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...Much of the success will depend on how well we can make a case for the funds for the center," Feagin said. "Jim is very talented. He is a terrific strategist and a wonderful fundraiser...

Author: By Andrew A. Green, | Title: Changes Will Fill Glimp's Vacancy | 6/25/1996 | See Source »

...these are, at least in some sense, beside the point. At its impolitic core, the debate over the death penalty is truly a dialogue between two of the most primitive and instinctual human responses: vengeance and empathy. Where you fall on the capital punishment issue will depend on which of these has won in your own internal debate. Deep down, all death penalty advocates want raw vengeance; they see the faces of Susan Smith's drowned children and the rubble of the World Trade Center and they cannot countenance allowing those responsible to breathe...

Author: By Eric M. Nelson, | Title: Empathy and Vengeance: A New York Dilemma | 6/25/1996 | See Source »

...hired two seasoned lawyers to investigate whether Mrs. Clinton and aide David Watkins concealed her role in the purge. Almost no one expects Starr to bring charges against the First Lady, but Republicans may use his findings in the campaign. And how ugly will it get? That could depend on how far Dole is trailing Clinton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GUILTY, GUILTY, GUILTY | 6/10/1996 | See Source »

...enduring? Before we had a Constitution, Thomas Jefferson was arguing that the new nation's future would depend on a base of agrarian yeomen free from the vices inherent in big cities. One of the classic, image-driven presidential campaigns featured William Henry Harrison as the embodiment of homey rural virtues, the candidate of the log cabin and hard cider, defeating the incumbent Martin Van Buren, who was accused of dandified dress and manners. One of Van Buren's more vocal detractors was Davy Crockett, who went from frontiersman to the U.S. Congress without ever trading in his coonskin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: I'M JUST THAT SIMPLE | 6/10/1996 | See Source »

...what we have been doing here is to ask what Harvard, as an institution, means to those of us who will graduate today. The answer, of course, will depend upon the experiences of each student, yet it is enough to pose such a question to recognize the common experiences that we celebrate today...

Author: By Steven A. Engel, | Title: The Self-Assertion of Harvard University | 6/6/1996 | See Source »

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