Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Advocate for vaccinatio­ns, 93

Betty Bumpers also backed limiting nuclear weapons

- By Ken Miller Associated Press

Betty Bumpers, a former Arkansas first lady who advocated for childhood immunizati­ons nationwide and pushed for limiting nuclear arms proliferat­ion, has died. She was 93.

Bumpers, long married to former Arkansas governor and four-term U.S. Sen. Dale Bumpers, died Friday at her home in Little Rock following a recent fall and complicati­ons with dementia, according to her daughter, Brooke Bumpers.

After her husband became governor in 1971, Betty Bumpers pushed childhood immunizati­ons in Arkansas and later advised other states on her efforts. She worked with former first lady Rosalynn Carter on a national childhood immunizati­on program during the late 1970s, and later with fellow former Arkansas first lady Hillary Clinton.

In 1982, she founded Peace Links with other congressio­nal wives. The organizati­on sought to bring together women in the United States and in the then-soviet Union to help reduce the proliferat­ion of nuclear weapons and to promote non-violent resolution­s to world conflicts.

“She just felt strongly she should take advantage of the opportunit­ies presented to her,” Brooke Bumpers said Saturday. “Children were particular­ly important to her, both in her immunizati­on efforts and for peace.”

Brooke Bumpers said Peace Links was the result of conversati­ons prompted by a question she asked her mother after she left for college: “If there’s a nuclear war, how would we all find each other?”

“At the time there were (nuclear) missiles in Arkansas,” she said. “She was just so horrified she had a child that was growing up with these fears and thoughts, and she thought it was just insane.”

Former President Bill Clinton, also a former Arkansas governor, and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton released a statement calling Bumpers “a remarkable person.”

“She and Hillary worked together in Arkansas and across the country to expand early childhood immunizati­ons,” the Clintons said. “Betty was an early, effective voice against nuclear proliferat­ion, a cause she championed when it was popular and when it wasn’t.”

Along with her daughter, Betty Bumpers is survived by her sons,

Brent and Bill, and seven grandchild­ren.

Dale Bumpers died Jan. 1, 2016.

 ?? Kevin Rivoli / Associated Press ?? Betty Bumpers speaks after being inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame on Oct. 8, 2005, in Seneca Falls. Fellow-inductee Hillary Clinton is pictured to the right. Bumpers, wife of former Arkansas governor and four-term U.S. Sen. Dale Bumpers, died at her home in Little Rock.
Kevin Rivoli / Associated Press Betty Bumpers speaks after being inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame on Oct. 8, 2005, in Seneca Falls. Fellow-inductee Hillary Clinton is pictured to the right. Bumpers, wife of former Arkansas governor and four-term U.S. Sen. Dale Bumpers, died at her home in Little Rock.

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