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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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04049926.000
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1993-06-16
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<text id=94TT0355>
<link 94TO0155>
<title>
Apr. 04, 1994: More Follies On The Sidelines
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Apr. 04, 1994 Deep Water
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE WHITE HOUSE, Page 26
More Follies On The Sidelines
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett and Nina Burleigh/Washington
</p>
<p> "It's difficult to defend the White House as much as we'd like,"
sighs a Democratic congressional leader. "Every day it's something
else making them look as if they don't know what they're doing."
Two Arkansan cases in point: William H. Kennedy III and Patsy
Thomasson.
</p>
<p> Kennedy should have learned something about Washington ways
while serving on the staffs of two Arkansas Senators in the
1970s before becoming a partner with Hillary Rodham Clinton
in the Rose Law Firm of Little Rock. But as associate White
House counsel, he has shown mainly a talent for getting in trouble.
He drew a reprimand from the White House last summer for appearing
to make political use of the FBI by calling in the G-men to
investigate the White House travel office. He has been taking
heavy flak for the strange anomaly of a White House staff peopled
largely by aides whose legal right to roam its corridors is
questionable. A third of the 1,044 employees have never received
permanent passes attesting that they have passed security clearances--largely, higher officials say, because Kennedy has failed
to forward FBI background checks to the Secret Service for final
approval.
</p>
<p> Last week came the semifinal straw. One of Kennedy's duties
was to look into the records of potential Administration appointees
and advise the White House of any ethical problems, such as
failure to pay taxes. But, it developed, he came to Washington
with a tax problem of his own: like Zoe Baird, Clinton's failed
first choice for Attorney General, Kennedy had not paid required
Social Security taxes on the wages of a nanny. In February 1993,
Kennedy did pay $1,352.52 to settle the 1992 bill--but he
did it with a cashier's check supposedly drawn by "Leslie Gail
McRae"--his wife's maiden name (they are engaged in what a
friend calls "bitter" divorce proceedings).
</p>
<p> Kennedy denied he had tried to deceive anyone, but it hardly
mattered; he also failed to pay nanny taxes for 1991, and forked
over $700 only three weeks ago. When that became public, the
White House frostily announced Kennedy would no longer run background
checks on potential appointees but would perform less demanding--and unspecified--duties. The betting is that he'll go back
to Arkansas as soon as he can resign inconspicuously.
</p>
<p> Patsy Thomasson, once Arkansas highway commissioner and now
director of the White House Office of Administration, has also
managed to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Like Kennedy,
she was involved in the travel-office affair. A Little Rock
investment group she headed has been caught up in a Securities
and Exchange Commission investigation into a run-up in the price
of the stock of a fisheries company just before it was acquired
by Tyson Foods of Arkansas; Thomasson says she did no trading
in the shares.
</p>
<p> Further, Thomasson joined ex-White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum
and Mrs. Clinton's chief of staff Margaret Williams in entering
the office of Vincent Foster Jr. the night of his suicide last
July, and neither she nor the other two have ever explained
what they were doing in there. Last week a crowd of reporters
who did not even recognize Thomasson nonetheless turned up when
she testified at a House Appropriations Subcommittee hearing,
but learned next to nothing. She would love to relate what happened
that night, Thomasson told Congress, but felt she should talk
first only to special counsel Robert Fiske. Questioned about
those White House passes, she gave a tantalizing quote. "We
don't think we have any Aldrich Ameses in the White House,"
said Thomasson, "but we certainly could." Oh?
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>