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SPRING 1995
Monica Lewinsky graduates from Lewis and Clark College, and heads to Washington, D.C. for an unpaid internship at the White House.

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NOVEMBER 1995
President Clinton and Lewinsky begin a series of sexual encounters at the White House.

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APRIL 1996
Lewinsky leaves the White House for public affairs post at the Pentagon.

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DECEMBER 1997
Lewinksy friend Linda Tripp tells the former intern that she won't shield their conversations if questioned during depositions with attorneys for Paula Jones.

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JANUARY 12, 1998
Linda Tripp contacts Independent counsel Kenneth Starr's office, providing 20 hours of taped conversations with Lewinsky. The next day, Tripp wears an FBI body microphone during a meeting with Lewinsky at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Pen
tagon City, Virginia, and records their conversation.
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JANUARY 16, 1998
Attorney General Jane Reno approves an expansion of Starr's probe into the Lewinsky matter.

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JANUARY 17, 1998
President Clinton, testifying under oath to lawyers in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case, denies having had an affair with Lewinsky.

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JANUARY 26, 1998
At a White House event, Clinton states, "I did not have sexual relations with that woman. ... I never told anybody to lie." "These allegations are false."

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JANUARY 27, 1998
Kenneth Starr opens a grand jury probe into Monica Lewinsky's allegations. Hillary Clinton, appearing on NBC's "Today" show, says
the controversy has been fabricated by a "vast right-wing conspiracy."

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