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It’s How I Learned to Drive, it’s a Pulitzer prize winning play by Paula Vogel from 1997. Basically, the story is a memory play with Lil’ Bit, a thirty-five year old woman looking back on her adolescence and her relationship with her uncle. I like it because she’s a brilliantly witty and wonderfully funny woman, even though it’s a terrible experience she’s relating. And the cast is just amazing...

Author: By Emily S. High, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Spotlight | 10/3/2003 | See Source »

...toss of the coin decided that Tiger Woods beat out Roseanne for a regular slot on Hollywood Squares, but Paula Zahn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Your Summer of 2003 IQ Test | 9/8/2003 | See Source »

...Sister Mary C. Boys of New York City's Union Theological Seminary). Some critics predicted toxic damage: "Its real tinder-box effect could be abroad," wrote Frank Rich in the New York Times, "where anti-Semitism has metastasized since 9/11." In the usually sober pages of the New Republic, Paula Fredriksen, the Aurelio Professor of Scripture at Boston University, warned, "When violence breaks out, Mel Gibson will have a much higher authority than professors and bishops to answer to." That's when...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Last Vexation Of Mel | 9/1/2003 | See Source »

Senator Clinton still doesn't seem to understand why some of us supported the impeachment of her husband. For me it came down to two issues: Bill Clinton lied to a federal judge and lied to the citizens who had elected him. The questions in the Paula Jones deposition may have been "designed solely to trap the President into charges of perjury," but I can't accept the idea of the head of the Executive Branch lying or in any way dissembling before the Judiciary. The far greater injury, however, came when Bill Clinton lied to me. ALASTAIR DALLAS...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Jul. 7, 2003 | 7/7/2003 | See Source »

...does one explain the arrant ingenuousness that defines her many years with Bill? Mrs. Clinton would have us believe that Monica Lewinsky was the first betrayal. Gennifer Flowers, Paula Jones, the tales the troopers told--all are dismissed as smears floated by political enemies or by grifters looking for money. (By the time the President told her about Monica, he had already admitted in a deposition to having had a sexual relationship with Gennifer Flowers, but Mrs. Clinton doesn't mention that.) One imagines the serial infidelities are too painful, too embarrassing. One imagines she doesn't want to expose...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Humanity of Hillary | 6/16/2003 | See Source »

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