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They also have a sterling goaltender in Bob O'Connor (second in the east with a 3.17 average and a 6-1-2 record), and that's bad news to Crimson fans who have watched Billy Cleary's boys fall victim to hot netminders in their last two league outings...

Author: By Bruce Schoenfeld, | Title: Boston College Host Icemen Tonight | 1/6/1981 | See Source »

...freshman from Warwick, R.I., turned in his first varsity performance at the Great Lakes Invitational two weeks ago, as did sophomore Bill Larson, who doubles as a hurler for Alex Nahigian's Crimson baseball team...Wade Lau is expected to be in the pads for Harvard, and O'Connor, who joined Fusco and Olson in West Germany, is the probable starter for the Eagles, although junior Doug Ellis has played in the last three games...

Author: By Bruce Schoenfeld, | Title: Boston College Host Icemen Tonight | 1/6/1981 | See Source »

Wise Blood. John Huston, at his eccentric best, adapts the Flannery O'Connor tale about a Godforsaken evangelist. For red-clay craziness -weird, scary and funny-this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Cinema: Best Of 1980 | 1/5/1981 | See Source »

...George Kittredge (Richard Council), an up-from-the-proles coal company manager. As everyone who has seen the matchless Katharine Hepburn-Cary Grant-James Stewart movie knows, the next 24 hours constitute a lifetime for Tracy. She takes a compromising midnight swim in the nude with Journalist Macaulay ("Mike") Connor (Edward Herrmann), sheds her fiance, and is reconciled to her ex-alcoholic, ex-husband C.K. Dexter Haven (Frank Converse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Caste Marks | 12/1/1980 | See Source »

Welty began writing after William Faulkner and before Flannery O'Connor, and her achievement has been partly eclipsed by theirs. All of them began with roughly the same material: life, odd and otherwise, in small towns of the rural South. Given this common starting point, comparisons of the three were probably inevitable, but they also were, and remain, misleading. Each looked at the South in a different way. Faulkner saw the tailings and butt ends of a long tragic myth; O'Connor perceived a gallery of grotesques testing the limits of God's mercy to man. Welty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Life, with a Touch of the Comic | 11/3/1980 | See Source »

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