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...TIMES -Robert Reinhold writes for the Times. He is supposed to be covering the "world of ideas," but he spends all his time chasing down demonstrations and invariably gets there late. Recently, he has been getting there on time, thanks to his new stringer Ernie Wilson, and he is very happy about...

Author: By James K. Glassman, | Title: Harvard's War Correspondents | 1/12/1970 | See Source »

WITH THE opening of school last September all this began to change. For the first time ever the New York Times had stationed a man in Cambridge. Robert Reinhold was ostensibly writing about the academic community in general, but in fact he would up covering Harvard. The Globe upgraded its correspondentship. (More than any other paper, the Globe has close ties to Harvard. Its publisher, Davis Taylor, is a member of the Board of Overseers, and it allots so much space to Harvard news that as correspondent I enjoyed more play than many full-time staffers.> Even the Washington, Post...

Author: By Parker Donham, | Title: Covering Harvard--A View From Outside | 6/12/1969 | See Source »

Heimert co-edited with Miller The Great Awakening (1967), an anthology, He wrote Religion and the American Mind: from the Great Awakening to the Revolution (1966) and, with Reinhold Niebuhr, he co-authored A Nation So Conceived...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Heimert Will Be Cabot Professor | 5/28/1969 | See Source »

...throughout his imprisonment, she spent roughly $1,000,000 on legal maneuvers, including seven fruitless pleas to the U.S. Supreme Court. Money came from those who believed that Sobell had not received a fair trial. Among the doubters were Nobel Prizewinning chemists Harold C. Urey and Linus Pauling, Theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Britain's nonagenarian nonbeliever, Bertrand Russell. Sobell, however, betrays scant enthusiasm today for continued legal battling to clear his name. In any case, after the verdict of his 1951 trial and more than a dozen later appeals, it would doubtless prove...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Historical Notes: Return from Oblivion | 1/24/1969 | See Source »

...Although he was one of the founders of the World Council of Church es, and his writings in the 1930s had helped create the climate for ecumenism, he later came to criticize the organization as "too institutionalist." Such aloofness from trends others thought relevant inevitably won him criticism. Reinhold Niebuhr, once something of a follower, dismissed Barth's politics as naive and his theology as suitable only for catacomb Christianity. Other contemporary theologians charged that Barth paid too little attention to the role of history and sociology in the development of Christianity and that he spoke a Biblicist language...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Death of Two Extraordinary Christians | 12/20/1968 | See Source »

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