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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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5. "<strong>Bush</strong> Dismisses Gorbachov Complaint," Washington Post, April 8, 1989.<br />

6. "Reagan Is Concerned About <strong>Bush</strong>'s Indecision," Washington Post, May 6, 1989.<br />

7. "<strong>Bush</strong> Rebukes Critics of Arms Policy," Washington Post, September 19, 1989.<br />

8. "<strong>Bush</strong> Hails 'Dramatic' Decision," Washington Post, November 10, 1989.<br />

9. "<strong>Bush</strong>: <strong>The</strong> Secret Presidency," Newsweek, January 1, 1990.<br />

10. "Berlin and <strong>Bush</strong>'s Emotional Wall," Washington Post, November 14, 1989.<br />

11. "Text of President <strong>Bush</strong>'s Address," Washington Post, November 23, 1989.<br />

12. People, April 9, 1990.<br />

13. See "Tracking Thyroid Problems," Washington Times, May 29, 1991. This article, anxious to prevent<br />

the reader from associating the broccoli outburst with the mental and thryoid problems of the spring of<br />

1990, hastens to add: "<strong>The</strong>re is no evidence that lack of broccoli causes Graves disease." Graves disease<br />

was the official White House lable for <strong>Bush</strong>'s thyroid malady, which medical professionals without political<br />

axes to grind have tended to classify as Basedow's disease.<br />

14. "Transcript of <strong>Bush</strong>-Gorbachov News Conference," Washington Post,> June 4, 1990.<br />

15. Jim Hoagland, "<strong>The</strong> Deal Behind the Summit," Washington Post, June 5, 1990.<br />

16. See "Marshall Says He Never Heard of <strong>Bush</strong>'s Nominee," New York Times, July 27, 1990; "Marshall<br />

Slams Gavel on Souter," Washington Times, July 27, 1990. At about the same time that Marshall quit, Rep.<br />

William Gray of Philadelphia, the Democratic Majority Whip, announced his resignation from the House to<br />

become the president of the United Negro College Fund. Gray had been under heavy police state attack<br />

from the FBI, and was hounded from office. Within a few weeks, <strong>Bush</strong> had disposed of the top-ranking<br />

black officials of both the legislative and judicial branches of government.<br />

17. Hobart Rowen, "A Near-Depression," Washington Post, January 10, 1991.<br />

18. "<strong>Bush</strong> Opens Door to Tax-Hike Talks," Washington Post, May 8, 1990.<br />

19. Alan Friedman, "<strong>The</strong> Neil <strong>Bush</strong> Bailout," Vanity Fair, October, 1990.<br />

20. "<strong>Bush</strong> Defends Fitzwater in S&L Finger-Pointing," Washington Post, June 21, 1990. <strong>Bush</strong> vetoed H.R.<br />

770, the Family and Medical Leave Bill, which would have required employers with 50 or more employees<br />

to provide their workers with up to 12 weeks of unpaid>, job-protected leave each year to care for a new<br />

child or a seriously ill child, parent, or spouse, or to use as "medical leave" if an eployee is seriously ill.<br />

<strong>The</strong> measure only required the employer to continue health benefits while the employee was on leave. <strong>The</strong><br />

House failed to override the veto by a 232 to 195 vote on July 23, 1990.<br />

21. "President Talks About a Family Matter," New York Times, July 12, 1990.<br />

22. "<strong>The</strong> Silver Fox Speaks Her Mind," People Weekly, August, 1990.<br />

23. At last report, Neil <strong>Bush</strong> was at large in Houston, Texas, where he had taken a job as a "new business<br />

director" with TransMedia Communications. This company is a subsidiary of Prime Network, a Denver-

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