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Obama told radio host Tom Joyner that his mother-in-law has been having fun hanging out with Betty Currie, former President Bill Clinton's personal secretary, and using the president's box at the Kennedy Center. She recently saw the Alvin Ailey dance troupe there. Mrs. Obama jokes that her mother has gotten so busy doing her own thing that "pretty soon she's going to come and say,
'You know, I can't pick up those kids. I've got so much going on.'" Those kids were a big reason the Obamas wanted Mrs. Robinson to move in with them. She had become kind of a surrogate parent to the girls because their own parents traveled so much during the 2008 presidential campaign
-- their mother mostly on day trips, their father for longer stretches at a time. A gold medalist in the 50-meter and 100-meter runs in the 1997 Illinois Senior Olympics, Mrs. Robinson retired from her job as a secretary at a bank to shuttle them to play dates and after-school activities. She helped her granddaughters get settled in a new city, a new home and new schools. Like their grandmother, Chicago is the only place they had ever lived. And although she spoke last summer of "beginning to feel left out" because the girls are growing up, she remains an important presence in their lives, as much as they are in hers. Mrs. Robinson's other three grandchildren live out West, where son Craig is the head men's basketball coach at Oregon State University. He has a teenage son and daughter, Avery and Leslie, and 6-week-old son Austin. Her husband, Fraser, who worked swing shifts at Chicago's water plant despite crippling multiple sclerosis, died in 1991. Mrs. Robinson's move to the White House puts the Obamas in the same category with at least 1 million American families in which the head of the household shares the home with both his or her parents and children, according to AARP, which represents people age 50 and older. Many of these arrangements aren't because the grandparent can't live on their own anymore, but because being there somehow makes life better, said Elinor Ginzler, AARP's senior vice president for livable communities. That includes looking after grandchildren. Multigenerational living arrangements are becoming more common, rising to 6.2 million households in 2008, up from 5 million in 2000. Having presidential relatives living in the White House isn't new. Mrs. Robinson is just the latest to do so. Ulysses S. Grant's father-in-law, Frederick Dent, lived there for a few years. Harry S. Truman's mother-in-law, Madge Gates Wallace, moved in despite her dislike for Truman. Woodrow Wilson's second wife, Edith, had both her mother, Sally Bolling, and sister, Bertha, live with them.
[Associated
Press;
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