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...Clinton promised him a job transfer but never delivered. ''We lied for him and helped him cheat on his wife, and he treated us like dogs,'' he complained in the story. The Spectator article gained some credibility by forcing the hand of the Los Angeles Times, which went to print with an article its reporters had been researching for several months. The Times reporters had found telephone records showing that as Governor, Clinton had been a prodigious caller of at least one of the women the troopers identified as his sexual partners. The records, reviewed last week by TIME, showed...
...leak it to a friendly reporter. The next day, Libby met again with Judith Miller, and they talked again of Wilson and his wife. Libby strengthened his earlier hunch about Plame's employment at the CIA, and this time, the two discussed how their conversations would be attributed in print. Libby, who once worked for the Congress, wanted to be identified as a "former Hill staffer" to mask the source of the information. (Miller, as things turned out, wrote nothing about Wilson or Plame.) Two days later, Libby heard from Rove (identified in the indictment only as "Official A") that...
...designer Kim Bull couldn't find suitable sleeping quarters for her mutt, she started Wowbow, a line of sleek acrylic beds, below. They're part of a new crop of fancy pet furniture that includes English-style beds from Cath Kidston (cathkidston.com) and hip variations like Fatboy's camouflage-print beanbag lounges (muttropolis.com...
...still weirdness. As much as Kilmer still looks like a movie star--glowing skin, giant teeth, deep green eyes and a velvet Paul Smith suit over a floral-print Paul Smith shirt--the main thing you notice about him is, in fact, his weirdness, although it's of a cool variety. This interview was postponed three days so he could jet to Russia to go to a party with his friend Mikhail Gorbachev, and then an extra two days so he could take a part in a Polish art film. It seems as if his life is in some constant...
...contents, some of the poems are opaque and difficult to understand. The title poem, “The Life of a Hunter,” is inspired not by the film “The Night of the Hunter,” but by a kitschy Currier and Ives print of the same name, Robinson says. The poem contrasts the humorous Adirondack event the print depicts (a bear sitting on a hunter’s rifle) with the psychoanalysis of the hunter once he returns to the city. Robinson says that this poem, like many of hers, is about...