Word: paulas
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Here?s the worst-kept secret in the country today: Paula Jones has decided to appeal the dismissal of her sexual harassment suit against President Clinton. Despite valiant efforts by her handlers to keep the decision quiet until an orchestrated press conference Thursday -- even garrulous spokeswoman Susan Carpenter McMillan has been wearing the muzzle of late -- the news has leaked out. Which is all that can be expected in a case where leaks to the press have become as common as filings to the judge...
This is a different country because of Paula Jones--and maybe a better one too. Already the vocabulary of popular culture has been immeasurably enlarged. In the fuddy-duddy New York Times, it has become acceptable to see oral sex on the front page--the words, I mean. Barroom rakes can be grateful for half a dozen new pickup lines, each with presidential cachet. "You make my knees knock." "I like your curves"--or, alternatively, "I like the way the hair falls down your back." And when all else fails: "Kiss it." Lawyers of the future will know to reach...
...seems to me that it is Paula Jones who is harassing the President. She wasn't physically damaged, and in my opinion there is scant proof that she has suffered psychologically or economically. She is after fame and fortune, and you in the media have certainly helped her. This sexual-harassment thing is getting out of hand. When a construction crew whistles at a pretty girl, is that harassment? Men have been coming on to women ever since Adam and Eve. JAY LIVINGSTON Los Angeles...
...PAULA JONES Maybe an object in Clinton's game, surely a pawn in someone else's. Who will give...
WOMEN: Don't change so much you look like you've entered the Witness Protection Program. As the nuns used to say, What are you hiding under all that makeup? A year ago, we were shocked when a newsmagazine gave a makeup and hairstyling credit on its Paula Jones cover. But that was four makeovers ago and before Washington hairdressers, previously known for keeping the chignon alive, had p.r. agents. Linda Tripp refused to sit for a photo by the New York Times because the newspaper would not pay for her hair and makeup artist...