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Like many other Democrats, Mark McKinnon for a long time had little use for George W. Bush. A media consultant based in Austin, Texas, McKinnon had toiled for Democratic candidates for years, and once he nearly took a job with Bill Clinton. In 1990 he helped Ann Richards become Texas Governor, and he regarded her successor with partisan suspicion. But McKinnon, 44, was won over after a dinner with Bush in 1997. He went to work producing the TV ads for the Governor's landslide re-election campaign in 1998, and is now running Bush's media campaign for President...
John Groves, 36, exemplifies both trends. He founded Open Microsystems, an Austin, Texas, electronic-software-and-services company, in 1991. Seven years later, he had built it into a $5 million business. But, he says, "we had to raise a lot more money or settle into a growth rate that in my opinion wasn't enough for long-range prosperity." So in 1998 he sold out to Gresham Computing, a British firm. Gresham coveted Open Microsystems' technology, employee team and customer list. In return, Gresham enabled Open, now renamed Gresham Enterprise Storage, to "get into deeper pockets," as Groves puts...
Stephen F. Austin, a team with votes in the USA Today/ESPN Top 25 preseason poll, was a handful for Harvard on Friday...
Stephen F. Austin 87, Harvard...
...covers 14.5 million Americans, is betting the move will improve the quality of care and its bottom line, and maybe even help convince Congress that the HMOs can heal themselves. Nearly everyone applauded the decision, but practicing physicians were cheering loudest. Says cardiologist George Rodgers, in United's Austin, Texas, pilot program: "It's just made my work much more enjoyable...