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home without a loss. Forward Lane MacDonald...

Author: By Ken Segel, | Title: Icemen Blank Cornell; McEvoy Shines in Net | 2/17/1987 | See Source »

With seven minutes remaining in the second period of Saturday night's Harvard Cornell hockey contest, 11 seconds into a Harvard power play, high-scoring Crimson winger Lane MacDonald took the puck to the right edge of the Cornell crease, set it firmly on the backhand side of his stick and flipped it high into the net over diving Big Red netminder Don Fawcett...

Author: By Ken Segel, | Title: Icemen Blank Cornell; McEvoy Shines in Net | 2/17/1987 | See Source »

Furthermore, MacDonald does not come off all that bookish anyway. Show business, not literature, is the common ground on which this epistolary odd couple meet and swagger and josh heartily. They are put in touch by a mutual friend, the wife of Novelist Erskine Caldwell. Before long MacDonald is asking Rowan's guidance on film and TV deals for his books; Rowan reciprocates by playing back studio goings-on for MacDonald's hard-boiled appraisal. When Laugh-In takes off, the novelist watches at home in Florida with a note pad at hand, sending Rowan comments and suggestions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Odd Couple A FRIENDSHIP: Rowan and MacDonald | 2/16/1987 | See Source »

...with their wives, get together occasionally and hit it off in * person as well as on the page. But meetings are hard to arrange; Rowan belongs more and more to his relentlessly successful show. MacDonald, who should know about such things, is worried that his friend is succumbing to the tyranny of a popular formula. "One never rides with anything," he warns, "because that is the way to dull up the world. One tries to improve everything with the tools available: imagination, mischief, irony and the marvelous knowledge that the world is mad." Rowan seems to agree, agonizing about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Odd Couple A FRIENDSHIP: Rowan and MacDonald | 2/16/1987 | See Source »

...crusty moralist in MacDonald -- familiar, especially, from his gratifyingly mordant asides in the Travis Magee books -- finally erupts when Rowan and his wife split up. Rowan castigates the self-sufficient woman his wife has become and complains that he wants his "compliant, noncombative, dependent, absorbed-in-me girl back." MacDonald responds with two long, tough letters describing Rowan's attitude as an "adolescent dream" and maintaining that his celebrity has given him an "iron insistence upon being totally right in all things." After this, does Rowan take MacDonald's well-intentioned scolding to heart and renew the friendship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Odd Couple A FRIENDSHIP: Rowan and MacDonald | 2/16/1987 | See Source »

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