10 Things You Didn't Know About Hillary Clinton
1. Born Hillary Diane Rodham on Oct. 26, 1947, in Chicago to Hugh E. Rodham, who owned a drapery making business, and Dorothy Howell Rodham, a full-time homemaker. Her parents were Republicans.
2. When she was 12 years old, she wrote to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, asking how she could become an astronaut. She received a reply saying that NASA didn't accept women in the astronaut program. Her mother comforted her by saying that her eyesight was much too bad anyway.
3. While at Wellesley College in Massachusetts, she became head of the local chapter of the Young Republicans. While there she slowly turned leftward in her politics, campaigning for Eugene McCarthy for president, organizing the school's first teach-ins on the Vietnam War. She wrote her senior thesis on poverty and community development. She graduated in 1969 with a degree in political science.
4. She appeared as a contestant on the television quiz show College Bowl.
5. In 1969, she appeared in Life magazine after giving the first commencement speech by a student at Wellesley. She received a standing ovation after shocking the audience by criticizing the first speaker, Sen. Edward W. Brooke.
6. In the summer of 1970, she heard Marian Wright Edelman speak, inspiring her to volunteer to work for Edelman's Washington Research Project, which later became the Children's Defense Fund. While there, she interviewed the families of migrant laborers and reported her findings to Walter Mondale's Senate subcommittee. This began a lifelong friendship and commitment to children's issues.
7. While at Yale in Connecticut, she first noticed Bill Clinton while he was trying to convince a group of classmates that they didn't need shots to visit Arkansas. He boasted that Arkansas "has the biggest watermelons in the world." They first met in the law library after 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?"
8. In 1974, she went to Washington, D.C., as one of only three women out of 43 lawyers to work on the inquiry into the possible impeachment of President Richard Nixon.
9. When Hillary Rodham and Bill Clinton were wed on Oct. 11, 1975, she kept her maiden name, not realizing it would become a controversial decision. After her husband's defeat for re-election in the 1980 Arkansas gubernatorial election, she changed her surname to Clinton. Voters had questioned their marriage's stability.
10. In 1977, she joined the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock. After her husband's successful gubernatorial bid in 1978, she continued working at the firm, becoming Arkansas's first professional first lady. In 1980, she became the firm's first female partner. In addition, she gave birth to their daughter, Chelsea Victoria Clinton, who was named for Joni Mitchell's song "Chelsea Morning."
Sources:
- 2002 Current Biography Yearbook
- Newsmakers, 1993
- Time
- People
- http://clinton.senate.gov/
Reader Comments
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DEPORTATION
My friend from Haiti, you are not the only one in situation with the department of home land secury.I am a Cuban,i came to this country when i was a young man.Today i am 52 years old and do not have even a green card.I am awayting to be deporter,for more than twenty year,but still wayting for that day to come.So hold on tight,you may get the opportunity to comeback one day
Please vouch for justice for all even for the immigrants
My name is Fritz Edme, I was wrongfully deported to Haiti on August 28,2006 after a wrongful detention by the New York State
railroading me for refusing to plead guilty for a crime that I did not commit. It's a shame how so many people were deported under the Bush's administrtion with the advance of the Department of Homeland Security. I did serve the United States Army and discharge with Honorable. What makes matter worse was that because of the negligence of the Department of Immigration and Naturalization that caused me to miss to become a US citizen audacious as these people in the office are, they disregarded my then application and deported me anyway fearing blame and lawsuit.As a Member of the United Nations now attached with the MINUSTAH here in Haiti, I am asking anyone who read this thoughts to forward it to the White House or to the State Department in Washington DC maybe I shall have a chance to come back to the States to visit my family and also to get this matter taking care of. I only need to clear up my name. Beside, I am working for one of the biggest organization on this planet therefore, I do not need to stay in this country not anymore.
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