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- <text id=94TT1317>
- <title>
- Sep. 26, 1994: Public Eye:The White Gloves Come Off
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 26, 1994 Taking Over Haiti
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PUBLIC EYE, Page 40
- The White Gloves Come Off
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson
- </p>
- <p> America's Favorite Grandmother, the author of the best-selling
- Barbara Bush: A Memoir, is sitting on the plumped-up cushions
- of a luxurious suite in Manhattan's Waldorf-Astoria Towers and
- revealing another side. It's not one that rhymes with rich,
- as she so famously characterized Geraldine Ferraro, her husband's
- 1984 vice-presidential rival, but not one that's soft and cuddly
- either. Pose a question about the Clintons, and she will snap,"Oh,
- them. This is supposed to be about my book." Point out that
- her pro-choice stance is totally at odds with her husband's--he would make abortion illegal, after all--and she says,
- "I'm not going to sit here and argue with you." But the wonder
- of it is that she is talking at all. Perhaps she has been saving
- up her presence, like a farmer who doesn't plant soybeans so
- the price will go up.
- </p>
- <p> Barbara Bush, author on tour, is a lot more interesting than
- the old one. She discloses that she was so depressed for a six-month
- period in 1976 that she felt like driving into a tree. She adds,"It
- was the kids' being gone and menopause. Today I would take chemicals
- to help me through." For the first time she talks poignantly
- about a Mother Problem. She regrets that her mother, who had
- everything, "wanted this, had to have that, didn't know how
- well off she was."
- </p>
- <p> She claims civility toward the Clintons, but lands zingers.
- In her book she observes that there are many pros and cons on
- homosexuals in the military, "but like Bill Clinton I have never
- been in the service and so have little to base my judgment on."
- She has decided, she says, not to read anything about the Clinton
- campaign in the memoir by political advisers James Carville
- and Mary Matalin. "I'm only reading the `Mary' parts."
- </p>
- <p> In going negative, Mrs. Bush is listening to her inner flak.
- First it told her she was going to have to do more than recite
- the guest book from Blair House. Now it's telling her to endure
- a promotional tour that would tax a stand-up comic pushing her
- new fall series. David Letterman went very easy on her, but
- she got testy when he didn't want to let her labor the point
- that George Bush (she always refers to him in the third person)
- had once worked in the private sector, unlike a certain President
- from Arkansas. Letterman said, "I think she's pretty steamed
- at me." Who would have thought Barbara Bush and Madonna would
- ever have something in common?
- </p>
- <p> When taking aim, the former First Lady often puts the arrow
- in someone else's quiver. She remains furious at Jane Pauley
- for calling her "a woman of the '40s" in an interview in 1979,
- but puts the criticism in a TV-crew member's voice. "He conveyed
- the impression that it was not unusual for ((Pauley)) to be
- so ugly." When she is asked about calling Al Gore a demagogue,
- she shrugs and says, "Well, it was in my diary," as if that
- relieves her of responsibility.
- </p>
- <p> She takes full credit for press bashing. She nearly lifts out
- of the down-filled cushion when she remembers how unfair it
- was when journalists made her husband out to be an elitist by
- erroneously reporting that he didn't recognize a supermarket
- scanner. But she remarks on the novelty of using a juicer and
- discovering that you can order carryout for dinner.
- </p>
- <p> She is proof that no one, once famous, will ever willingly recede
- into obscurity. As First Lady, her failure to use her platform
- to speak out on the issues was accepted because of her conviction
- that people like her didn't blab about themselves. But now there's
- product to move. When told that she doesn't sound like herself,
- that she's a lot more acerbic, she says, "Well then, you don't
- really know me." No, not really, after all.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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