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8 pages in length. One cannot discuss twentieth century first ladies without Eleanor Roosevelt immediately coming to mind. Regarded as one of America's great reforming leaders who had a sustained impact on national policy toward youth, blacks, women, the poor, and the United Nations, Mrs. Roosevelt became the new representation of first ladies. Politically active and social adept, Eleanor took strong stands in everything she addressed, in spite of the fact that she was initially apprehensive of becoming trapped in the cyclical confines of the White House. This proved to be a premature concern, inasmuch as Mrs. Roosevelt was instrumental in setting new precedents. Weekly press conferences, national lectures and a radio programs were just some of the innovative ways the first lady immersed herself in the political scene. Along with a syndicated newspaper column, being a hands-on supporter for the World War II war effort and a major voice in [President Roosevelt's] administration for measures to aid the underprivileged and racial minorities, Eleanor had made a solid place for herself in the annals of American history. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCERoos.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
impact on national policy toward youth, blacks, women, the poor, and the United Nations" (Lash, 1971, p. PG), Mrs. Roosevelt became the new representation of first ladies. Politically active
and social adept, Eleanor took strong stands in everything she addressed, in spite of the fact that she was initially apprehensive of becoming trapped in the cyclical confines of the
White House. This proved to be a premature concern, inasmuch as Mrs. Roosevelt was instrumental in setting new precedents (Cook, 1993). Weekly press conferences, national lectures and a
radio programs were just some of the innovative ways the first lady immersed herself in the political scene. Along with a syndicated newspaper column, being a hands-on supporter for
the World War II war effort and "a major voice in [President Roosevelts] administration for measures to aid the underprivileged and racial minorities" (Lash, 1971), Eleanor had made a solid
place for herself in the annals of American history. II. HUMANE AND COMPASSIONATE Much like her political counterparts of contemporary society who
seek to bring national peace and prosperity, Eleanor Roosevelt possessed a first lady leadership quality that set her apart from a great many other first ladies of this or any
other time. The concept of first lady leadership is easy to define, but it is not as easy to execute; Eleanor was not only able to characteristically recognize the
inherent demands of the job as wife of Chief Executive of the United States, but she also rose to the challenge both consistently and uniformly. For example, the negativity
surrounding the issue of homelessness spawned real concern for the way these hapless people were treated; to be sure, they were hardly regarded as "normal" human beings when society looked
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