Who's Who.In his new book The Breach, Peter Baker describes "a different approach" taken by Bill Clinton's impeachment impeachment, formal accusation issued by a legislature against a public official charged with crime or other serious misconduct. In a looser sense the term is sometimes applied also to the trial by the legislature that may follow. lawyers as they sought his acquittal. "Sitting on the Republican side of the chamber, some of the White House attorneys were regularly striking up conversation with the senators during breaks. Strom Thurmond, the ancient senator from South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15. , kept sidling over to the defense table to flirt with Nicole Seligman Nicole Seligman (born 1957) is an American attorney. She is currently Executive Vice President and General Counsel of Sony Corporation, and has received national attention in the United States for her representation of Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North during the Iran-Contra hearings and Cheryl Mills Cheryl Mills was Deputy White House Counsel for President Bill Clinton, whom she defended during his 1999 impeachment trial. She currently works at New York University as Senior Vice President, General Counsel, and Secretary of the University, and as Acting Senior Vice President . "`How come you're so cute?' he would ask, then clutch one of their arms, `I just love holding on to you,'" Baker writes. In 1992, Richard Holbrooke Richard Charles Albert Holbrooke (born April 24, 1941) is an American diplomat, magazine editor, author, Peace Corps official, and investment banker. He is also the only person to have held the Assistant Secretary of State position for two different regions of the world (Asia and co-chaired a commission that recommended that the White House be the "center for strategic planning" for national security, domestic policy, and economic policy formulation. Our pal Al Kamen wonders how Holbrooke feels about that recommendation now that he seems slated to land outside the White House as Secretary of State. Kamen, by the way; also reports that doubts as to who would be formulating national security policy inside an Al Gore White House seemed removed last month when Gore's brain truster Leon Fuerth announced himself to 300 members of the Council on Foreign Relations The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) is an influential and independent, nonpartisan foreign policy membership organization founded in 1921 and based at 58 East 68th Street (corner Park Avenue) in New York City, with an additional office in Washington, D.C. as the "putative national security adviser." Arthur Laffer, the father of Ronald Reagan's supply-side economics supply-side economics, economic theory that concentrates on influencing the supply of labor and goods as a path to economic health, rather than approaching the issue through such macroeconomic concerns as gross national product. who last year made Time's list of "the century's 100 greatest minds," has, according to a company he sued, developed a lucrative "pattern and practice of preying on small cash-strapped companies by promising to sit on their boards of directors, reneging on his promise, and then suing to extort To compel or coerce, as in a confession or information, by any means serving to overcome the other's power of resistance, thus making the confession or admission involuntary. To gain by wrongful methods; to obtain in an unlawful manner, as in to compel payments by means of threats of the stock he was to receive for his services." According to the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Observer, "the economist has considerable leverage in the disputes because companies that eagerly announced his appointment to their boards are loath to lose the legitimacy his name brings and are ill-financed to fight his lawsuits." You may have wondered why there suddenly appeared on the House floor a resolution condemning the Turkish massacre of Armenians, an event that, however lamentable la·men·ta·ble adj. Inspiring or deserving of lament or regret; deplorable or pitiable. See Synonyms at pathetic. lam en·ta·bly adv. , did after all take place 80 years ago.
The explanation is that Republicans control the House and a Republican
congressman, James Rogan, is in a closely contested race for reelection re·e·lect also re-e·lect tr.v. re·e·lect·ed, re·e·lect·ing, re·e·lects To elect again. re in a California district that happens to contain more than 20,000 registered voters of Armenian descent. "The fact this is of interest to his constituents is not lost on the leadership," Rep. Thomas Davis, head of the House Republican reelection committee told Eric Schmitt of The New Fork Times. "This resolution will be a very tangible debating point for him." The resolution does seem to have set off a bit of a scramble, though, to hire top lobbyists. The Turks have hired former speaker designee des·ig·nee n. A person who has been designated. Bob Livingston, former house appropriations committee member Gerald Solomon, and former representative and international specialist Stephen Solarz. The Armenians are countering with former representative and pundit An expert or knowledgeable person. From "pandit" in Hindi. See guru. Susan Molinari. Livingston, Solomon, and Solarz are being paid a total of $1.8 million for their trouble, leading one to think that there might be another explanation for the resolution: Perhaps Davis just wants to do his little part to help bring down our trade deficit. "Who's Who" hopes Al Gore wins, but we have to admit we will sorely miss what The Washington Post's Mike Allen describes as George W. Bush's "serial syntactical aberrations?" Their number is impressive enough to warrant anthologizing by the web site of ABC News under the heading of "The English Patient." In case you missed them, the latest came when he proclaimed that "I know the human being and fish can coexist peacefully," and when commenting on Gail Sheehy's allegation that he is an undiagnosed dyslexic dys·lex·ic or dys·lec·tic adj. Of or relating to dyslexia. n. A person affected by dyslexia. , Bush said, "the woman who knew I had dyslexia dyslexia (dĭslĕk`sēə), in psychology, a developmental disability in reading or spelling, generally becoming evident in early schooling. To a dyslexic, letters and words may appear reversed, e.g. , I never interviewed her." Over the last decade, we have often reported on the interesting relationship between House Transportation Committee Chairman Bud Shuster and his former staffer and friend Ann Eppard. Eppard, who was not supposed to lobby him for a year after she left her staff job to open a transportation lobbying firm, in fact, according to The Washington Post, "arranged for meetings between Schuster and her clients, regularity dined with the congressman and his clients, and frequently dropped by his office to introduce different clients before leaving, so they could discuss legislation with Schuster." Among the goodies she showered on Schuster was a Christmas vacation trip to Puerto Rico, financed by two of Eppard's clients who paid for a four-bedroom villa for Shuster and his family. She was indicted INDICTED, practice. When a man is accused by a bill of indictment preferred by a grand jury, he is said to be indicted. for receiving "more than $200,000 from a lobbyist while she was serving as Schuster's chief of staff. She escaped with a fine of only $5,000. Schuster has not been indicted. But last month the House finally did take note of his transgressions which, by the way, included illegally spending "hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign funds on expensive restaurants and charter airplanes for personal rather than campaign use." So what did the House ethics committee ethics committee A multidisciplinary hospital body composed of a broad spectrum of personnel–eg, physicians, nurses, social workers, priests, and others, which addresses the moral and ethical issues within the hospital. See DNR, Institutional review board. do? It sent Schuster a letter of reproval. It is, according to The New York Times, "the mildest form of sanction the committee can mete out." After the election comes a new book written by Hillary Clinton called An Invitation to the White Home, The New York Post The New York Post is the 13th-oldest newspaper published in the United States and the oldest to have been published continually as a daily.[3] Since 1976, it has been owned by Australian-born billionaire Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation and is one of the 10 calls its researcher, Cheryl Merser, "as much as expert on sex as she is on the subtleties of state dinners." That's because in 1983, Merser published her own book, Honorable Intentions, which The Washington Post describes as "an 80s guide to love and romance with sexually explicit chapters." As the election approached, even Republican pollsters like Fred Luntz and Bill McInturff were conceding that "the Senate, long thought to be safely in Republican hands, is up for grabs on Election Day," according to Allison Stevens of The Hill. "I said I think three or four months ago that I thought Republicans were going to lose the House." Luntz told Stevens. "If I were to bet on it today, I'd say the GOP position in the House actually looks better than it did a few months ago but the Senate looks much worse than it did a couple of months ago." One of the Senate races that now looks good for the Democrats is Minnesota, where a late Democratic primary had helped give Republican Sen. Red Grams the early edge. Now Tom Hamburger of The Wall Street Journal reports that some pollsters think the Democratic nominee, departmentstore heir Mark Dayton, "has recently opened a substantial lead." Recently, The Washington Post's Ceci Connolly gave the Secret Service a bit of a heart attack on Air Force Two when she put her arm around the vice president's shoulder and held a plastic water pistol to his head. While Connolly claimed the incident was a joke, others saw it as a reflection of her well-known hostility to the Gore camp, according to the Financial Times. Connolly has denied any bias against Gore, but she apparently made no bones about her feelings about the Financial Times. An incensed Connolly reportedly gave the Times staff a tongue lashing for daring to write about the behavior of reporters covering the campaign and for breaking the unspoken rule among the press that keeps its own dirty laundry private. |
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