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Executive Privileges
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Her lips as vivid as the
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plumage of the vermilion flycatcher, Monica Lewinsky returns this week to the
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covers of the Star and the National Enquirer . In a detailed
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account of her White House trysts, the Star portrays Lewinsky as a sort
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of Jewish Salome, arousing the president with her dance of the Gap dress, only
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to hand the independent counsel the head of Bill the Southern Baptist.
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According to the publication, Lewinsky told the grand jury of at least four
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sexual encounters (depending on your definition of the phrase) in Clinton's
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office.
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Apparently the president is a man with precise, if deranged, views on the
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matter. How many 51-year-olds could write philosophic treatises on getting to
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first, second, and third base? The Star reports that Lewinsky says the
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president allowed them to engage in kissing and "heavy petting" while they had
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their clothes on. Once things got hot, however, "[h]e and Monica would
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unclench--and she would perform a private strip show for the president," making
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sure "the two refrained from touching each other." All right, Abelard and
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Héloise it's not--with the staining of the dress it's probably closer to "Hints
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from Heloise." The damned spot occurred, says the Star , during one of
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these episodes, while the dress lay on the carpet. The Star 's "source"
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explains that Clinton "believes that if they weren't touching in any state of
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undress, that it's not technically sexual relations." Let's see, making out
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with someone, then ejaculating while she strips in your office does not
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constitute sexual relations. Bill, that's good, that's good.
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The Star also reports that a Secret Service agent
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and former top Clinton aide Harold Ickes "walked in on the president and his
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young guest while the two were enjoying an extended stay in the private study."
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It does not report if Clinton subsequently began to hang "Do Not Disturb" signs
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on White House doorknobs.
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Ickes
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makes a very different kind of appearance in the National Enquirer 's
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Monica package. In it he is Cassandra, cursed to have his prophecies
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disbelieved: "When Ickes first tried to tell Clinton that Monica was spreading
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stories that could be harmful to him, he refused to listen." In this version of
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events, Clinton got sucked into an innocent "paternal" relationship (we're
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entering Woody Allen territory here) with a woman he supposedly characterized
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as "wide-eyed and young and I knew she got a thrill out of talking to me." What
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he eventually came to realize, the Enquirer quotes him telling friends,
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is that "[t]he woman is dangerous. She hallucinates. She fantasizes. I don't
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know if she even knows what the truth really is anymore."
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On the other hand, according to another story
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in the very same issue, the Enquirer reports what no one else has--that
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she and Clinton went all the way. In this version of events, Lewinsky believed
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their dalliance was a true love affair. "I thought he turned to me because his
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wife is so cold," another insider has her saying. But soon she realized she was
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not to be Clinton's Wallis Warfield Simpson. "I saw my dreams start to unravel
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when he told me I should return the gifts," she is quoted as saying. Despite
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feeling humiliated and enraged, she did it, because "I didn't want him to be
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hurt. I loved him."
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Since
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it's difficult to reconcile the portrait of the "virtual psychopath who had
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created an entire fantasy world involving the President, a woman who now wanted
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to destroy him," with the woman who was pursued then "coldly dumped" by him,
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the only prudent conclusion to draw from the Enquirer is that we have
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one wacky White House.
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The Enquirer also calls in the services of forensic
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psychiatrist Dr. Judianne Densen-Gerber to analyze the meaning of the dress.
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"It's very, very bizarre. Why would she keep the dress? Why would she send it
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to her mother? The normal thing is if you stain something, you wash it off."
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Densen-Gerber is obviously a disciple of the One-Hour Martinizing school of
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psychiatry.
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Finally, this whole sordid
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episode might open a new category of collectible. Stephen Fishler, a
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collectibles expert, tells the Enquirer if the dress contains Clinton's
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semen and it leads to impeachment proceedings, it could fetch $500,000. Semen,
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schemen is the reaction of collector Jesse Briggs, who has already made
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an offer (are formal bids being accepted?) of $100,000 for the frock, no matter
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what the result.
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And don't look to the
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Globe for more Monica madness. It is staying out of this whole tawdry
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mess, preferring to examine more elevated topics such as the possibility that
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actor Jim Carrey believes the spirit of late comedian Andy Kaufman has taken
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over his body.
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More Flytrap
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