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- <text id=94HT0007>
- <link 94TO0195>
- <title>
- Jul. 28, 1975 'Have a Helluva Good Time'
- </title>
- <history>Time-The Weekly Magazine-1970s Highlights</history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- 'Have a Helluva Good Time'
- July 28, 1975
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Betty Ford still refers to it as "the time when the roof
- caved in"--the time when an unassuming Middle American
- political family suddenly had to move from a modest four-
- bedroom suburban Virginia home into the mansion at 1600
- Pennsylvania Avenue. "I really didn't want to come here," the
- First Lady told TIME Washington Correspondent Bonnie Angelo
- in the White House last week. "I was afraid because of the
- social demands, and I didn't think of it as a meaningful
- position for me." Adds her daughter Susan: "At first the idea
- of the presidency scared us, especially the kids. We were
- afraid we would become too public, that everyone would get
- wrapped up in their own things and we wouldn't be a family amy
- more." Her stoutest encouragement came from Alice Roosevelt
- Longworth, 91, who still remembers when she herself moved into
- the White House at the age of 17. Said she to Susan: "Have a
- helluva good time!"
- </p>
- <p> Since Ford took office, the entire family has been
- together in the White House only once--last month, when the
- President insisted on a reunion. On that occasion the picture
- was taken that appears on TIME's cover; the First Lady
- presented it to her husband as a birthday gift. Yet as far-
- flung as the Ford children are, the family's solidarity
- remains its chief feature, along with a freewheeling
- independence of mind that all the Fords--including the
- President--nurture and relish.
- </p>
- <p> That is one way the family surmounts crises; each member
- faces problems head-on. Betty Ford has been the most badly
- hit, during the past year, by the discovery of a cancerous
- tumor that required removal of her right breast last
- September. But aside from a regimen of daily pills for one
- week out of every six, she has been able to ignore the disease
- and it has made no reappearance since her operation. She also
- suffers from a painful arthritic back, but even that rarely
- darkens her spirits. Despite her husband's mammoth work load,
- she finds that it has not come between them. "Evenings we
- usually spend together, both working while we sit in the den
- or maybe watch TV," she says. She also has unique occasions
- to lobby the president. "You might call it 'pillow talk,'"
- she says with a grin. "I definitely think I have influenced
- him on women's issues. There's a woman in the Cabinet--and I
- suggested that. Now if I can get a woman on the Supreme
- Court, I'll be batting 1.000."
- </p>
- <p> She has been a forthright spokeswoman for the Equal
- Rights Amendment and liberalized abortion laws, and has calmly
- brushed aside the criticism she knew would be coming. "When
- somebody asks you how you stand on an issue, you're very
- foolish if you try to beat around the bush--you just meet
- yourself going around the bush the other way." On the other
- hand, she admits that when she occasionally disagrees with her
- husband she "wouldn't want to embarrass him by opposing his
- position [in public]. That I'll do in the privacy of our own
- sitting room."
- </p>
- <list>
- A DOZEN WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE
- TIME Magazine, January 5, 1976
- </list>
- <p>Betty Ford: The Most Since Eleanor
- </p>
- <p> "I'm the only First Lady to ever have a march organized
- against her," boasted Betty Ford, 57, after a chorus of black-
- clad women in front of the White House chanted their
- disapproval of her enthusiastic lobbying for the Equal Rights
- Amendment. Last year Betty became the most controversial--and
- popular--First Lady since Eleanor Roosevelt, speaking out on
- a variety of once delicate topics. Abortion: "I feel it is the
- right of a human being to make her own decisions." Marijuana:
- "It's the type of thing that young people have to experience."
- The prospect of a premarital affair for her teen-age daughter:
- "I wouldn't be surprised... But I'd want to know pretty much
- about the young man." Her candor is deliberate. Says she:
- "You're very foolish if you try to beat around the bush--you
- just meet yourself coming around the bush the other way."
- </p>
- <p> Her matter-of-fact attitude toward her mastectomy saved
- lives by bringing breast cancer out of the shadows into the
- light of public discussion and understanding. WE LOVE BETTY
- placards sparkle in every crowd the President draws, and the
- audiences break into applause at the mention of her name.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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