Word: paulas
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Optimists and reformers already foresee laws that will undo the Supreme Court's Paula Jones decision and protect sitting Presidents from lawsuits; revisions of the independent-counsel law to preserve its value but limit its potential for abuse; even laws that would affirm a privilege for Secret Service agents and government lawyers. Clinton's successors, if they are men or women of unimpeachable character and conduct, can go a long way to set things right. Reagan was the latest President to test the resilience of the office: following the disgrace of Nixon and the disappointments of Ford and Carter, books...
...PAULA MAKES IT SMALLER...
...PAULA JONES, a woman who apparently felt her affection for the camera was not sufficiently requited, enriched her standing among the American public by unveiling her nose job on national TV last week. The surgery, which was paid for by an anonymous donor, is the latest in a series of "improvements" Jones has made to her lineaments, although, oddly, her haircut and the removal of her braces were not considered broadcast-worthy material. Appearing exclusively on PrimeTime Live and in the National Enquirer, Jones said she decided to trade in her "family nose" because she was sick of being made...
...Paula Johnson grew up the daughter of divorced parents in Manassas, Va., outside Washington, and moved to Ruckersville five years ago. Now 30, she is the divorced mother of three boys in addition to the switched daughter. She also has custody of an unrelated 16-year-old girl. "My mom says other kids brought home stray dogs and cats," she says. "I brought home stray people." Johnson raises her family on the $9.07 an hour she earns as a flagger at construction sites. "TV dinners and hamburger casseroles" help make ends meet...
...Melissa Conley, who drove Johnson home after the delivery, says she remembers Johnson asking the doctor discharging her what blood type Callie had. "The doctor says it was not her type, that Callie had O-negative, which is rare," Conley says. "Then Paula said, 'She must have her father's,' and got real quiet...