Word: kathleen
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...press--or notable fragments of it--is more easily titillated. Consider the case of Kathleen Willey, 51, a former low-level aide in the White House who was subpoenaed by Paula Jones' lawyer, Joseph Cammarata, after he received an anonymous tip that the President had made a grab for her. Willey's lawyer said she has no information relevant to Paula Jones or Bill Clinton, and he is filing a motion to quash the subpoena. But that hardly cooled the frenzy. Two "friends" of Willey's told reporters that something happened--they don't agree about what--one day when...
...wasn't that frightened until they threatened to flip our car over," says Kathleen Shuey. She and her husband George were trying to get on the Bay Bridge when their Volvo station wagon was surrounded for no apparent reason by "maybe a hundred" cyclists, one of whom scratched the side of the car. "That's when I got out and ran after him, and I almost grabbed him," says George. "Where does this stop?" Ironically, the Shueys support alternative transportation, but none of the cyclists bothered to ask. George, a Vietnam vet, and his wife, a recovering cancer patient...
...demonstrate that President Clinton made improper overtures to a number of women, at least one former White House employee wants no part of it. Subpoenaed by Jones' lawyer to testify about allegations that Clinton made a pass at her in the White House when she worked there in 1993, Kathleen Willey, whom he later appointed to the U.S.O. board of directors, said she is "outraged that she is being pulled into the Paula Jones case," has nothing of relevance to contribute and would resist any deposition. Willey added that she continues to have a very good relationship with the President...
...Boston, though, is getting cocky. "If we let up, the homicides could come right back again," warns Sergeant Kathleen Johnston, who is responsible for safety in the Boston public schools. "They are like a chronic disease...
...might as well have tried to adjudicate a monsoon. That afternoon, Kathleen Treanor took the stand and told about kissing her four-year-old daughter Ashley goodbye and never seeing her alive again. After unspeakable days of waiting, Treanor recovered Ashley's body from the rubble, buried the little girl, and trudged on. Seven months later, someone called from the medical examiner's office. "He said, 'We have recovered a portion of Ashley's hand,'" Treanor testified in a trembling voice that rose as she fought to get through each sentence, "'and we wanted to know if you wanted that...