Austin M. Allran

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Austin Murphy Allran (born 13 December 1951) is a Republican member of the North Carolina General Assembly representing the state's forty-second Senate district, including constituents in Iredell and Catawba counties. An attorney from Hickory, North Carolina, Allran is currently (2003-2004 session) serving in his ninth term in the state Senate.

Allran was born in Hickory, North Carolina; he graduated from Hickory High School in 1970 and then earned degrees in English and history from Duke University. Allran attended law school at Southern Methodist University, earning his degree in 1978. He married Judy Mosback on 27 September 1980; they have two children. In 1981, Allran was elected to the North Carolina House of Representatives and in 1986 to the North Carolina Senate; he served as Republican minority whip during the 1995-1996 session. In March 2005 Senator Allran hit the headlines when he called for the game of solitaire to be erased from the Microsoft Windows computers of state employees in his North Carolina constituency, claiming that such a move would save millions of dollars and improve productivity due to the working time lost while state employees play the game. [1]