THE WRITINGS OF H.R. CLINTONArticles
Harvard Educational Review Reprint Series, No. 9 pp.
Yale Law Journal, Vol. 86, No.7 pp.
Teacher's College Press
Speeches
Center For Teacher Education, University of Texas
Millions of Americans were first exposed to Hillary Rodham Clinton as she sat loyally by her husband, Governor Bill Clinton, on Sixty Minutes. He was there to deny any liaison with the currently specified bimbo, though he conceded (indirectly) bimberies unspecified. His wife denied that she was like Tammy Wynette standing lachry-mosely by her man; yet that is exactly what she seemed at that humiliating moment. It would be a shame for people to continue thinking of her only in that role, since she is one of the more important scholar-activists of the last two decades. In 1988 and 1991, she was put on the list of America's most powerful lawyers by The National Law Journal, in recognition of her membership on corporate boards and her record as senior partner at the prestigious Rose law firm in Little Park, where she has been an innovative litigator. In her fields of estate law, child custody, and children's rights, she was, for instance, the first trial lawyer in Arkansas to conduct the examination by satellite of a witness in a hospital outside the state.
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