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46740327
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6/29/76 - Plymouth, Massachusetts - "Remember the Ladies" Exhibit (3)
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46740327
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document
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6/29/76 - Plymouth, Massachusetts - "Remember the Ladies" Exhibit (3)
collections
Sheila R. Weidenfeld Files (Ford Administration)
Sheila Weidenfeld's Trip Files
subjects
Massachusetts
Equal Rights Amendment Project
President (1974-1977 : Ford). Office of the First Lady. 1974-1977
American Revolution Bicentennial, 1776-1976
Voyages and travels
Women
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46740327
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1976-07-31
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7
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1976
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1976-06-01
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6
year
1976
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The original documents are located in Box 27, folder "6/29/76 - Plymouth, Massachusetts - "Remember the Ladies" Exhibit (3)" of the Sheila Weidenfeld Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Some items in this folder were not digitized because it contains copyrighted materials. Please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library for access to these materials. Digitized from Box 27 of the Sheila Weidenfeld Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library THE NEW YORK TIMES Food Day WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1976 42 M family/style Mrs. Ford Helps Remember the Ladies' of Revolutionary Era By JUDY KLEMESRUD Special to The New York Times PLYMOUTH, Mass., June Alison Buckhoitz, which said 'A Dull Life' National Director 29-Three of Washington's in part, "Why can't women In includes a number of Noticeably missing from most: prominent political be equal? Men are. Why can't portraits of the period's out- the exhibition was Martha wives-Betty Ford, Nancy women? Men say-women can't standing women, including Abigail Adams, Martha Wash- Washington's bathing suit, Kissinger and Joan Kennedy be equal. That's not fair to ington, and Mercy Otis War- which had been mentioned --gathered on the steps of girls and women I'm going ren There are hall gowns among. the items. in earlier A2 F First L .ady presides at the Ladie s' exhibit opening By MARY NELL NAUGHTON Girl Scout Council presented Mrs. Ford essay contest, Wayne Carlin and Kim South Carolina, Alison / Buckholtz. PLYMOUTH-America's First Lady, with an apple-head doll as she entered Freyermuth. Fiona Brandon, daughter "Why can't women be equal," Alison Mrs. Betty Ford, officiated here the club on the waterfront. Each of the of the director of the exhibit, presented wrote to Mr. Ford and went on to tell Tuesday at the formal ceremonies other honored guests received a corn the First Lady with a colonial nosegay. him that she intended to write to the opening the national art exhibition. husk doll. governor to see if he could change the Old Colony Memorial Serving / Plymouth, Carver, Kingston and Duxbury, Massachusetts Vol. No. CLIV 42 Pag es in 4 Sections Plus Supplements Thursday, July 1, 1976 Whole Number 7998 25 cents Local radio dealers Wite house Gerald R. Ford Washington DC. 1827 Gippy Lane chas Sc. 29407 Charlston, South Carolina June 23, Dear Prezedent Ford, why can't woman be equal.? Men are. why can't woman? There Shuld be a law that all People Shuld be equal. W Men say woman can't be equal. that's not faiR to Girls and woman. I'm Going to write to the Govenen so he RATO R. FORD HORREY Can Change the law Love Alison Buckholf to 22 AGe 6 in a half 10. Remember The Radies 1750 WOMEN IN AMERICA 1815 Mrs. Ford accepts floral bouquet from Fiona Bran- don. Behind Near Mrs. Ford are Henry Atkins, pres don, age six, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bran- dent of the Pilgrim Society, and Mrs. Brandon. Photo by Mike Robinson Mrs. Ford accepts floral bouquet from Fiona Bran- don. Behind Near Mrs. Ford are Henry Atkins, presi- don, age six, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bran- dent of the Pilgrim Society, and Mrs. Brandon. Remember the Radies 1750 WOMEN IN AMERICA 1815 Exhibit took months to prepare PLYMOUTH-Months of prepara- Angelo Brigida and notified personnel and Director Mabel Brandon and luncheon guests, who included other tions culminated here, Tuesday, with inside the club as well. The occupants of Curator Conover Hunt walked through donors, sponsors and dignitaries toured the opening of the national art exhibi- the boat agreed to leave before Brigida the displays. Mrs. Ford presented the exhibit. tion, "Remember The Ladies,' in arrived on the scene. awards to PCHS students Wayne Carlin An evening reception was held to ac- Pilgrim Hall. The show, containing At Pilgrim Hall and Kim Freyermuth, winners of the comodate more than 700 additional more than 200 individual items, por- essay contest staged for the opening. friends, supporters and patrons of the traits, books, manuscripts, letters and A select group of reporters and She spoke briefly to the crowd of about exhibition. "Remember the Ladies" household objects, was assembled photographers were admitted to the ex- 750 assembled outside. opened for the public yesterday and will under the direction of Mrs. Mabel Bran- hibition and followed Mrs. Ford as she Following Mrs. Ford's departure, the remain in Plymouth until September. don of Plymouth and Washington. The total budget for the unique presentation was approximately $550,000. Local police, a private security firm and the Secret Service were all in- volved in the preparations for the ar- rival of First Lady Betty Ford, who of- ficiated at the opening ceremonies. A twenty-four-hour-a-day patrol has been maintained at Pilgrim Hall since the arrival of the priceless art objects and museum pieces here last week. The security will be maintained for the duration of the show in Plymouth. Anita Franks, executive secretary for the show told the OCM yesterday that the staff and the members of the Antiquarian Society were indebted to Acting Plymouth Police, Chief Ernest Leonardi, and Sgt. Louis Cappella for their A6 Thursday, July 1, 1976 OLD COLONY MEMORIAL Mrs. Ford in a gay moment during her private review of the exhibi- tion. Mrs. Ford quips and praises on own tour By MARY NELL NAUGHTON ing the price of some of the corsetry, PLYMOUTH- First Lady Betty she exclaimed, 'Oh! heavens! Eight Ford was given the premiere showing dollars for one stay!' of the national exhibition, "Remember A wedding gown which had been The Ladies," which she officially found in a drawer of Plymouth's Anti- opened here Tuesday. Both Curator quarian House and is part of the ex- Conover Hunt and Director Mabel hibit, attracted Mrs. Ford's eye. She Brandon accompanied Mrs. Ford told the small entourage touring the through the exhibit, describing various show with her that when the Ford's of 0,0 of UP - - 105 BETTY) PLYMOUTH, MASS. (UPI) -- FIRST LADY BETTY FORD MADE A NO N POLITICAL VISIT TO THIS HISTORIC COLONIAL TOWN TUESDAY TO JOIN SEVERAL OTHER LEADING AMERICAN WOMEN IN DEDICATING A BICENTENNIAL ART EXHIBIT. MRS. FORD WAS GREETED BY SOME 1,000 WOMEN WHOSE CHEERS DROWNED OUT CHANTS OF A SMALL GROUP OF PLACARD -TOTING DEMONSTRATORS PROTESTING HER ENDORSEMENT OF THE EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT. JOINING MRS. FORD IN THE CEREMONIES TO OPEN THE EXHIBIT CALLED "REMEMBER THE LADIES- WOMEN IN AMERICA 1750-1315," WERE JOAN KENNEDY, NANCY KISSINGER, REP. MARGARET HECKLER, R -MASS., AND MASSACHUSETTS FIRST LADY KITTY DUKAKIS. ALTHOUGH RAIN DAMPENED THE MORNING, THE SUN HAD POPPED OUT WHEN MRS. FORD, UNDER HEAVY SECRET SERVICE ESCORT, ARRIVED AT THE PLYMOUTH YACHT CLUB SHORTLY BEFORE 12:30 P .M. FOR A BRIEF LUNCHEON WITH THE OTHER GUESTS. THE TITLE OF THE EXHIBITION, SPONSORED BY CLAIROL AND PHILIP MORRIS, INC., WITH FUNDING FROM THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENTS FOR THE ARTS AND HUMANITIES, WAS BASED ON A REQUEST ABIGAIL ADAMS ONCE MADE OF HER HUSBAND, JOHN ADAMS. IN FORMULATING THE LAWS OF THE NEW AMERICAN NATION IN 1776, MRS. ADAMS WROTE, "I DESIRE YOU REMEMBER THE LADIES AND BE MORE GENEROUS AND FAVORABLE TO THEM THAN YOUR ANCESTORS." UPI 06-29 04:37 PED The New York Times/Arthur Grace AT OPENING OF BICENTENNIAL EXHIBIT: Betty Ford with some of the women who gathered in Plymouth, I Era women. From left: Kitty Dukakis, wife of Governor of Massachusetts, Joan Kennedy, Mrs. Ford, Represent- Mass., yesterday for an exhibit about Revolutionary War ative Margaret Heckler and Nancy Kissinger. Page 42. N.Y. Times 6/30/76 A2 The Washington Star Wednesday, June 30, 1976 Names/Faces I Plymouth Rock Hen Party Boo of the Week came at Plymouth, Mass., yester- day. and goes, depending on your point of view, to ei- ther First Lady Betty Ford or the handful of anti- Newsmakers L.A.Tinies 6/30/76 Old Men-and Women-Need Love Too -Nannie Gurley isn't worried about the 21-year differ- ence between her age and her husband's. "I always did like older men," she said. And she didn't even mind that Amsey Sheffield didn't have a ladder for their elopment. We were in love," she said, admiring her marriage license. "We didn't know they were in love," said Sally Maloney, social services director at the Highland House Nursing Home in Columbus, Ga. "All the ladies call Mr. Sheffield 'Honey' and 'Sugar.' We thought he was playing the field." Sheffield, 94, said he was looking forward to setting up housekeeping with Mrs. Gurley, 73, a widow in her home in Columbus. "The doctor didn't want me to stay alone," she said. "Now I've got someone to be with 24 hours a day." Sheffield began the wedding night N071 RW FIRST LADY WASHINGTON (AP) -- FIRST LADY BETT FORD WISHED GOOD LUCK TODAY TO WASHINGTON BALLERINA SANDRA FORTUNE, WHO WILL PARTICIPATE NEXT MONTH IN INTERNATIONAL BALLET COMPETITION IN VARNA, BULGARIA. MRS. FORD MET THE 25-YEAR-OLD MEMBER OF THE CAPITAL BALLET CO. AT THE WHITE HOUSE AND PRESENTED HER A LETTER IN WHICH SHE AND PRESIDENT FORD OFFERED THEIR WISHES FOR SUCCESS. ''YOU WILL INDEED BEAUTIFULLY REPRESENT THE UNITED STATES AND THE VITALITY OF THE ARTS IN OUR NATION,' THE LETTER SAID. MRS. FORD LATER FLEW TO PLYMOUTH, MASS., TO PARTICIPATE IN A BICENTENNIAL SALUTE TO WOMEN WHO PLAYED A ROLE IN THE FOUNDING OF THE NATION. AFTER THE PLYMOUTH EVENT, THE FIRST LADY PLANNED TO VISIT HER SON, MICHAEL AND DAUGHTER-IN-LAW GAYLE IN ESSEX, MASS., RETURNING TO WASHINGTON THURSDAY. 06-29-76 13:35EDT WASHINGTON (UPI) -- FIRST LADY BETTY FORD CONGRATULATED SANDRA FORTUNE TODAY ON THE WASHINGTON BALLERINA 'S SELECTION AS AN AMERICAN ENTRANT IN THE BIANNUAL INTERNATIONAL BALLET COMPETITION IN VARNA, BULGARIA, NEXT MONTH. MRS. FORD, A FORMER DANCER, MET MISS FORTUNE AI THE WHITE HOUSE AND BUT WORTHWHILE" COMPETITION. THE LETTER ALSO RELAYED PRESIDENT FORD PRESENTED HER WITH A LETTER WISHING HER SUCCESS IN THE "DIFFICULT 'S BEST WISHES. MRS. FORD THEN LEFT FOR PLYMOUTH, MASS., TO ATTEND A BICENTENNIAL "REMEMBER THE LADIES" EVENT. AIDES SAID SHE WILL RETURN JULY 1 AFTER SPENDING SOME DAYS WITH HER SON MIKE, A THEOLOGY STUDENT, AND HIS WIFE, IN BOSTON. PLYMOUTH, MASS. (UPI) -- MRS. BETTY FORD HAS PAID SPECIAL TRIBUTE TO THE "FOUNDING MOTHERS" OF AMERICA IN A VISIT TO PLYMOUTH, THE HISTORIC OCEANSIDE TOWN WHERE THE PILGRIMS LANDED IN 1620. JOINING MRS. FORD WERE MASSACHUSETTS FIRST LADY KATHERINE "KITTY" DUKAKIS, MRS. JOAN KENNEDY, MRS. NANCY KISSINGER AND U.S. REP. MARGARET HECKLER, R -MASS. THE FIRST LADY 'S VISIT TUESDAY WAS IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE OPENING OF A BICENTENNIAL ART EXHIBIT: REMEMBER THE LADIES -- WOMEN IN AMERICA 1750-1815." "WE ARE HERE IN PLYMOUTH WHERE THE PILGRIMS LANDED; WE ARE HERE TO HONOR THE UNS UNG WOMEN WHO HELPED WIN OUR INDEPENDENCE, MRS. FORD SAID IN REMARKS AT DEDICATION CEREMONIES FOR THE EXHIBIT. THE EXHIBIT IS COMMERCIALLY SPONSORED WITH FUNDING FROM THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENTS FOR THE ARIS AND HUMANITIES. K B BETTY) THE PREVIEW AND CEREMONIAL LUNCHEON FOR A BICENTENNIAL ART EXHIBITION JUNE AT 29 PLYMOUTH, MASS. (UPI) -- MRS. FORD WILL BE THE GUEST AT A PLYMOUTH YACHT CLUB. MARGARET KITTY DUKAKIS, WIFE OF MASSACHUSETTTS GOV. MICHAEL DUKAKIS, JOINING THE FIRST LADY WILL BE JOAN KENNEDY, NANCY KISSINGER, THE HECKLER, R -MASS., AND NEW YORK LT. GOV. MARY ANN REP. THE COUNTRY 'S REVOLUTIONARY ERA. EXHIBITION HIGHLIGHTS THE ROLE OF THE FOUNDING MOTHERS KRUPSAK. DURING HUMANITIES. INC., FUNDING FROM THE NATIONNAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS AND THE WITH EXHIBITION IS JOINTLY SPONSORED BY CLAIROL AND PHILLIP MORRIS, UPI 06-22 03:14 PED UP - 117 P R B CORRESPONDENTS : MEDIA REPRENTATIVES WISHING TO COVER BETTY FORD 'S APPEARANCE AT A BICENTENNIAL ART EXHIBIT IN PLYMOUTH, MASS., NEXT TUESDAY, MUST SUBMIT CREDENTIAL REQUESTS TO CAROL SORELL AT RUDER AND FINN FINE ARTS BY 5 P.M. FRIDAY. CALL: (212) 593-6333, (212) 593-6433, (212) 593-5473. THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS REQUIRED : NAME, AFFILIATION, SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER OR PASSPORT NUMBER, DATE AND PLACE OF BIRTH, BUSINESS AND HOME PHONE NUMBERS. THE REQUEST MAY BE PHONED IN BETWEEN 9:30A .M. AND 5:30P.M. THROUGH FRIDAY. CREDENTIALS MUST BE PICKED UP IN PERSON BETWEEN 10 A .M. AND NOON NEXT TUESDAY AT THE LIBRARY AT PILGRIM HALL IN PLYMOUTH. UPI 06-22 05:28 PED UP - 297 R B CORRESPO NDENTS: NEXT WEEK AT THE WHITE HOUSE : PRESIDENT FORD RETURNS TO WASHINGTON FROM PUERTO RICO LATE MONDAY EVENING, AND PLUNGES ALMOST IMMEDIATELY INTO A ROUND OF BICENTENNIAL ACTIVITIES THAT WILL KEEP HIM HOPPING FOR THE BETTER PART OF A WEEK. HIS SCHEDULE LISTS AN EVEN DOZEN EVENTS BETWEEN THURSDAY AND THE FOLLOWING WEDNESDAY THAT ART CONNECTED WITH THE OBSERVANCE OF THE NATION'S 23TH BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY. IN BETWEEN FORD 'S RETURN FROM THE SAN JUAN ECONOMIC SUMMIT AND HIS ROUND OF RICE TENNIAL ACTIVITIES BUSINNING THURSDAY, THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE WILL MEST VITH JAPANESE PRIME MINISTER TAKEO MIKI, PROBABLY VETO A BILL HE VIIDED BEFORE, AND LIKELY WILL FIND TIME TO DISCUSS HIS ELECTION CAMPAIGN WITH TOP POLITICAL AIDES. THE BILL THAT FORD IS EXPECTED TO KICK BACK TO CONGRESS IS THE PUBLIC WORKS -JOBS DILL THAT HE VETOED IN DIFFERENT FORM LAST FESRUARY. A JOBS REPORT, THE ONTHLY LABOR DEPARTMENT SURVEY OF THE NATION 3 EMPLOYED AND UNEMPLOYED, IS TO DE ISSUED AT THE END OF NEXT WEEK AND PROBABLY WILL BRING COMMENT FROM THE WHITE HOUSE. ANOTHER REPORT RELATING TO THE ECONOMY OF BOTH THE NATION AND THE WORLD IS TO BE ISSUED IN SAN JUAN THIS MONDAY AT THE CONCLUSION OF THE ECONOMUC SUMMIT. IT IS REPORTED THAT FORD MAY HOLD A NEWS CONFERENCE IN SAN JUAN AT THE CONCLUSION OF THE MESTERN WORLD CONFERENCE. IN CONNECTION WITH THE BICENTERMIAL, THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE 'S SCHEDULE CALLS FOR TWO MAJOR EVENTS ON THURSDAY: THE MORNING DEDICATION OF THE NEW SMITHSONIAN AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM, AND THE NOON OPENING OF THE CENTENNIAL SAFE AT THE CAPITOL. THE NEXT DAY THE PRESIDENT GOES TO THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES FOR A CEREMONY PLACING THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE AND SIMILAR NATIONAL TREASURES ON CONTINUOUS PUBLIC DISPLAY OVER A THREE DAY PERIOD. THEN ON SATURDAY, JULY 3, HE WILL HEAD UP CUESTS ATTENDING AN "HO NOR AMERICA" CEREMONY AI THE KENNEDY CENTER WHICH IS TO FEATURE MANY OF THE NATION'S OUTSTANDING STAGE, SCREEN AND IV ENTERTAINERS. AT THE BEGINNING OF THE FOLLOWING WEEK, THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE STILL WILL DE GOING STRONG ON THE DICENTERNIAL, ATTENDING JULY 4 CHURCH SERVICES HERE, VISITING VALLEY FORGE, PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK ; AND THEN PACK TO THE WHITE HOUSE TO WATCH THE MONUMENT GROUNDS FIREWORKS AND THE LANDING OF THE VIKING SPACECRAFT ON MARS. OTHER BICENTENNIAL EVENTS TO FOLLOW INCLUDE A MATURALIZATION CEREMONY AT MONTICELLO AND GREETINGS TO ENGLAND 'S QUEEN WHO WILL BEGIN HER AMERICAN BIRTHDAY VISIT WEEK AFTER NEXT. ANOTHER ROYAL COUPLE WILL VISIT THE FORDS NEXT WEEK -- NORWAY'S CROWN PRINCE HAROLD AND PRINCESS SONJA WHO WILL CALL AT THE WHITE HOUSE ON FRIDAY. PETTY HAS ONE EVENT ON HER SCHEDULE NEXT WEEK PRECEEDING THE PROGRAM OF SICENTENNIAL EVENTS THAT SHE WILL ATTEND WITH THE PRESIDENT. ON TUESDAY THE FIRST LADY FLIES IO PLYMOUTH, MASS., TO ATTEND CEREMONIES COMMENORATING THE LANDING OF THE NATION'S FOREFATHERS 01 THAT CITY'S FAMOUS ROCK. UPI 06-25 13:33 PED First lady to arrive Tuesday for 'Remember the Ladies' opening By MARY NELL NAUGHTON have been at work, throughout the Hall, scheduled for 2:30 p.m. The ex- through the efforts of Mrs. Henry Bran- PLYMOUTH- The First Lady, Betty winter and spring, on a variety of com- hibit will be open to the public on don, Manters Point and a large commit- Ford, will officiate at ribbon-cutting mittees and are in charge of the lun- Wednesday, June 30. tee of celebrities and local individuals. ceremonies here on Tuesday opening cheon. "Remember The Ladies" is a collec- In Plymouth the fund-raising commit- Old Colony Memorial Serving Plymouth, Carver, Kingston and Duxbury, Massachusetts Vol. No. CLIV 42 Pages in 4 Sections Plus Supplement Thursday, June 24, 1976 Whole Number 7997 25 cents Carver approves school plans Mrs. Ford Helps 'Remember th By JUDY KLEMESRUD tion," Mrs. Ford said, shortly courage to seek equal rights Alison Buckholtz, which said Special to The New York Times before cutting a white ribbon for women today." in part, "Why can't women PLYMOUTH, Mass., June marking the opening of the The hecklers carried signs be equal? Men are. Why can't 29-Three of Washington's exhibition, "and to focus at- reading "Stop ERA" and women? Men say women can't most prominent political tion on the unfinished busi- "Equal Rights Amendment be equal. That's not fair to wives-Betty Ford, Nancy ness of our revolution for Stamps Out the Family," and girls and women. I'm going Kissinger and Joan Kennedy full freedom and justice for they occasionally chanted, to write to the Governor so -gathered on the steps of women." "Go away, ERA." Advocates he can change the law." Pilgrim Hall here today for Mrs. Ford, who was dressed of the amendment countered The exhibition, housed on the opening of a major Bi- in a white knit dress by by chanting "ERA, all the two floors of Pilgrim Hall centennia] exhibition about Gloria-Sachs, drew mild boos way." and in the nearby Antiquari- Revolutionary War era wo- from a small group of anti- Protesters Chant ERA demonstrators in the an House, consists of 213 ob- men, called "Remember the The protesters broke into Ladies." crowd of about 1,000 persons jects dealing with American gathered in front of the hall, the chant again after Mrs. women-rich and poor, black, "We're here to honor the when she said, "This exhibit Ford finished reading a letter white and Indian-and their unsung women who helped about neglected Americans to President Ford from a 61/2- to win our national revolu- should give us strength and year-old South Carolina girl, lives in the period between 1750 and 1815. Why did the planners stop at 1815 rather tha going up to the present? "Because we wanted to show what revolutionary era women were like," said Linda Grant Depauw, the exhibi- tion's historian. "It was a time when all women were working in the same occupa- tions as men, and had equal pay and far more legal free- dom and political rights than our own time. They were more liberated than at any time since." This all changed when the Industrial Revolution came along," she said. "The afflu- ence that occurred turned them into dependent women," she said. The exhibition will be at Plymouth, the landing place of the Pilgrims, through Sept. 26, and then will move out to Atlanta, Washington, Chicago, Austin, Tex., and New York where it will end on June 15, 1977. 'A Dull Life' In includes a number of portraits of the period's out- standing women, including Abigail Adams, Martha Wash- ington, and Mercy Otis War- ren. There are ball gowns and a maternity dress, as well as a 17th-century sex manual published in Philadel- phia, a wig curler, an 18th- century Hanuukah lamp, Christnia Gatler's testimony of rape by British soldiers during the Revolutionary War and an exhibit of cloth- ing worn by the war's camp followers. Near Martha Washington's portrait is a portion of a let- ter she wrote while First The New York Times/Arthur Grace Lady to a cousin in Virginia, Betty Ford pauses at a display of an 18th-century which says, in part: "I live a very dull life here and corset at "Remember the Ladies" exhibition in Plymouth, know nothing that passes in the town-I never go to any- publick place-indeed Ithink Mass. "I'm just grateful I didn't have to live in I am more like a state pris- oner than anything else that day," she said. "I would never be able to get ready." The display of a woman being trussed into one of the 2 D.Y.Time/30/76 e Ladies' of Revolutionary Era tight corsets of the period sherbert in the Plymouth of John and Abigail Adams. especially appealed to her caused Mrs. Ford to laugh Yacht Club. Mrs. Kennedy, who was was "how the ordinary wom-sub during her tour of the exhibi- Another executive, David wearing a white sheath en lived in those days." tion this afternoon. Mahoney, chief executive of- dress with a red and blue Among the other promin- "I'm just grateful I didn't ficer of Norton Simon, re- stripe running around it, and ent guests at the festivities have to live in that day," fused to join the head table, Mrs. Kissinger, who was were representative Margaret she said. "I would never be where he was supposed to wearing a white dress with Heckler of Massachusetts, 5.22 able to get ready." sit by Mrs. Kissinger, after navy polka dots, were said Elly Peterson and Liz Car- At a nearby statue of Molly he was late for the grand to have ben extremely valu- penter, co-chairmen of E. R. Pitcher, Mrs. Ford was told entrance and was then forc- able in raising money for America, and Kitty Dukakis, by Conover Hunt, the exhibi- ibly stopped by Secret Serv- the exhibition. wife of the Massachusetts leport on Page 31 TELEPHONE 426-3000 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1976 44 Betty Ford comes to Plymouth Whi to help U.S. 'Remember the Ladies' to Mayor Kevin H. Whit state and federal officials ] ly divided city back toget "I understand and I city with compulsory bus black or white, enjoys see mote neighborhoods." It was White's first m in two years, a state-wide He outlined an eight-point mendations recently submitte Violence, to upgrade job oppor a high student dropout rate. Included in the program is of expanding the size of the Sch control of the schools out of th cluding ending federal receiver School. He will demand area col stantial numbers" of scholarsh graduates and request busine prentice programs for the city "To deal with violence, w pansion of police personnel," h 'We need jobs and educatio which takes money from Bost pours it into Texas or Califori "We want no more lecture We know them too well," he (Continued on Pa Phase 2 says school politics ha By ALAN EI Boston students are crippl competent and disorganized tion, burdened with political p red-tape, a spokesman for th volved in Phase 2 said yester Robert J. Lamphere, vice Mutual Life Insurance Co., hasn't even scratched the S students for the world of wo PILGRIM GIRL-Alexandra Wentworth, 11, of Plymouth kisses First Lady Betty Ford. As chairman of the Tri-l Staff Photo by Kevin Cole Education, Inc., Lamphere he firms and three consortia paire 'We have unfinished business' under Phase 2. In an exclusive interview can, Lamphere made these 0 By BONNIE SELWAY faced Secret Service men a little after noon, was greeted warmly by a crowd of 1000 and stopped to talk The school system lac} First Lady Betty Ford opened a Bicentennial wom- to a Girl Scout troop which presented her a hand- and competent top-level per en's art exhibit, "Remember the Ladies," in Plymouth made doll. really happen." After a year yesterday and called for equal rights for women. ministration of Supt. Marion She had lunch at the Plymouth Yacht Club and munity finds itself without : A-2 The Washington Star Friday, July 16, 1976 Names/Faces News of the Widow Truman Bess Truman, widow of President Harry S. Truman, has been hospitalized in Kansas City for treatment of arthritis. She is 91. She is said to be in good condition. Since the death of her hus- Tropicana stockholders. The devil's in there some- place. Strange In Plymouth, Mass., the Board of Selectmen has finally come up with the $75 to pay for a gift it present- ed to Betty Ford during her Bicentennial visit in June. The town finance committee had refused to transfer Past 7/1/76 Actress Elizabeth Taylor dances with a member of the Strolling Trou- badors, Leslie Hurley, at the Lincoln Memorial. Personalities Elizabeth Taylor was back in town After she spoke, some women in the yesterday, this time with Iranian Am- audience began chanting "Go away, bassador Ardeshir Zahedi nowhere in ERA." About a dozen protestors car- sight. ried placards lettered "Stop ERA." (R-III.). mence. emailed was the only umng I regret. I realized after 14 months in Betty Ford was booed by a group of this country the value of money, anti-feminist demonstrators in Plym- whether it's clean or dirty." outh, Mass., yesterday as she lobbied for the passage of the Equal Rights Heart Surgeon Dr. Michael De- Amendment. Bakey says an artificial heart will be The First Lady had viewed at Pil- available by the turn of the grim Hall a Bicentennial exhibit century. King Carl Gustav and his called "Remember the Ladies" and new Queen Silvia went through Lon- said, "This exhibit about those forgot- don customs with their fellow air- ten ladies should give us the courage plane passengers, declining VIP to seek equal rights for the women to- facilities. day." -Tom Zito