Word: paper
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...inch-thick binder that I called my life: "Baratunde, I thought you were a PDA man." By PDA, he meant personal digital assistant. And he was right. Why shouldn't I, Mr. User assistant, Tech Talk computer friend, be using something electronic to organize my life instead of primitive paper products...
...claims to have had Dodi Fayed's love child 15 months ago, have surfaced in Britain. The Sun tabloid has reprinted some of the letters with which Holliday reportedly "bombarded" Dodi's father, Mohamed Al Fayed. "I am not a nutter or a gold digger," she wrote. The paper claims Holliday "began her quest by leaving a letter at the cemetery where Dodi was buried." The head of Al Fayed's security team called her claims about meeting Dodi "garbage." The Sun also reveals that Holliday purportedly attempted to sell her daughter to an English couple for 4,000 pounds...
...Starr is not short of support on Capitol Hill, however, where there are ominous rumblings of the "I" word. Roll Call, the Washington insider paper, says that Newt Gingrich and other GOP grandees have discussed dipping into a $4.4 million fund to help bankroll impeachment proceedings. An aide to Gingrich confirmed that her boss had discussed bolstering the Judiciary Committee staff should Starr turn the matter over to them. None of Clinton's enemies are using the "I" word in public -- it's merely being passed off as preparation. "In Washington," said Rep. Steve Largent (R-Okla.), "you have...
...week Monica ruled the waves. It was radio Monica every day and TV-talk-show Monica every night. Monica made every morning's paper and the cover of the weekly magazines. Like an endless D-day announcement, she rippled across the other famous zipper, in Times Square. But if you craved Monica maximus, there was only one place for you. On the Web it was all Monica all the time...
...record: 2.5 million pages. "When all is said and done on this, journalism is going to have to look at itself in the mirror," says Web-Timesman Bernard Gwertzman. The Times' main competitor, the Washington Post, used its Website to break scoops online hours before the morning paper hit the newsstand. At what was once the other end of the news spectrum, the National Enquirer seized the moment to relaunch its moribund Website with what it promised was "late-breaking news" about Lewinsky and her high school teacher...