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- <text id=89TT0242>
- <title>
- Jan. 23, 1989: A New Second Lady
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 23, 1989 Barbara Bush:The Silver Fox
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 27
- A New Second Lady Who Is No Second Fiddle
- </hdr><body>
- <p> There are unwritten rules of etiquette for a Vice
- President's wife that correspond roughly to the antebellum
- definition of a lady: her name should appear in the papers only
- on the occasion of her marriage or death. Barbara Bush adapted
- well: she did good works quietly and kept out of the public
- eye. Marilyn Quayle is already hard at work following in Mrs.
- Bush's footsteps. But the outspoken and confident lawyer turned
- housewife may have a tougher time keeping a low profile.
- Marilyn Tucker Quayle is anything but self-effacing.
- </p>
- <p> She asserted herself almost immediately after Dan Quayle was
- nominated, telling reporters that when her husband first ran for
- Congress in Indiana, "I made all the decisions." The cool,
- appraising look she cast on Quayle when he spoke, and the sharp
- tugs on his sleeve when she wanted him to stop, gave her away as
- first among her husband's handlers. Bush aides quickly learned
- that behind her demure shirtwaist dresses and her trademark Mary
- Tyler Moore flip hairdo there was a strong-minded, intelligent
- woman who wished to be viewed as Quayle's "senior adviser."
- </p>
- <p> In mid-September Marilyn wanted to accompany Quayle on a
- tour of NORAD, the high-security Air Force installation in
- Colorado. His handlers, who had planned to use the event to
- underscore Quayle's readiness to become Commander in Chief,
- argued that he would be undercut by having his wife tag along.
- Marilyn stood firm about going, until Quayle interceded and
- eventually persuaded her to visit a Colorado Springs day-care
- center instead.
- </p>
- <p> Marilyn, 39, is made of sterner stuff than her playful,
- easygoing husband. Both her parents were doctors; she was the
- fourth of six children, brought up in a strict Christian
- household in Indianapolis. The Tuckers became followers of a
- conservative Fundamentalist preacher, "Colonel" Robert B.
- Thieme Jr., and Marilyn grew up listening to Thieme's tapes. She
- has dissociated herself from Thieme's more reactionary social
- teachings, but defends his biblical teachings.
- </p>
- <p> A model student, Marilyn was "always real popular,"
- according to classmate Kathy Hyde Parker, "but never with the
- bad kids." Her self-styled feminism was awakened early: she
- wanted to play basketball in high school but balked at the
- half-court games girls then had to play. At Purdue she ran for
- freshman-class treasurer and formed the Pep Girls, a pom-pom
- cheerleader squad that she directed with no nonsense. "At our
- meetings we didn't horse around," says former Pep Girl Barbara
- Little.
- </p>
- <p> Marilyn met Quayle at Indiana University law school and
- married him ten weeks later. They sat together in the front row
- in tax lectures; it was Marilyn who spoke up frequently and
- sought out the professor after class. She was due to deliver
- her first child on the day of the bar exam, and had labor
- induced early so she could take the test. The young couple hung
- out a law shingle together above the family newspaper office in
- Huntington, but Marilyn ran the practice. A Huntington friend,
- Sandy Cook, says Marilyn was the first "superwoman" in her set,
- expertly balancing career and family, even baking bread.
- </p>
- <p> Marilyn quit working shortly after her second child was
- born, and brought her efficiency and drive to housekeeping.
- Innately frugal, she shops at bargain stores and does her own
- daily housework, but she has always made sure -- at least up to
- now -- that the Senator did his fair share. The Quayles shun
- the social circuit. When the family moved to the Washington area
- in 1977, a former aide recalls, "Marilyn was at the school as
- often as the teachers." She directed children's school plays,
- did PTA and Little League, and does not allow her three children
- -- two boys and a girl -- to watch television. She was just as
- attentive to Dan Quayle's career, reading his paperwork at
- home, clipping articles and offering advice on strategy. She
- also found time to join Joanne Kemp and Susan Baker's Bible
- study group.
- </p>
- <p> She shares her husband's conservative views, opposing
- abortion and the ERA, but comes off as more of a true believer
- than Quayle. In appearances and interviews, Marilyn has proved
- to be poised, self-possessed and far defter than her husband at
- deflecting hostile questions.
- </p>
- <p> Toward the end of the campaign, her stock was so high that
- politicians speculated on whether she would be appointed to fill
- Quayle's Senate seat. The move was never feasible, but Marilyn
- felt flattered, and heightened press interest for a while by
- coyly refusing to deny it. Now she is busy changing the
- children's schools (the family is moving into Washington from
- McLean, Va.) and redoing the vice-presidential residence. She is
- soliciting a donation of $150,000 from friends to cover the
- renovations needed for a family with three growing children.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike Barbara Bush, who has long toiled against illiteracy,
- Marilyn may not pursue good works. She says her interests run
- more to foreign affairs and "substantive" issues. She is even
- considering joining a Washington law firm -- provided her
- official duties and conflict-of-interest concerns permit it.
- "She understands the role," says her friend and tennis partner
- Joanne Kemp, "but if she can find a way to do it differently
- that is proper, she will." At her Christmas party, a reporter
- told her jokingly that as the Vice President's wife she could
- set her own style. Marilyn smiled saucily and replied, "That's
- right -- the flip is back."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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