In 1970, she married Richard Friedman. The couple met when she interviewed him
during his mayoral race against
Richard J. Daley. Friedman testified before Congress in 1972 regarding her experience of credit discrimination and bias after her marriage. Prior to her marriage, Friedman had established nine years of credit history, which was dissolved once she reported her marital status. Complaints to congressional members inspired a bi-partisan panel to sponsor the hearings based on sex discrimination. Upon marriage, she requested updates to her existing credit cards with her name and address change. The companies, as in the case of
Bonwit Teller, either closed her accounts or, as was the case with
Marshall Field's, required her to reapply for credit using her husband's information. "Marriage had made me a non person," she reported. One company,
American Express, stopped sending her bills directly and instead sent them to her husband. He requested that the company send them directly to her as they had before the marriage. While Lueloff Friedman kept making payments, the company did not accept them as the account had been changed to her husband's name. The hearings resulted in Congress passing the
Equal Credit Opportunity Act, signed into law by President
Gerald Ford on October 28, 1974. == Personal life and death ==