Eleanor Roosevelt: A Life of DiscoveryScholastic, Incorporated, 1993 - 197 páginas A photobiography of the first wife of a president to have a public life and career of her own. |
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Página 40
... believed that a woman's place was in the home . All of the young women Eleanor knew were already married or were planning to marry . As respectable society matrons , they would devote themselves to large households bustling with ...
... believed that a woman's place was in the home . All of the young women Eleanor knew were already married or were planning to marry . As respectable society matrons , they would devote themselves to large households bustling with ...
Página 52
... believed that he had a chance to win , but he was eager to test himself . Eleanor - now twenty - six and the mother of three - supported her husband's ambitions . " I listened to all his plans with a great deal of interest , " she wrote ...
... believed that he had a chance to win , but he was eager to test himself . Eleanor - now twenty - six and the mother of three - supported her husband's ambitions . " I listened to all his plans with a great deal of interest , " she wrote ...
Página 148
... believed that the United Nations was FDR's most important legacy . Her appointment as a delegate was a tribute to him , she said . The other American delegates were men : Secretary of State James F. Byrnes ; Senator Tom Connally of ...
... believed that the United Nations was FDR's most important legacy . Her appointment as a delegate was a tribute to him , she said . The other American delegates were men : Secretary of State James F. Byrnes ; Senator Tom Connally of ...
Contenido
First Lady | 1 |
Mademoiselle Souvestre | 23 |
Cousin Franklin | 37 |
Derechos de autor | |
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