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Despite his stature, there has until now been no full-dress biography of Niebuhr, who died in 1971 at age 78. Fox, who teaches at Oregon's Reed College, fills the gap with Reinhold Niebuhr: A Biography, to be issued next week by Pantheon (340 pages; $19.95). It is an admirable work, appreciative but not uncritical, enriched but not burdened by meticulous research. Though Niebuhr's ideas are skillfully woven into the story, Fox offers a life, not a theology text...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Definitive Reinhold Niebuhr | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

...essay the role of the brooding, mordantly comic, half-mad prince is to brave comparison with Garrick and Booth, Burton and Olivier. Kline may not yet rank among that pantheon, but he has vaulted over his contemporaries with this production. His performance ripens and changes night by night. It still seems unfinished in some scenes, too cautious in others, and is on the whole a bit quiet and constrained to energize a melodrama nearly four hours long. But he speaks the text with clarity and command, and he makes Hamlet believable as a whirlpool of contradictions: an inconstant avenger...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Kevin Kline's Ultimate Test | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

...disappointments. "Many of their famous classical music artists are dead or have already come to the West," Niefeld says. "By and large, the talent that's left over there is of less consequence than before. It isn't like 20 years ago, when the Soviets had a pantheon of world performers you couldn't find anywhere else...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Step Right Up to the Great Culture-Kultura Bazaar | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

...advisers on each side. Johnson relied most heavily on his Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara, later head of the World Bank and currently a director of the Ford Foundation. The following exclusive excerpt from his forthcoming book, Blundering into Disaster: Surviving the First Century of the Nuclear Age (Pantheon Books; $14.95), recounts that fateful meeting and its consequences...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Long Road to Reykjavik | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

...spent countless hours in public parks, chess clubs and my library at home fighting for my (king's) life, would be stark raving mad by now. I suspect that I am not. I like to tell myself that I am in pretty sane company. The game certainly has its pantheon of upstanding citizens. While ambassador to France, Benjamin Franklin preferred to eschew the Paris opera for chess at the Caf? de la R?gence. (Excellent choice.) Napoleon played, although to judge by one of his games, a diagrammed and illustrated copy of which hangs in my office...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Did Chess Make Him Crazy? | 4/26/2005 | See Source »

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