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A young family, a new style for the White House

By JOCELYN NOVECK, AP National Writer Jocelyn Noveck, Ap National Writer Thu

Nov 6, 4:30 pm ET

It was a mere fleeting image amid all the others that were beamed into our

living rooms on that momentous election night: 7-year-old Sasha Obama in her

black party dress, bounding gleefully up into her father's arms, each in turn

planting a happy kiss on the other's cheek.

But the heart-tugging moment was as poignant a reminder as any that a vigorous,

appealing young family is entering the White House one that will bring a

dramatically different energy and style to the presidency.

And on that night, it wasn't hard to see why some have been tempted to make the

comparison with another highly telegenic first family who fascinated and

inspired the country nearly a half-century ago: the Kennedys.

Youth, style, optimism all those hallmarks of Obama's ascension to power

remind Ted Sorensen, the speechwriter and adviser to John F. Kennedy, of his

former boss. And, he says, an infectious sense of confidence. That's something

few of us who watched Obama on that balmy Chicago night could have missed: The

sense of calm and assuredness, though not cockiness, that he projected as he

accepted the mantle of the most powerful job in the world.

"Kennedy had that confidence, too," says Sorensen. "And it carries over. Just

as Kennedy's election restored confidence to a nation, Obama's will have the

same results confidence of Americans in our leadership, of consumers in our

economy, of other countries in America."

What will mark the style of an early Obama White House? Friends of the new

first couple say the mansion will be infused with the spirit of Sasha and her

10-year-old sister, Malia, just as the Kennedy White House is often remembered

as a playground for Caroline with her pony, Macaroni, or John, Jr., who liked

to hide in the Oval Office desk.

"He may be the president-elect, but those two young daughters will still be a

major focus of his life, and a major part of the White House," says Kirk

Dillard, a Republican state senator from Illinois and a friend of Obama's.

"Barack is a pretty hip and engaged father, and those girls have him wrapped

around their little fingers." He expects dance recitals and soccer games to

fill the family's spare time.

The White House staff will be grateful for their presence, says Betty Monkman,

a former chief White House curator who worked there for 30 years.

"Any house is so much more alive with children, and it's the same with the

White House," says Monkman. "The kids come in, they bring their friends. It

makes it a home." Monkman recalls pumpkin-carving parties with Amy Carter, a

scavenger hunt for Chelsea Clinton.

What kind of first lady will Michelle Obama be? On the trail, we saw this

striking 44-year-old woman become an increasingly effective advocate for her

husband, drawing big crowds at her own events, and all the while drawing praise

for her sense of style.

Sandy Matthews, a close friend from Chicago, says the first priority of the pal

she calls "Mich" (pronounced "Meesh") will be getting her girls settled. After

that, she expects her to focus on issues she embraced on the campaign trail

the challenges facing working women and military families, for example.

Will she and her husband be enthusiastic White House hosts, holding grand

dinners a la Jackie Kennedy? Friends aren't sure. "They're pretty relaxed and

casual types," says Matthews.

And Dillard recalls a friend with simple tastes, whom he ran into "getting ice

cream at a Dairy Queen or buying junk food at a gas station."

Todd Boyd, a professor of popular culture at the University of Southern

California, imagines the Obamas hosting events with impressive guest lists,

given celebrity enthusiasm for the president-elect. And though Obama tried hard

to downplay the celeb factor when the Republicans likened him in a Web ad to

Britney Spears and Paris Hilton, Boyd suspects that "those rules will probably

loosen a bit at least until the re-election campaign." (One can also imagine

that Obama booster Oprah Winfrey will have an open invitation to the White

House.)

On a more serious note, the state of the economy will doubtless have an impact

on the style and mood of any entertaining in an early Obama presidency, Boyd

says: "They will be very conscious not to appear insensitive to the conditions

people are facing."

Among Washington's social set, "there will be a lot of updating of Rolodexes to

add an influx of new Chicagoans," says Juleanna Glover Weiss, former

spokeswoman for Vice President Dick Cheney and a frequent Washington hostess.

Weiss also expects that Obama will enforce stricter ethics and lobbying

restrictions she thinks McCain would have, too which may mean fewer free

meals in the nation's capital, more snacking on finger food instead.

There's one area where many are hoping for the immediate influence of Michelle

Obama: the often maligned world of Washington fashion, where Jackie Kennedy's

famous sense of style has never been replicated.

"Undoubtedly, fashion will change," says Rochelle Behrens, a designer and also

a former intern in the Bush White House. "Michelle Obama has an easy, unfussy,

simple style of dress that harks back to the Camelot days of Jackie Kennedy. I

think we'll see people latch onto her style."

Specifically, Behrens hopes to see the new first lady, who like her husband

works out religiously, spearhead the return of the bare arm she was widely

praised for a purple sleeveless sheath early in the campaign.

"I can't think of a first lady who was unabashedly able to bare her arms and

shoulders in the East Wing," Behrens says. And while we're at it, the bare leg

may win out, too: Michelle Obama has said on national TV that she avoids those

pesky pantyhose.

Other possible changes, according to Behrens: fewer puffed sleeves on the

streets of Washington, and fewer sequins at night. And in a troubled economy,

women will be happy to know that their first lady shops online at J. Crew.

And her husband? One men's fashion expert foresees a nationwide influence on

the shape of suits. "Barack Obama will cause a generation of men to look at the

way suits fit," says Tyler Thoreson, editor of men.style.com. "A fitted,

tailored look will feel more natural to the average guy after seeing it on the

leader of the free world."

On a more substantive style note, will we see, in the Obama administration, a

renewed emphasis on carefully chosen words and elegant rhetoric?

Sorensen, the Kennedy speechwriter, notes how the McCain campaign sought to

denigrate Obama's rhetorical talents, as if to say elegant words meant no

substance.

"Just words?" Sorensen asks. "That's what Kennedy used to summon the country to

a better understanding of responsibility to fellow citizens, to galvanize U.S.

efforts in space exploration, to explain on national TV that the Soviets had

missiles 90 miles from our shores. Believe me, eloquence is a very important

asset in the White House."

Finally, if Tuesday's victory rally is any indication, we may be seeing four

more years (at least) of real public displays of affection between Barack and

Michelle Obama. Matthews, Michelle's friend, hopes these spontaneous moments

continue.

"I really teared up when Michelle looked into Barack's eyes on Tuesday night

and told him, 'I love you,'" she says.

"The country needs to see a genuine marriage with love and emotion. She was

telling him, I think, that they're walking down this road together. And you

know, even a president needs to hear that."