Single Blossoms
Night Cereus and dark blue skys
One blossom Cereus
Red Cactus Fruit ****
Mexican CactusRed fruit
(15:50:34) This matter had been much in the news at that time and the President said to me that he was concerned that it was not being fairly understood. I replied that even that kind of innocuous conversation could subsequently be misconstrued and that it would be' preferable if the President had no discussions of any sort with Mr. Ludwig about Whitewater. The President agreed and asked me to,: so inform Mr. Ludwig. I returned to my hotel room, and I called Mr. Ludwig, whom I had not previously met. He was not in his room so I left a message later that evening, I met Mr. Ludwig by chance, I took him aside, explained that I had learned of his call to Mr. Sloan. and that 87 had talked to the President, who had decided that the two of them should not discuss anything about Whitewater. And I believe that was the end of the matter. My only other involvement in these matters came about in response to Roger Altman's February 24, 1994 testimony before this Committee. On the following day, Friday the 25th, Cliff Sloan came to MY office and told me that although Mr. Altman had said there was only one meeting between White House and Treasury officials concerning Madison, Mr. Sloan was aware of two additional meetings and several phone conversations with Jean Hanson that had taken place in late September through early October, 1993, prior to the time I had joined the Counsel's Office. In addition, I had previously learned from Mr. Nussbaum, in a conversation that occurred approximately one week after the February 2nd meeting, that Mr. Altman had raised the issue of his recusal at that February 2nd meeting. The press accounts on February 25th, quoting Mr. Altman's testimony, made no reference to the recusal. Although I had no information about Mr. Altman's knowledge, I was concerned about these omissions in his testimony. On Monday, February 28, 1994, when Mr. Nussbaum returned from an out-of- town trip, I raised these concerns with him. After he and I discussed the matter, Mr. Nussbaum asked me to talk to John Podesta, Staff Secretary, who was already aware of these issues, having discussed them previously with Mr. Eggleston. Mr. Podesta subsequently met with several members of the White House staff, including myself, to decide what actions would be appropriate in this occasion. After these discussions, Mr. Podesta called Mr. Altman and relayed our concerns about his testimony. Mr. Chairman, that sums up my involvement in these events, I will be glad to amplify in response to your questions. Thank you. The CHAIRMAN, Thank you, Mr. Klein. Mr. Eggleston. W. NEIL EGGLESTON, ASSOCIATE COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT Mr. EGGLESTON. Thank you. Mr. Chairman, my name is Neil Eggleston. I'm an Associate Counsel to the President. I started working at the White House in September 1993, shortly before the events that are the subject of these hearings began. Mr. Chairman, I've spent a large portion of my professional career in public service. I am proud of that public service, and I am proud that I have now worked in all three branches of Government. In the late 1970's, I served as a law clerk to two Federal judges, including the Honorable Warren E. Burger, when he was Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. From 1981 through 1987, 1 was an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Southern District of New York. 1, left that job in 1987 to work for the House of Representatives as Deputy Chief Counsel of the House Select Committee investigating the Iran-Contra affair. As previous testimony before this Committee has now made clear, I was involved in some of the contacts between the Treasury Department and the White House in this matter. As to each of contacts, I was acting in my official capacity, assisting others III responding to press and congressional issues. 88 The first meeting that I recall attending with members of the Treasury Department occurred on October 14, 1993, As I recall, that meeting related to press inquiries that the Department of the Treasury had received about criminal referrals on the Madison matter. Those press inquiries were apparently prompted by detailed leaks from someone in the RTC to the news media, including the fact that the Clintons' names appeared in the referrals. I do not believe that I learned any information during that meeting that was not prompted by those press inquiries. And indeed, leaks from the RTC appeared a few weeks later in articles in The Washington Post and The New York Times. I have no reason whatsoever to believe that any White House official took any steps to influence the RTC based on the information that the White House received concerning the criminal referrals.
Kids in river, playing in water -- Philippines or Indonesia Nice shot as kids go bounding into river. They turn around and smile for the camera. 01:09:07 Medium shot of kida playing in the bend of the river. Foliage on other side gives a more enclosed feeling to the space. 01:09:10 Closer take of boys still facing camera 01:09:16 Take from CU as the boys come bounding out faces close to the camera. 01:09:22 END Section of film removed for client transfer. Remainder of roll transferred later on this tape.
Cheesy recreation of tornado - wind blowing through houses, strange shots of man being blown along by strong wind. Effect is more comic than frightening. 01:13:37 two men in formal wear do somersaults through store, land in trash cans 01:13:49 man on bicycle washing dishes in machine driven by pedal power, tosses them to young boy who catches them all 01:14:15 young girls rush to table, sit down, another girl pulls a lever and a fully set table lowers from the ceiling 01:14:29 CU man buried in sidewalk with safe on top of him, crowd stumbles around wondering what to do, so they get a movie camera and film him 01:14:55 mustachioed man driving in open Model T tries to clean his windshield, then realizes there's no glass in it -- all while roaring down the road. Another man lands from nowhere on the car's roof, falls off, and chases after him. Gradually the still-moving car begins to fall apart. He stops the shell of a car, gets out and primps, posing proudly. 01:16:00 CU man with model of petard, with little doll hanging from the scaffold
MS woman picking flowers, wearing a two piece glamour outfit. CU of her hand with exotic flowers.
CU man in suit and hat takes it off, wipes brow with handkerchief
MS woman with grocery bags puts them in trunk of car, with some difficulty (two takes), then gets into car
MS woman on phone, talks while taking notes, then hangs up, looking at camera
MS hula hoop girl in studio, zoom in, which gets a little blurry
CU knife in belt, another man's hand sneakily pulls it out (several takes)
CU man in yachting cap drinking orange soda from a bottle, pan to another man doing same
3 teens, two women and man talking together
MS woman at mirror, admiring corsage (focus soft)
(16:00:03) Ms. NOLAN. Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee, my name is Beth Nolan. Since February 1993, 1 have been Associate Counsel to the President. I also serve as the Alternate Designated Agency Ethics Official for the White House; the Counsel to the President serves as the Designated Agency Ethics Official. While serving in the White House, I am on leave from my position as a law professor at The National Law Center, George Washington University, where I have taught courses in legal ethics, Government ethics, and constitutional law. Before I began teaching, I served for 4 years, from 1981 to 1985, as a staff attorney in the Office of Legal Counsel of the Department of Justice. As alternate ethics official, my responsibilities include matters arising under the conflict of interest laws and the standards of conduct, as well as other matters concerning Administration ethics Policy. My job involves frequent consultation with ethics officials throughout the Executive Branch. My only contacts with a Treasury official on this matter fell into this area of consultation. I had several telephone conversations with Dennis Foreman, the Designated Agency Ethics Official of the Department of the Treasury. I spoke with Mr. Foreman initially at the request of Bernard Nussbaum, then Counsel to the President, regarding the recusal standards applicable to Presidential appointees as they affected Roger Altman, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury and Interim CEO of the Resolution Trust Corporation. 90 Mr. Foreman and I discussed the general standards, and he told me that he intended to contact Art Kusinski, the Designated Agency Ethics Official of the RTC, and Steven Potts, the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, to evaluate the recusal issue. This made clear to me that a decision process was in place in which the recusal decision would receive serious consideration by the appropriate officials. It is my recollection that I had a brief phone call with Mr. Nussbaum in which I reported these matters to him, and that I received no follow-up instructions to do anything further. Mr. Foreman later advised me he had been in contact with both the RTC and OGE and that a legal memorandum had been prepared and forwarded to Mr. Altman setting forth the standards applicable to his recusal. These phone calls are the total of my contacts with the Treasury on this matter. My conversations with Mr. Foreman were fully consistent with the duties of a White House ethics lawyer, and, indeed, the Director of the Office of Government Ethics has determined that they were "similar to the types of discussions that take place daily between Executive Branch ethics officials and the White House ethics expert on matters involving Presidential appointees." I will be happy to answer your questions. The CHAIRMAN. Thank you. Mr. Eggleston, let me start with you. On March 1, 1993, you were serving as Associate Counsel to the President and as I understand it, you reported to Bernie Nussbaum, who was at that time Counsel to the President; is that right? Mr. EGGLESTON. Sir, it was March 1, 1994. 1 didn't start in the White House until September 1993. The CHAIRMAN, Let the record make that correction, 1994. At that time in 1994, March 1, you would have been reporting to Bernie Nussbaum, Counsel to the President; is that right? Mr. EGGLESTON. Yes, sir. The CHAIRMAN. Did you also report to Harold Ickes, who was Deputy Chief of Staff to the White House? Mr. EGGLESTON. I did not report directly to Mr. Ickes. On an asneeded basis, I provided legal advice or support to him. He was not MY direct support-- excuse me, direct report. The CHAIRMAN. Did Mr. Ickes assign you a task of writing a memo concerning the Rose Law Firm? Mr. EGGLESTON. He did. The CHAIRMAN. Tell me what you were specifically assigned to do in that memo. Mr. EGGLESTON. I believe that that assignment came sometime. certainly after the February 24th hearing, which took place before. this Committee. I don't recall whether it was Friday, Saturday or Sunday. It was before the date of the memo--the date of my memo is actually February 28th. I think I wrote this sometime over the: weekend. Mr. Ickes essentially asked me if I would prepare a memo on where things stand now. A number of things had occurred sort of at the hearing that I think changed between the hearing and the following day that changed where things stood- 91 The CHAIRMAN. Let me stop you. You say "where things stand." What "things" are we talking about? Mr. EGGLESTON. Probably the easiest way for me to do it, I do not have a real clear recollection of exactly what he asked me to do, but I'm fairly confident that my memorandum responded to whatever it was that he asked me to do. I think that he asked me, as I recall, generally to set forth where the matter stood with regard to the Rose Law Firm, which had frankly, Mr. Chairman, been the matter that had dominated, as I recall, 75 percent of the hearing that took place here on February Keith.
Pov rom
Near Chilcoat passMts from trainTwo flags: British & US
Lake Bennett from train
Carlisle CreedLoading woodDissolves
"Tutshi"Lake sceneesNear BennettBritish Flag
Circle: Boat & barge unloading