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...legitimate line of inquiry opened last week when the Supreme Court declined to review a lower-court decision granting Starr the right to see notes that White House lawyers took of their conversations with Hillary Rodham Clinton. No lawyer-client privilege exists between government attorneys and officials, the court said, so the White House gave Starr the notes he sought: five pages about the First Lady's account of her actions after Foster's suicide, a dozen pages scribbled by lawyer Jane Sherburne during breaks in Hillary's January 1996 grand jury appearance. Starr is looking for evidence that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HAS STARR GONE TOO FAR? | 7/7/1997 | See Source »

...political history," she says. "We elect women like there was no tomorrow."Photo Courtesy of Martha StewartAVERY W. GARDINER '97, who hopes to occupy the White House someday, speaks with a current occupant, HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON...

Author: By Elizabeth T. Bangs, | Title: D.C.-Bound Gardiner Prepares for Life in Politics | 6/5/1997 | See Source »

...pitch in. Events starring President Clinton were slated for $50.2 million "from Trustees, Labor and the Asian community," and specific events were commonly notated "(Asian)" or "(Jewish)" along with specific amounts targeted. Events with Vice President Al Gore were to raise $10.8 million, and some documents suggested that Hillary Rodham Clinton should raise $5 million on her own. A Nov. 20, 1995, memo from then-DNC chairman Donald Fowler even called a Christmas dinner at the White House "an accountability event for prior projections and commitments." As Ickes himself wrote in one memo directed to Clinton and Gore: "The fund...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brought to You by the DNC | 4/2/1997 | See Source »

...quiet war gave way to public battles, and Bronfman wasn't finished enlisting political help. On April 8, a day before he was to testify at D'Amato's hearing, Bronfman invited Hillary Rodham Clinton to his New York apartment for a fund-raising lunch. That morning, New York magazine had published a story on the search for Jewish money in Swiss banks. Bronfman ripped the pages out and gave them to Clinton. "Will you please read these?" he said. "You will understand how important it is that I see your husband tomorrow." Clinton scanned the article and asked, "Swiss...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ECHOES OF THE HOLOCAUST | 2/24/1997 | See Source »

Those looking to support a good cause could find themselves having lunch with the Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, reading a signed copy of Hillary Rodham Clinton's "It Takes a Village" or drinking from old-fashioned bar glasses with Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.)--as long as they are willing...

Author: By Rebecca F. Lubens, | Title: Political Contact Auctioned to Fund Interns | 2/19/1997 | See Source »

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