hornaday said their scorn reflected prejudice against women in general. franklin himself made a joke about the newspaper women seated at his wife's feed. a noted cartoonist for the old washington star newspaper, drew a caricature of the conferences and i think for years it was here on the library and museum exhibit. i don't know if it's still out or not. now, black countered this by publishing a comment that mrs. roosevelt, without ever mentioning it, put it into this girl's at mrs. roosevelt's feet by giving orders to the white house that chairs be provided for all who attended the meetings. even black, however, who was attacked as eleanor's slave, because she always wrote such laud torre things about the first lady, wished the conferences produced more hard news. black said the first lady would speak in generalities about social concerns, including housing, education and legislation that aimed to bar married women from working. still, the mundane quality of the announcements eleanor always had announcements about her social schedule, about the places sh