Word: carolyne
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...found Hillary Clinton's long-lost Whitewater billing records two years after they were subpoenaed, testified that they turned up unexpectedly last August in a room next to Mrs. Clinton's office in the family residence, but that she did not know they were important at the time. Carolyn Huber, who worked for the Rose law firm before coming to Washington, told the Senate Whitewater Committee Thursday she believed at the time that the papers had been left for her to file. Huber testified that she put the papers in a box without looking them over, then forgot about them...
...days later, the White House disclosed that a personal aide to the Clintons had stumbled upon 115 pages of billing records from Mrs. Clinton's Rose Law Firm that had been eagerly sought for more than two years by congressional investigators as well as by the Whitewater investigators. Carolyn Huber, who was the custodian of the Clintons' personal files taken from White House lawyer Vincent Foster's office after his 1993 suicide, discovered the copied billings while sorting through correspondence in her East Wing office...
...related to the troubled S & L, but conflicting comments made by her associate Susan Thomases have prompted renewed demands from Whitewater investigators for her time sheets. Until now, the whereabouts of the documents was unknown. Releasing the documents Friday, Clinton lawyer David Kendall said the records were discovered by Carolyn Huber, Special Assistant to the President, and "confirm our earlier statements about the nature and amount of Mrs. Clinton's work on this representation." D'Amato unsurprisingly took a different view, saying " a cursory glance would indicate there was s a minimum of $21,000" in billings, which would "raise...
...case surfaced about 18 months ago," according to Carolyn B. Eggert, assistant director of communications for medical affairs at the Dana Barber Cancer Institute...
...result of "the welfare state," which had produced "a drug-addicted underclass with no sense of humanity, no sense of civilization and no sense of the rules of life." But real life is more complex. Deborah Evans "was dying to have somebody to love her," recalls her cousin Carolyn Milani. Evans ran away from home after fighting constantly with her mother, acting out to gain the attention of her often absentee father...