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...back to win by two. His final total: 282, six under par for the Augusta National course. The lone West German pro on the P.G.A. tour, Langer is the first of his countrymen to win even the German Open. His Masters victory, he hopes, "will inspire some other young boy from Germany to take up the game." For now, though, when asked who the greatest German player in history was, he smiles brightly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Apr. 29, 1985 | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

...horrible and magnificent. The first round is being called the best ever, though there have been a few fights before and Dempsey-Firpo was well received in 1923. Even retreating, Hearns slugged boldly. Hagler was a monster. He swears, "I love the boxing game like a little boy," though this was far from the effect. "I love the smell," he says, even of his own blood, diluting his sweat like a hemorrhage in a sink, rendering his face a red rage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: For Love of a Smelly Art | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

...late 1970s by two New York photographers who had hired Madonna, then an impoverished dancer, as an artist's model (pay: $30 a session). Instead, Guccione purchased the work of another New York photographer, who had paid Madonna $50 for a two-hour sitting in 1978. "Play boy's photos were coarse, uncomplimentary and rather like scraping the bottom of the barrel," said Guccione. Nonsense, says Playboy. Guccione offered at least $100,000 for Playboy's pictures, but the photographers turned him down. "Guccione is rattling his chains to try to get attention," said Playboy Editorial Director Arthur Kretchmer. Neither...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Like a Pinup: Navel battle of the newsstands | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

...novel's reputation grew, its author seemed to vanish. For 20 years Gaddis taught, lived on grants and wrote literature for business and industry: annual reports, speeches for executives, memorandums. In 1975 he reappeared with JR, a lengthy, knowledgeable satire about an eleven-year-old boy who becomes a corporate tycoon. JR won that year's National Book Award for Fiction, and Gaddis went back to doing whatever it is literary comets do on their elliptical journeys between publication dates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Apocalypse in the Living Room CARPENTER'S GOTHIC | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

...When the boy was eight, a temporary depression aroused his mother's anxieties. "A little alarmed," she later recalled, "I asked him whether he was unhappy. He ... said very seriously, 'Yes, I am unhappy.' When I asked him why, he ... exclaimed, 'Oh, for freedom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Interiors: The Roosevelts | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

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