My life
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Stack | 973.929092 CLI/M (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 52664 |
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973.92092 KIS/Y Years of renewal : the concluding volume of his classic memoirs | 973.920922 PRE The presidential image : a history from Theodore Roosevelt to Donald Trump | 973.928092 PHI/A American dynasty : aristocracy, fortune, and the politics of deceit in the house of Bush | 973.929092 CLI/M My life | 973.9290926 TAY/C The clinton tapes; A president's secret diary | 973.93 LUC/T Time to start thinking : America and the spectre of decline | 973.93 WOL/L Landslide : the final days of the Trump presidency |
President Clinton was born William Jefferson Blythe IV on August 19, 1946, in Hope, Arkansas, three months after his father died in a traffic accident. When he was four years old, his mother wed Roger Clinton, of Hot Springs, Arkansas. In high school, he took the family name. As a delegate to Boys Nation while in high school, he met President John Kennedy in the White House Rose Garden. The encounter led him to enter a life of public service. Clinton was graduated from Georgetown University and in 1968 won a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford University. He received a law degree from Yale University in 1973, and entered politics in Arkansas. He was defeated in his campaign for Congress in Arkansas's Third District in 1974. The next year he married Hillary Rodham and in 1980 and Chelsea, their only child, was born. Clinton and his running mate, Tennessee's Senator Albert Gore Jr., then 44, represented a new generation in American political leadership. For the first time in 12 years both the White House and Congress were held by the same party. But that political edge was brief; the Republicans won both houses of Congress in 1994. In 1998, as a result of issues surrounding personal indiscretions with a young woman White House intern, Clinton was the second U.S. president to be impeached by the House of Representatives. He was tried in the Senate and found not guilty of the charges brought against him. He apologized to the nation for his actions and continued to have unprecedented popular approval ratings for his job as president.
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