Maybe meeting with the 'generals' of
war ... during his Presidency had an
effect upon his health?
Jan 18, 2006
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. - Former
President Gerald R. Ford could be released from
a hospital Thursday if he continues to respond
well to treatment for
pneumonia,
his chief of staff said.
His hospitalization Saturday
marked the second time in five weeks that Ford,
92, has been admitted to Eisenhower Medical
Center near his Thunderbird Estates home.
“Decisions regarding his
discharge are made on a day-to-day basis, and if
all continues to improve, we anticipate his date
of discharge as Thursday,” Ford’s chief of
staff, Penny Circle, said in a brief statement
Tuesday.
Based on his age, it was felt
that Ford should receive intravenous antibiotics
at the hospital, Circle said Monday.
In mid-December, Ford
underwent routine tests at Eisenhower and was
hospitalized overnight because of what Circle
called “a
horrible cold.” It was not clear if the
cold led to the bout with pneumonia, she said.
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Kevin Lamarque /
Reuters
|
Former President Gerald Ford, seen
in 2000
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On Aug 6, 2000 it was reported that former
Pres Gerald R. Ford had successful surgery to
relieve swelling in his tongue. (Thought to be
from a rare bacterial infection)
In Sept 2000, Ford suffered
two small strokes
while attending the Republican National
Convention in Philadelphia and spent about a
week in the hospital. Doctors said there was no
apparent brain damage. Three years later, he was
hospitalized for a night for
dizziness.
Ford became the nation’s
oldest living former president with the death of
Ronald Reagan in June 2004. Reagan was 93.
July 14, 1913
Born Leslie Lynch King Jr., the son of
Leslie Lynch King and Dorothy Ayer
Gardner King, in Omaha, Neb. The Kings
separate two weeks later, and his mother
takes him to Grand Rapids, Mich., to
live with her parents. On Feb. 1, 1916,
his mother marries Gerald R. Ford, a
Grand Rapids paint salesman. They begin
calling the boy Gerald R. Ford Jr. His
name is legally changed Dec. 3, 1935.
|
June 1935
Graduates from the University of
Michigan with majors in economics and
political science. Played center and
linebacker for the Wolverines football
team. Turns down contract offers from
the Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers
of the National Football League,
deciding instead to attend Yale
University Law School. |
1941
Receives law degree from Yale. |
1942
Leaves legal practice in Grand Rapids to
join the Navy Reserve, receiving a
commission as an ensign. Serves aboard
the light aircraft carrier USS Monterey
until the ship is severely damaged in a
typhoon and fire. Spends the rest of the
war ashore. |
February 1946
Discharged from the Navy with the rank
of lieutenant commander. |
Oct. 15, 1948
Marries Elizabeth Ann Bloomer Warren, a
department store fashion consultant.
|
Nov. 2, 1948
Elected to the House of Representatives.
In that election and his 12 subsequent
re-elections, always receives more than
60 percent of the vote. |
Nov. 29, 1963
Appointed by President Johnson to the
Warren Commission investigating the
assassination of President John F.
Kennedy. He is the last remaining member
of the commission. |
January 1965
Elected minority leader of the House of
Representatives. |
Dec. 6, 1973
Confirmed as nation’s 40th vice
president after selection by President
Richard Nixon to replace Spiro Agnew
after Agnew resigned. Agnew had pleaded
no contest to a charge of income tax
evasion. |
Aug. 9, 1974
Sworn in as 38th president after Nixon’s
resignation. He is the only president
not to have been elected either
president or vice president. |
Aug. 20, 1974
Nominates former New York Gov. Nelson
Rockefeller to be vice president. |
Sept. 8, 1974
Pardons Richard Nixon for any “crimes he
committed or may have committed.” |
November 1974
Reaches tentative agreement with Soviet
leader Leonid Brezhnev on limiting the
number of U.S. and Soviet nuclear
delivery systems at a summit in
Vladivostok, Russia. |
April 1975
Orders the evacuation of the last U.S.
personnel from Vietnam. War officially
ends April 24, 1975. |
May 1975
Orders a military response when
Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge regime seizes the
merchant ship SS Mayaguez on May 12 and
removes its crew. The 30-member Mayaguez
crew is freed, but 64 U.S. service
people are killed and 50 injured. It is
believed that about 60 Khmer Rouge
soldiers are killed. |
May 28, 1975
Signs Threshold Test Ban Treaty with the
Soviet Union’s Leonid Brezhnev
prohibiting underground nuclear weapons
tests exceeding 150 kilotons. |
Aug. 1, 1975
Signs the Helsinki Accords, recognizing
existing frontiers between states in
Eastern Europe, including between East
and West Germany, in exchange for
concessions from the Soviet Union on
human rights, travel and dissemination
of information. |
Sept. 5, 1975
Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme, a follower of
imprisoned cult leader Charles Manson,
points a gun at Ford as he shakes hands
in Sacramento, Calif. No shots are
fired. |
Sept. 22, 1975
Radical Sara Jane Moore tries
unsuccessfully to shoot Ford outside the
St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco.
|
Dec. 1, 1975
Nominates John Paul Stevens as Supreme
Court associate justice. Stevens is
confirmed by the Senate Dec. 19. |
Nov. 2, 1976
With Bob Dole as running mate, loses
presidential election to Democrat Jimmy
Carter. |
Jan. 20, 1977
Leaves office upon inauguration of Jimmy
Carter. |
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..... a meeting ...... |
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Did meeting with the 'Generals of war'
cause him to have exposures that might
have led to ill health?
.....
such as those with Chronic Fatigue
Immune Disfunction have? |
|
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http://www.valdezlink.com/re/msn/oddsnends/presgeraldford.htm
VERY HIGH White Blood
Cell Counts
(advanced
anemia)
*
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Not
just a virus or cold?
* |
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Health Changes
like CFIDS after flu
* |
THE Fatigue
AIHA of CFIDS is proof EGBE is the root cause -
Lots of Issues -
January/08 summary
|
The Proper View of CFIDS, CFS, FM, ME
Our Nation has a Wrong
View of Health Care
http://www.valdezlink.com/re/healthcare2.htm |