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CLINTON, HILLARY RODHAM: MORE IMAGES

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Copyright 1983 The H.W. Wilson Company. All rights reserved.
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CLINTON, HILLARY RODHAM
Oct. 26, 1947- Lawyer; wife of the president of the United States.
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1993 Biography from Current Biography
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       As the only first lady in the history of the republic to have had a high-powered career as well-established--and in the same field to boot--as her husband's prior to his being elected president of the United States, Hillary Rodham Clinton has engendered more controversy and raised more people's expectations than any of her predecessors. A lawyer, a professor, and an advocate of educational reform and children's rights, she was appointed the leader of President Bill Clinton's task force on health care reform in 1993. In that capacity she held unprecedented meetings with senators and policy experts before addressing the subject in congressional testimony, for which she was widely, and literally, applauded--a rare event on Capitol Hill. She has been called "the most important White House adviser on domestic issues" and "the most openly empowered presidential wife in American history." Over the course of her husband's presidency, Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure is expected to transform irrevocably the role of first lady from that of trend-setting international hostess to one in which policy-making and advising the president openly, without apology, is no longer taboo, if not yet entirely accepted.

Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton was born on October 26, 1947 in Chicago, Illinois, the oldest child and only daughter of Hugh E. Rodham, who owned a drapery-making business, and Dorothy Howell Rodham, a full-time homemaker. Hillary and her brothers, Hugh and Tony, grew up in Park Ridge, Illinois, a middle-class suburb of Chicago to which the Rodhams moved when Hillary was four years old. As the new kid on the block, Hillary was often attacked by a girl named Suzy, the neighborhood bully. After running home in tears one time too often for her mother to countenance, Hillary was told to fight back the next time she was hit. She did, and from then on her natural leadership abilities attracted lots of friends--both boys and girls--at Eugene Field Elementary School, Emerson Junior High, Maine East High School, and the newly built Maine South High School, to which she was transferred in her senior year as a result of redistricting.
An outstanding student, Clinton excelled in nearly every endeavor she undertook. She maintained good grades, earned Girl Scout merit badges and DAR (Daughters of the American Revolution) community-service awards, played the piano, took ballet lessons, engaged in competitive sports, and performed household chores for an extra potato with dinner rather than for an allowance. A highly skilled member of the debating team and a participant in the student government in high school, she was a National Merit Scholarship finalist and a member of the National Honor Society. During the summers she worked as a lifeguard at a municipal swimming pool. Even as a teenager, she displayed a predilection for social activism. Spurred by the Reverend Don Jones, her youth minister at the First United Methodist Church, she organized baby-sitting services for local migrant workers. Taking his white, middle-class charges into Chicago's inner-city neighborhoods, Jones introduced them to black and Hispanic youths in an effort to eradicate prejudice among his pupils. On one occasion, the two groups of young people discussed the relevance of Picasso's painting Guernica to their own lives; on another day, in 1962, Jones took the teenagers to listen to a speech by the civil rights leader the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., to whom Jones introduced the teenagers backstage. Sensing Clinton's insatiable intellectual curiosity, Jones lent her books by the theologians Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Reinhold Niebuhr, and Paul Tillich as well as J. D. Salinger's novel The Catcher in the Rye.
Despite her association with children from less-privileged backgrounds and her exposure to a variety of philosophies, Clinton remained, like her parents, staunchly Republican, campaigning enthusiastically for Barry Goldwater in the presidential campaign of 1964. After graduating in 1965 from Maine South High School in the top 5 percent of her class, which voted her the student most likely to succeed, Clinton enrolled at the all-female Wellesley College, near Boston, Massachusetts, where she promptly became head of the local chapter of the Young Republicans. It was not long, however, before the turbulence of the late 1960s reinforced the teachings of her youth minister and led her slowly leftward in her politics. The assassinations of Malcolm X in 1965 and of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy in 1968, coupled with the violence Clinton witnessed at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in the summer of 1968, dovetailed with her keen sense of social justice to convert her wholeheartedly to the Democratic party. She campaigned for Eugene McCarthy for president in 1968, worked to enroll more black students at Wellesley, organized the school's first teach-ins on the Vietnam War (which turned into antiwar protests), and wrote her senior thesis on poverty and community development.
In 1969 Clinton graduated from Wellesley with a bachelor's degree in political science. As president of the student government, she was selected by her classmates to deliver the school's first student commencement address, immediately following a speech by Senator Edward W. Brooke, a liberal Republican from Massachusetts. After shocking her audience by castigating Brooke for the irrelevance of his remarks, she spoke about her classmates' college experience in terms of what it had meant to them personally. "We are, all of us, exploring a world that none of us understands and attempting to create within that uncertainty," she told her fellow graduating seniors. "But there are some things we feel, feelings that our prevailing, acquisitive, and competitive corporate life, including, tragically, the universities, is not the way of life for us. We're searching for more immediate, ecstatic, and penetrating modes of living." Clinton's words and her photograph were published in Life magazine. The national publicity she received through the article and through her victories as a contestant on the television quiz show College Bowl enhanced her already impressive resume and helped to ensure that she would have her pick of the best law schools.
Clinton enrolled at Yale Law School, in New Haven, Connecticut, after a Harvard professor told her that his university did not need any more female students. At Yale she served on the editorial board of the now-defunct Yale Review of Law and Social Action and presided over a mass meeting that was called in the spring of 1970 to formulate a response to the trials of the Black Panthers Ericka Huggins and Bobby Seale, which were then underway at a courthouse near the university. Recalling the campus atmosphere at the time in a speech to other Yale alumni in October 1992, she said that "there was a great amount of ferment and confusion about what was and wasn't the proper role of law school education. We would have great arguments about whether we were selling out because we were getting a law degree, whether in fact we should be doing something else, not often defined clearly but certainly passionately argued. That we should somehow be 'out there,' wherever 'there' was, trying to help solve the problems that took up so much of our time in argument and discussion."
The solution to Clinton's dilemma--how to combine social activism and a legal career--presented itself in the figure of the civil rights lawyer and Yale alumna Marian Wright Edelman, the first black woman to pass the bar exam in Mississippi. After Edelman gave a speech at Yale in the spring of 1970 about her work in behalf of the poor and children's rights, Clinton volunteered to work for Edelman's Washington Research Project, the congressional lobbying and advocacy group that later became the Children's Defense Fund. Edelman could not afford to pay her for her services, so Clinton applied for a Law Student Civil Rights Research Council grant, obtained a stipend, and spent the summer of 1970 in Washington, D.C., interviewing the families of migrant laborers and reporting her findings to Senator Walter F. Mondale's subcommittee. Back at Yale, she augmented her knowledge of the nascent children's rights field with classes on child psychology and family law. Scheduled to graduate in 1972, she prolonged her education for a year in order to work at Yale's Child Study Center, where she helped research a book by Anna Freud, Joseph Goldstein, and Albert Solnit entitled Beyond the Best Interests of the Child (1973). During her final year at Yale, Clinton also performed legal research for the Carnegie Council on Children, specializing in the rights of children to education and medical care.
Meanwhile, in her second year at Yale Hillary Clinton had met her future husband, Bill Clinton, at the law library. According to the often-repeated story of their first meeting, the two of them stared at each other from opposite ends of a long corridor in the library until Hillary approached Bill and said, "Look, if you're going to keep staring at me, and I'm going to keep staring back, I think we should at least know each other. I'm Hillary Rodham. What's your name?" From then on, Hillary and Bill were inseparable. As well matched temperamentally as they were intellectually, both were equally dedicated to public service. Having spent the previous year in Oxford, England on a Rhodes scholarship, Bill Clinton was then in his first year of law school. Before graduating in the same class in 1973, the couple had spent the summer of 1972 in San Antonio, Texas, where Bill had run George S. McGovern's presidential campaign and Hillary had registered Hispanic voters.
For several months after her graduation, Hillary worked as a staff attorney for the Children's Defense Fund in Cambridge, Massachusetts while Bill taught at the University of Arkansas School of Law in Fayetteville. They kept in touch by telephone and occasional visits. In January 1974 Hillary Clinton moved to Washington, D.C., at the behest of John Doar, the special counsel to the House Judiciary Committee, who was in charge of the committee's inquiry into the impeachment of President Richard Nixon. One of only three women on the staff of forty-three lawyers, Clinton was put in charge of legal procedures. She impressed her peers with her objectivity and her ability to distinguish advocacy from judicial guidance. Her colleagues found her to be energetic, emotionally supportive, and cooperative. When the impeachment staff was disbanded following Nixon's resignation, on August 8, 1974, Clinton was deluged with offers of high-paying jobs at prestigious law firms on the East Coast in addition to an invitation to return to her post at the Children's Defense Fund. To the dismay of her friends and family, she instead joined Bill Clinton on the faculty of the University of Arkansas School of Law in Fayetteville in September 1974.
In the summer of 1974 Bill Clinton had launched a bid for a seat in the House of Representatives from Arkansas's Third Congressional District, a Republican stronghold. Hillary became his unofficial campaign manager when she demonstrated her remarkable organizing skills. Although Bill Clinton lost the election to the Republican incumbent, John Paul Hammerschmidt, by four percentage points, he came closer to defeating Hammerschmidt than any Democrat before or since. During the campaign, Hillary had made extensive contacts throughout the state and discovered that she enjoyed teaching criminal law, running a legal-services clinic, and doing prison projects and advocacy work in the quiet college town in the Ozark Mountains. Visits to friends and family in Illinois and to the East Coast in the summer of 1975 confirmed for Hillary that she was not missing anything by remaining in Arkansas. Upon her return to Fayetteville in August, Bill surprised her with a house and a proposal of marriage. When they were wed, on October 11, 1975, Hillary retained her maiden name, a decision that would surface as a controversial issue in her husband's subsequent political campaigns.
After Bill Clinton was elected state attorney general in 1976, he and Hillary moved to Little Rock, where she taught law as an adjunct professor at the University of Arkansas and directed the school's legal-aid clinic. Earlier that year she had impressed Jimmy Carter with her work on his presidential campaign, which Bill had directed in Arkansas. In 1977 President Carter appointed her to the board of directors of the Legal Services Corporation, a Washington-based organization that provides federal funds to legal-aid bureaus throughout the United States. In the same year she founded and presided over the Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families, a nonprofit legal advocacy group whose mandate was to identify the problems facing low-income children, and she was among the first female associates hired by Rose Law Firm, where her salary enabled her and Bill to buy a house in the upper-middle-class suburb of Hillcrest.
In 1978 Hillary campaigned for Bill in his first run for governor, which he won by defeating his Republican opponent, A. Lynn Lowe, by a margin of almost two to one. Hillary, who had recently been named to the board of directors of the Children's Defense Fund, continued to work at Rose Law Firm after the election, giving Arkansas something it had never had: a working first lady. After moving into the governor's mansion, Bill appointed Hillary chairperson of the Rural Health Advisory Committee, whose members dealt with the problems involved with providing health care in isolated areas. Neither Hillary's retention of her last name nor her assumption of official duties engendered much controversy at that time. In early 1980 she was made a partner at Rose Law Firm and gave birth to Chelsea Victoria Clinton, who was named after the song "Chelsea Morning."
In announcing the birth of a daughter to Bill Clinton and Hillary Rodham, the governor offended some of his more traditional constituents, who began to carp that something must be wrong with his marriage if his wife would not take his name. Compounding his problems in 1980, the year Ronald Reagan would sweep Republicans into office in a nationwide landslide, was President Carter's decision to intern 18,000 Cuban refugees at Fort Chaffee, Arkansas. After some of them rioted that summer, Bill Clinton's Republican opponent, Frank White, played on racist sentiments in his campaign and unseated Clinton, who fell into a period of despair. He traveled the state apologizing for his mistakes and asking voters to forgive him, which they did by returning him to office in 1982. Arkansans also forgave Hillary for her "brash" independence after she took her husband's last name and underwent a comprehensive image makeover, which included trading in her thick glasses for contact lenses, lightening and taming her hair, losing fifteen pounds, and dressing more fashionably.
Over the following decade Hillary Clinton honed her campaigning skills as her husband was reelected governor in 1984, 1986, 1988, and 1990. She learned many valuable lessons--about dealing with the press, gaining popularity, and fending off attacks on her husband's character and the quality of their marriage--that would serve her well in 1992. In the meantime, she pursued a fulfilling career with the imprimatur of voters, legislators, and the governor, who, early in his career, signaled the depth of his confidence in her abilities by appointing her to top-priority posts. In 1983, as head of the Arkansas Education Standards Committee, Hillary Clinton set out to improve the quality of public education, in which Arkansas ranked forty-ninth in the nation in per pupil expenditures. Her most controversial recommendation was the establishment of teacher competency testing. She ultimately prevailed, and the state passed a law, instituted in 1985, allowing teachers to be dismissed if they failed to demonstrate adequate reading, writing, and math skills. For her educational reforms, Hillary Clinton received the Arkansas Press Association's first headliner-of-the-year award in 1984.
Throughout her ten years in the governor's mansion, Hillary Clinton demonstrated her influence in positions of public service. She provided disadvantaged families with access to an already existing program called HIPPY, for Home Instruction Program for Preschool Youngsters; served on the board of directors of the Arkansas Children's Hospital; worked for the Southern Governors' Association Task Force on Infant Mortality; organized the state's first neonatal care unit and a helicopter service, called Angel One, that would bring emergency care to people living in outlying rural areas; and served on the American Bar Association's Commission on Women in the Profession. She served on the boards of directors of the retail giant Wal-Mart, TCBY (a yogurt company), and LaFarge, resigning from them all in May 1992. In 1988 and 1991 she was named among the most influential lawyers in the United States by the National Law Journal, and in 1989 she was named among the best business-litigation attorneys in Arkansas.
Bill Clinton had been expected to run for president of the United States long before he actually threw his hat into the ring in 1992. Five years earlier he had called a press conference at which all those assembled expected him to declare his intention to run; instead, he had shocked everyone by declining and explaining that his then seven-year-old daughter was too young to be subjected to the ruthless inquiries of the press, which had for years been publishing allegations of the governor's rumored infidelity. That issue resurfaced with particular virulence early in the 1992 campaign, when a lounge singer named Gennifer Flowers claimed to have had a twelve-year affair with Bill Clinton.
Because of the unfavorable publicity generated by Flowers's allegation, many in the Clinton camp thought their candidate was dead in the water, but Hillary Clinton insisted on meeting the issue head-on. At her urging, the Clintons were interviewed by Steve Kroft on the television news magazine 60 Minutes on Super Bowl Sunday in January 1992. That extraordinary event constituted most Americans' introduction to Hillary Clinton. Grilled about whether he had betrayed his wife, Bill admitted that he had caused pain in their marriage but refused to be more specific. Hillary put an end to that line of questioning when she said that the public should respect the "zone of privacy" that surrounds the way any two people deal with their marital problems. "We've gone further than anybody we know of, and that's all we're going to say," she declared in what was almost universally considered to be a bravura performance. When it was reported that Flowers had been paid for her story, the Clintons went on the offensive, transforming the issue from a near-certain liability into an attack on the failure of the press to enforce the standards of responsible journalism.
Subjected to more intense scrutiny than any previous presidential candidate's wife, Hillary Clinton learned the danger of providing the media with sound bites that could easily be taken out of context. When Jerry Brown, who was seeking the Democratic nomination, attacked her professional record, she said, "Well, I suppose I could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas, but what I decided to do was pursue my profession, which I entered before my husband was in public life." Although she went on to praise all the choices available to women, including staying home, the unfortunate remark was widely interpreted as an indication of arrogance. Not long afterward, Clinton made another gaffe while talking to Gail Sheehy, who profiled her in Vanity Fair (May 1992), when she complained that the public and the press were following a double standard in not investigating the alleged infidelities of President George Bush, who would be Clinton's Republican opponent in the 1992 presidential election. In both instances, Hillary rescued her image and the candidacy of her husband by apologizing for her mistakes, which had made headlines that referred to the "Hillary Problem" and the "Hillary Factor."
Most of the negative publicity that Hillary Clinton seemed to attract derived from the public's anxiety about how much power she would wield if her husband were elected president of the United States and how she would transform the role of first lady. Early in the campaign, Bill Clinton had boasted that he and his wife were a "buy one, get one free" package deal. Shortly after he became president, he named her to the unofficial post of leader of his Task Force on National Health Care Reform, whose thirty-four working groups and 500 employees worked in secrecy from January 25 to May 30 to come up with a viable solution to tame the costs of the nation's $800 billion health-care industry while expanding services and coverage. Hillary Clinton broke precedent on February 4, 1993, when she held the first in a series of meetings with congressional leaders. On June 22, 1993 the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that she was a de facto government official when it sanctioned the secrecy in which the task force had conducted its business, and a Newsweek poll taken in September 1993 indicated that 56 percent of Americans approved of her leadership of the task force.
After Bill Clinton unveiled his health-care package in a well-received speech to Congress, on September 22, 1993, Hillary Clinton drummed up support for the legislation in testimony before two House committees in an unprecedented demonstration of political clout for a first lady. In defending the president's health plan, which he has made the cornerstone of his domestic policy, she thoroughly impressed members of both parties with her command of detail, her poise, and, by combining flattery with persuasion at every turn, her public-relations expertise. The Clintons' bold reform plan, which will be debated and modified for months to come, would provide health insurance to all Americans, including the thirty-seven million who are currently uninsured and the twenty-two million who are considered to be "underinsured." The Clintons have argued that by cutting wasteful spending through government regulation, raising taxes on alcohol and tobacco, and injecting "managed competition" into the health-insurance market, their plan to overhaul the nation's health-care system, which represents 14 percent of the United States economy, is superior to alternative proposals.
In keeping with her longstanding commitment to a healthful lifestyle, the blond, blue-eyed Hillary Rodham Clinton, who once joked that all she had to do to make the front page of the nation's newspapers was to change her hairstyle, exercised regularly at the YMCA before moving to the White House, where she has banned smoking. Unlike her predecessors, who made news primarily by redecorating or ordering a new set of china, Clinton has taken little interest in home decorating other than to add comfort and familiarity to her surroundings, replace fat-laden French food with more healthful meals, and hold more open houses for the public. In yet another break with the past, she has set up an office not in the East Wing of the executive mansion but in the West Wing, closer to her husband's Oval Office. In her increasingly meager allotments of spare time, she enjoys reading, playing the piano, watching movies, and playing Game Boy, the popular computerized video game.

Works about subject

Selected Biographical References: Guernsey, JoAnn Bren. Hillary Rodham Clinton: A New Kind of First Lady (1993); King, Norman. Hillary: Her True Story (1993); Radcliffe, Donnie. Hillary Rodham Clinton: A First Lady for Our Time (1993); Sherrow, Victoria. Hillary Rodham Clinton (1993); Warner, Judith. Hillary Clinton: The Inside Story (1993)

Additional citations

Alter, Jonathan. Why Hillary still holds on; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v132 no9 38-43 Ag 31 '98
Walsh, Kenneth T. Portrait of a marriage; U.S. News & World Report (ISSN: 0041-5537) v125 no8 27-8+ Ag 31 '98
Breslau, Karen. Hillary's next life; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v132 no3 22-3 Jl 20 '98
Fineman, Howard. Hillary's tailored universe; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v131 no19 32-4 My 11 '98
Walsh, Kenneth T. The survivalist; U.S. News & World Report (ISSN: 0041-5537) v124 no18 18-20 My 11 '98
Schindehette, Susan. Tempered by fire; People Weekly (ISSN: 0093-7673) v49 46-7 F 9 '98
Klein, Joe. An American marriage; The New Yorker (ISSN: 0028-792X) v73 34-7 F 9 '98
Cooper, Matthew. For better and for worse; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v131 40-1 F 9 '98
Cooper, Matthew. Hillary Clinton goes to war; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v131 24-5 F 2 '98
Adams, James Ring. Webb's dirty lingerie; The American Spectator (ISSN: 0148-8414) v31 28-33+ F '98
Breslau, Karen. Destination unknown; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v130 45-6 N 24 '97
Hubbard, Kim. Happy return; People Weekly (ISSN: 0093-7673) v48 60-1 N 10 '97
Cooper, Matthew. Hillary's turning point; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v130 30 O 20 '97
Tumulty, Karen. Turning fifty; Time (ISSN: 0040-781X) v150 32-8+ O 20 '97
Walsh, Kenneth T. Hillary's resurrection; U.S. News & World Report (ISSN: 0041-5537) v123 26-9 O 20 '97
Broder, John M. For Hillary Clinton at 50, yet another beginning; The New York Times Biographical Service (ISSN: 0161-2433) v28 1654-5 O '97
Amiel, Barbara. Commentary; Vogue (ISSN: 0042-8000) v187 504+ S '97
Clinton, Hillary Rodham. African odyssey; Vogue (ISSN: 0042-8000) v187 186-99+ Je '97
Cooper, Matthew. Hillary power; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v129 58-60 Ap 7 '97
Cooper, Matthew. With friends like these . . .; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v129 20-3 Mr 17 '97
Weisberg, Jacob. Act II: ghosts in the administration; Vanity Fair (ISSN: 0733-8899) vno438 88-91+ F '97
Thomas, Evan. Friends for now; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v129 40-1 Ja 27 '97
Pooley, Eric. Reinventing Hillary; Time (ISSN: 0040-781X) v148 37-8 D 2 '96
Jong, Erica. Hillary's husband re-elected!; The Nation (ISSN: 0027-8378) v263 11-15 N 25 '96
Breslau, Karen. Hillary's second term; Newsweek (ISSN: 0028-9604) v128 21 N 18 '96


Descriptors

Lawyers ; Professors ; Presidential Advisers; First Ladies; Children's Rights Advocates; ACTIVISTS ; HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVISTS; GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS; RELATIVES OF PRESIDENTS; PRESIDENTIAL AIDES; FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS; EDUCATORS ; TEACHERS ; CLINTON HILLARY RODHAM

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