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...concerned the Coalition may be eating into their dwindling base. Voters are looking for more morality in their politics, and the Coalition is providing it. "Thanks in great part to people like Ralph Reed, they have become a mainstream constituency," said Democratic consultant Mark McKinnon, who is based in Austin, Texas. "I have been advising my clients that we get ourselves in a lot of trouble by attacking the religious right. Instead of inciting them, we ought to try to co-opt them. We need to show we have a backbone of morality in this party...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO RALPH REED | 5/15/1995 | See Source »

...serious allegations of government involvement" that his office is probing. "More people die from skiing every year than are hurt by militias," says Duke. What critics are calling "ultraright," he adds, is "really just people that believe in the Constitution." --By Nina Burleigh/ Washington. With reporting by Hilary Hylton/ Austin and Richard Woodbury/Denver

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE MOVEMENT'S SYMPATHETIC EARS ON CAPITOL HILL | 5/8/1995 | See Source »

...THIS ISN'T AMERICA, this can't be America," Sam Gwynne remembers thinking as he arrived in Oklahoma City on the afternoon of its darkest day. But it was, and Gwynne, Time's Austin bureau chief, was the first of six Time correspondents converging on Oklahoma City from all parts of the country (backed by two dozen others elsewhere) to report this week's unusually disturbing cover package. All had seen death before; each was nonetheless shaken by the enormity of the Oklahoma tragedy. Says correspondent Ann Simmons: "You can't become inured to suffering on this scale...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: To Our Readers, May 1, 1995 | 5/1/1995 | See Source »

...current production opens stiffly (as though conversation had to be slower in the 19th century because contractions hadn't yet been invented), the actors soon zero in on their thrillingly cold target. As is often true in James, we witness a battle that can have no victors. Dr. Austin Sloper (Philip Bosco) is a wealthy widower whose earnest daughter Catherine (Cherry Jones) pales beside his resplendent memories of his wife (who, to make the comparison all the more pointed and painful, died giving birth to Catherine). Reared in an atmosphere of genteel censure, Catherine only gradually surmises that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BROADWAY GROWS UP | 5/1/1995 | See Source »

...your fit this description, then you are Lara Jacobson of Hollis Hall and Austin...

Author: By Matt Howitt, | Title: Diver Jacobson Makes Big Splash | 4/25/1995 | See Source »

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