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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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these points were outlined by Yarborough during a campaign speech of September 18,<br />

1964, with the title "Higher Education as it relates to our national purpose."<br />

As chairman of the veterans' subcommittee, Yarborough authored the Cold War GI Bill<br />

of Rights, which sought to extend the benefits accorded veterans of World War II and<br />

Korea, and which was to apply to servicemen on duty between January, 1955 and July 1,<br />

1965. For these veterans Yarborough proposed readjustment assistance, educational and<br />

vocational training, and loan assistance to allow veterans to purchase homes and farms at<br />

a maximum interest rate of 5.25% per annum. This bill was finally passed after years of<br />

dogged effort by Yarborough against the opposition of Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy,<br />

and Johnson. Yarborough was instrumental in obtaining a five year extension of the Hill-<br />

Burton act, which provided 4,000 additional beds in Veterans Administration Hospitals.<br />

In physical improvements, Yarborough supported appropriations for coastal navigation.<br />

He fought for $29 million for the Rural Electrification Administration for counties in the<br />

Corpus Christi area alone. In eleven counties in that part of Texas, Yarborough had<br />

helped obtain federal grants for $4.5 million and loans of $.64 million under the Kennedy<br />

Administration accelerated public works projects program to provide clean water and<br />

sewers for towns and cities that could not otherwise afford them. Concerning his<br />

committment to this type of infrastructure, Yarborough commented to a dinner in Corpus<br />

Christi: "<strong>The</strong>se are the projects, along with the ship channels, dams and reservoirs, water<br />

research programs, hurricane and flood control programs that bring delegations of city<br />

officials, members of county court, members of river and watershed authorities, co-op<br />

delegations, into my office literally by the thousands year after year for aid, which is<br />

always given, never refused." Yarborough went on: "While our efforts and achievements<br />

are largely unpublicized...there is satisfaction beyond acclaim when a small town without<br />

a water system is enabled to provide its people for the first time with water and<br />

sewerage...when the course of a river is shored up a little to save a farmer's crops, when a<br />

freeway opens up new avenues of commerce." [fn 6] In the area of oil policy, always<br />

vital in Texas, Yarborough strained to give the industry everything it could reasonably<br />

expect, and more. Despite this, he was implacably hated by many business circles. In<br />

short, Ralph Yarborough had a real committment to racial and economic justice, and was,<br />

all in all, among the best that the post-New Deal Democratic Party had to offer. Certainly<br />

there were weaknesses: one of the principal ones was to veer in the direction of<br />

environmentalism. Here Yarborough was the prime mover behind the Endangered<br />

Species Act.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> moved to Houston in 1959, bringing the corporate headquarters of Zapata Offshore<br />

with him. Houston was by far the biggest city in Texas, a center of the corporate<br />

bureaucracies of firms doing business in the oil patch. <strong>The</strong>re was also the Baker and Botts<br />

law firm, which would function in effect as part of the <strong>Bush</strong> family network, since Baker<br />

and Botts were the lawyers who had been handling the affiars of the Harriman railroad<br />

interests in the southwest. One prominent lawyer in Houston at the time was James Baker<br />

III, a scion of the family enshrined in the Baker and Botts name, but himself a partner in<br />

another firm because of the so-called anti- nepotism rule that prevented the children of<br />

Baker and Botts partners from joining the firm themselves. Soon <strong>Bush</strong> would be hobnobbing<br />

with Baker and other representatives of the Houston oligarchy, of the Hobby and

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