The White House was rocking on the night of Saturday, May 31, 1975, for the Holton-Arms School senior prom. Susan Ford, the 17-year-old daughter of the 38th president of the United States, did the bump and the hustle in the East Room until one A.M., along with her classmates and their dates.
It was the only prom ever to be held at the executive mansion, which makes it an odd event in White House social history, right up there with President Andrew Jackson’s cheese party of 1835, which saw some 10,000 visitors gobbling up a wheel of cheddar that weighed nearly 1,400 pounds, and John F. Kennedy’s more exclusive skinny-dipping shindigs in the White House pool.
Susan had been a student at the Holton-Arms School, an academy for girls in Bethesda, Maryland, since her freshman year. The members of the class of ’75 paid the cost of the prom
— $1,300—after raising funds at bake sales and school fairs.
Tablecloths were made out of floral pink-and-yellow sheets. The menu included those staples of 1970s cuisine, Swedish meatballs and quiche, as well as a nonalcoholic punch made of tea, lemonade, soda, grape juice, and sugar. Susan and her classmates assembled the centerpieces—candles in a setting of daisies, tulips, lilies, sweet peas, and ming fern.
“The girls wore long dresses, light makeup, casual hairdos, and, in many cases, orchid corsages,” the Associated Press reported. “Many of their escorts, in black or white tuxedos, wore boutonnieres and below-the-collar length hair.” An AP wire photo accompanying articles that ran nationwide captured Susan and her date dancing (butt) cheek to (butt) cheek, along with a caption noting that the young couple was doing “the new dance, the bump.”
“Susan, at that age, was strikingly beautiful,” says Sally Alexander, a retired English teacher at Holton-Arms, who was one of six chaperones. “And it’s a great deal of fun to watch a bunch of beautiful young girls with handsome young men, all dressed up. They were clearly excited about being where they were, but they were not uncomfortably awed. It was a beautiful affair.”
Lady, Betty Ford, were en route from Belgium to Spain as part of a diplomatic tour of Europe. In their place was the president’s sister-in-law, Janet Ford, “a small figure in a white lace dress, casting a tolerant but observant eye on the proceedings,” as The New York Times described her.
Security was not what it is now. There were no bomb-sniffing dogs or counterterrorism agents on the grounds. Still, those who planned to attend had to provide their names, birth dates, and Social Security numbers, for Secret Service review, by April 15.
It's simple. It's creamy. It's crunchy. It's our Creamy Crunchy Onion Bake, and it's going to impress everyone, including you. Oh yeah, we hope you're ready to get blown away by this deliciously easy onion casserole.
- 4 large sweet onions, thinly sliced
- 1 stick butter
- 1/8 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 sleeve (about 30) buttery crackers, crushed
- 1 teaspoon soy sauce
- 1 (10-1/2-ounce) can cream of mushroom soup
- 1 (8-ounce) can evaporated milk
- 2 cups shredded Cheddar cheese
- Preheat oven to 350º.
- In a skillet, melt butter and saute onions about 10 minutes, or until clear. Add salt and pepper; set aside.
- In a large bowl, mix together crushed crackers, soy sauce, soup, and milk. Stir in the onions then pour into a 2-quart casserole dish. Sprinkle with cheese.
- Bake 25 to 30 minutes, or until hot and bubbly. Serve immediately.
1934 – Sparky Anderson, American baseball manager (d. 2010)
Margaritas can be served on the rocks (shaken with ice), frozen (blended with ice), or straight up (without ice).
Legends
- 1 ounce tequila
- Dash of Triple Sec
- Juice of 1/2 lime or lemon