Word: finn
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Sometimes ABC stars even do more than that. As Happy Days grows older the relationship between the bad boy hero Fonz and the good boy hero Richie (Ron Howard) is becoming TV's own pop version of Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer. John Ritter of Three's Company has managed to make a popular sex symbol out of a refreshingly non-macho male. Soap, after a slow start, has begun to change its intially idiotic female leads (Cathryn Damon and Katherine Helmond) into believable middle-aged heroins. Though there is much to lament about ABC's blockbusters...
...owned by Phillips Brooks House and driven by Christopher Finn '80, who is helping ease the serious shortage of volunteers willing to transport kids to Walpole for the program. The kids hop out in the prison parking lot and run into the anteroom where other youths--both black and white--stand peering into the glass windows of the prison's central command, waiting for the uncooperative guards to find the list that will let them in tonight...
...next three slots went to the first Crimson runners to cross the line. Ed Sheehan placed seventh at 24:46, followed by teammates Reid Eichner at 24:52 and captain Stein Rafto at 24:54. The fourth and fifth Harvard finishers were Brian Finn, who came in at 24th at 25:53, and Thad McNulty, who finished 29th...
...joke. Jimmy Carter seems incapable of performing such a humanizing service for himself. In an odd way, Billy does it for him. Billy compensates for his brother's sweet-eyed psalm-singing and persnicketiness; Billy drinks beer on Sunday morning instead of going to church; he is Huck Finn against the town's respectables. He has become something of a folk hero; in doing so he has begun to cut his celebrity loose from his sibling's and achieved a media being...
...crossed the line three seconds later, closing rapidly at the finish. Hot on Sheehan's heels was fellow Crimson runner Thad McNulty, who finished ninth at 25:52. Three Dartmouth runners filled the next three slots with another brotherly finish, and they were followed by Harvard's Brian Finn, who ran an excellent first half on the slippery course, but whose chances were hurt by an unscheduled pratfall in one of Franklin's subaqueous glades...