | See Source »

...Third Man. This film partakes of much the same spirit as the American film noirs of the same period, though it was written by Graham Greene and directed by British director Carol Reed. Set in occupied Vienna immediately after World War II, The Third Man is by far the best thriller ever made. In the course of exploring two sides of the American character--vicious, anti-social instrumentality and unworldly innocence--Reed gets the best performance of Orson Welles's career. He uses his expressionistic camera techniques as well or better than Welles ever...

Author: By Jono Zeitlin, | Title: FILM | 1/13/1977 | See Source »

...White House reporter and later as press secretary to Lady Bird Johnson, Auntie Mameish Liz Carpenter is heading home to Austin, Texas, "to think more, to write more and to raise a little hell." At a farewell party at Ford's Theater, Old Friends Pearl Bailey and Carol Charming sang a duet, and Nancy Dickerson and Gloria Steinem helped narrate Carpenter's life story. But stealing the show, as usual, was Liz herself. "I stand here as the only Democrat leaving town," she told the 650 guests. Reminiscing a bit, Carpenter, 56, cracked: "I can remember most...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Dec. 20, 1976 | 12/20/1976 | See Source »

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