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| | True Confessions? - Boston College (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16) |
 | | Kennedy, in fact, was the only main character who appears in more than one Higgins book, and, with one minor exception, the only first-person narrator in the extensive Higgins oeuvre. |
 | | Kennedy tends to view prosecutors as preening, overzealous, and drunk on power, while Higgins was proud of his work in the prosecutor's office, according to William McCormack '67, who met Higgins as an undergraduate, was his partner on the Law School's moot court team, and is now a partner at the Boston firm Bingham Dana. |
 | | Kennedy, for his part, draws a close connection between sinfulness and crime when he says, in Sandra Nichols, that generally, the motive for committing a crime is "one of five of the seven deadly sins: pride, greed, lust, anger, or envy. |
| www.bc.edu /schools/law/alumni/magazine/2001/fall/feature1 (3439 words) |
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