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...identify 10,000 African-American "team leaders" who, in exchange for VIP treatment, like getting to shake hands with the President in front of Air Force One, would voluntarily talk up Republican policies to their friends. "It's one of the reasons I think we doubled our support in Ohio among African Americans," says Mehlman. "Rather than running a television ad, we had thousands of feet on the street. If a fellow member of your PTA tells you that George Bush cares about education, that has credibility that a paid canvasser or an ad will never have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Campaigns: An Eye On The White House And An Eye On You | 3/12/2006 | See Source »

...title is an understatement. This partly improvised sitcom focuses on 16 members of an extended Cincinnati, Ohio, clan: siblings, stepsiblings, grandparents, married parents and single parents. The family is set abuzz in the pilot when Stepgrandpa Wendal (Max Gail) announces that he's leaving Grandma Colleen (Dee Wallace)--and then doesn't. The material is typical family-comedy stuff--money fights, bedroom troubles, sibling rivalries--but the show's conversational improv rhythms and realistic, documentary style make Sons and Daughters worth adopting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: 6 Totally Funny TV Series | 3/12/2006 | See Source »

...Written by Ohio's Mike DeWine, the legislation tries, in effect, to put a fence around a wild horse. It would allow warrantless wiretaps and other electronic surveillance of people linked to groups plotting terrorist acts against the United States, while making a start at restoring legislative control over a White House that claims to be above the law in times of war. And since this is simply an agreement among Senate Republicans-the bill has an uncertain future, at best-there is no guarantee that other actors in Congress won't make the fence higher, or for that matter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: News Analysis: Can Congress Fix The Eavesdropping Mess? | 3/10/2006 | See Source »

...will eventually choose ordination, but others might feel a call to minister outside of the ecclesiastical sector. THE OTHER MINISTRYMatthew E. Nelson grew up in the Catholic Church but, disenchanted, jumped ship after his confirmation. He became an evangelical Christian and went to college at Cedarville University in Cedarville, Ohio, a school affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention. In college, he discovered that he was gay, and he kept it a secret for fear of expulsion or ex-gay therapy. But at the end of his sophomore year, he read Richard B. Hays’ “The Moral...

Author: By Stephen M. Fee, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Modern Devotion | 3/8/2006 | See Source »

...This then is what the landscape looks like now. South Dakota may be leading the way, but legislators in Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee, Missouri, West Virginia, and Oklahoma have introduced similar bills. In the next months we?ll see how fast an appeal heads to the Supremes and whether they?ll hear it. Money is pouring in to support legal challenges on both sides. But in the meantime the conversation has changed... and there?s no telling to whose advantage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When Is an Abortion Not an Abortion? | 3/6/2006 | See Source »

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