Word: hubers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Nixon had Rose Mary Woods. It now looks as though the role of Embattled Loyal Retainer is sewn up, for Whitewater purposes. Huber has acted as an office manager for Mrs. Clinton for so long that Chelsea is said to regard her as a grandmother. It must pain her immensely that her 116-page discovery has renewed investigators' interest in the residential quarters of the White House and may help sustain the inquiry through the presidential-election season...
...FIRST AWARE OF WHAT she had found. Carolyn Huber periodically cleans out the book room, the cluttered space next to Hillary Clinton's third-floor White House study where small gifts to the President accrue. Last August, Huber came across a sheaf of folded computer printouts. Musing briefly that they looked like legal billing sheets, she carried them off in a box with some knick-knacks. It was not until Jan. 4 that, while straightening her own East Wing office, she looked a bit more closely. At that point, as she testified last Thursday before Senator Alfonse D'Amato...
...CAROLYN HUBER H.R.C. aide "discovers" Whitewater billing records, raising even White House eyebrows...
...Hillary Clinton's offer to provide written responses to questions about her involvement in the Whitewater affair. The Committee "looks forward to hearing Mrs. Clinton's responses," he replied, but not before the White House provides further information such as White House e-mail messages. Longtime Clinton associate Carolyn Huber described to the Whitewater Committee last week how she accidentally and unaccountably discovered Hillary Clinton's Whitewater billing records, missing under subpoena for 18 months, in a room in the Clinton residence. That testimony has elevated the controversy to a new level, notes TIME's Viveca Novak...
...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...