'New' Paula to Bare, Tell All in Mag
By MARTIN MBUGUA
Daily News Staff Writer
Plastic surgery shrank her Pinocchio profile, and braces put a gleam in her
smile. Now Paula Corbin Jones is showing the rest of her souped-up self.
The former Arkansas state employee whose sexual harassment suit triggered
events that led to President Clinton's impeachment is baring all in the
December edition of Penthouse.
The mag, which is scheduled to hit the streets Oct. 24, will feature a
nine-page spread of a nude and seminude Jones with a story titled, "Paula
Jones Uncovered! She shows all, she tells all: How the Far Right used and
abused her to destroy Clinton."
"This is the new and improved Paula Jones. ... She has a lovely body," said
a spokeswoman for the publisher, General Media Communications Inc.
"It's a Paula Jones who feels so good about herself that she wants to share
the truth of what [the right-wingers] did to her with the rest of the
world," she said of the story by Joe Conason.
But news of the nudity did not sit well with Susan Carpenter-McMillan,
Jones' friend and former adviser, who was at an uncharacteristic, albeit
momentary, loss for words.
"I am so completely, vehemently opposed to posing in the nude,"
Carpenter-McMillan said.
"If it is true, I would be very disappointed," she added. "It's the worst
thing she could have done. I don't think anyone will approve of it."
The spread reportedly was shot in California during the Democratic National
Convention and captured Jones naked inside and next to a swimming pool, as
well as in several indoor locations.
At least two pictures in the spread will be full exposure of a "happy and
comfortable" Jones.
"She told me she wouldn't do it a couple of months ago," Carpenter-McMillan
said. "I was aware of it, but they weren't supposed to be nude."
Penthouse ran seminude pictures of Jones in 1998, taken from Polaroids shot
by her boyfriend at the time.
Her ex-husband, Stephen Jones, was not available for comment, but a woman
who answered the phone at his home in Collierville, Tenn., identified
herself as Mrs. Jones and said, "That side of our lives is closed."
White House officials and attorney Robert Bennett, who represented President
Clinton in Jones' suit, declined to comment.
"There is nothing to say," Jones' mother, Delmer Corbin, said by telephone
from her home in Cabot, Ark.
Original Publication Date: 10/7/00
http://www.mostnewyork.com/2000-10-07/News_and_Views/Scandal_Sheet/a-83169.a
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