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...process, Gingrich, a man willing to stick out his tongue at some venerable American institutions, has become a sort of Establishment guerrilla, attacking the institutions he badly wants to lead. In the election year of '94, when the Capitol dome appears in campaign commercials as something weirder and more sinister than Dracula's castle, Newt's Congress-bashing strategy is bearing fruit. It's the Gingrich gospel you hear in the words of voters like David Bywater, 26, a Nebraskan who is supporting Republican newcomer Jan Stoney against Senator Bob Kerrey. "Seniority means you've been around too long...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bringing Down the House G.O.P. Guerrilla | 11/7/1994 | See Source »

...said they had voted for Foley in the past. This year none of them plan to. Ironically, the Speaker's effectiveness was one of the reasons why. "It's basically pork. Even though we live here, it just isn't right," said Bob Johnston, 37. They also think of Capitol Hill as a place where no favor is done for free. Foley knows who to lean on and which string to pull, they agreed. "But what did he give away to do that?" demanded Gerard Schille...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tom Foley: The Price of Pork | 11/7/1994 | See Source »

Besides partisan problems, one ugly malaise has enveloped the entire Capitol. This Congress is in love with the status quo. Health care, the crime bill and probably welfare reform will be the victims of inaction this year. For too many representatives, nothing is better than something that they don't completely support...

Author: By Daniel Altman, | Title: Inaction Rules In D.C. | 10/31/1994 | See Source »

There is soul and fuddle here. Heat and hesitation. The grace of real genius and at times a touch of madness. Among the five CDs that constitute The Complete Bud Powell On Verve and the four that make up The Complete Blue Note and Roost Recordings (Capitol), you get a deep experience of his gift and his torment. It is, much of it, great jazz. All of it is vital. These separate CD sets are neither monument nor memorial, even though this year marks the 70th anniversary of Powell's birth. Rather, the recordings provide a map of trails blazed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAZZ: The King of the Hill | 10/31/1994 | See Source »

...Capitol set opens with Powell's first date as a leader, recorded on Roost in 1947, kicking off with a sprung version of I'll Remember April that betrays none of Powell's troubles. It bursts with giddy invention that could have tipped the song into anarchy if Powell hadn't been able to restrain his own abandon. He was so good and so graceful, he could realize his inspirations with tremendously controlled dexterity. The earliest of the Verve recordings are from 1949, and they end with a 1955 session in which Powell, his bass player and drummer close...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAZZ: The King of the Hill | 10/31/1994 | See Source »

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