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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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eing placed in a coffin, where he was cross-examined by the members.... K.O.A. was<br />

able to hold the loyalty of its members over the years to become a powerful institution at<br />

Phillips Academy and to erect a handsome pillared Society house on School Street.<br />

<strong>The</strong> second Society of the seven that would survive until 1950 was A.U.V. [<strong>George</strong><br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s group]. <strong>The</strong> letters stood for Auctoritas, Unitas, Veritas. [Authority, Unity, Truth.]<br />

This organization resulted from a merger of two ... earlier Societies ... in 1877. A new<br />

constitution was drawn up ... providing for four chief officers--Imperator [commander],<br />

Vice Imperator [vice-commander], Scriptor [secretary], and Quaestor [magistrate or<br />

inquisitor]....<br />

Like K.O.A, A.U.V. had an elaborate initiation ceremony. Once a pledge had been<br />

approved by the Faculty, he was given a letter with a list of rules he was to follow. He<br />

was to be in the cemetery every night from 12:30 to 5:00, deliver a morning paper to each<br />

member of the Society each morning, must not comb or brush his hair nor wash his face<br />

or hands, smoke nothing but a clay pipe with Lucky Strike tobacco, and not speak to any<br />

student except members of A.U.V.<br />

After the pledge had memorized these rules, his letter of instruction was burned. <strong>The</strong><br />

pledge had now become a `` scut '' and was compelled to learn many mottoes and<br />

incantations. On Friday night of initiation week the scut was taken to Hartigan's drugstore<br />

downtown and given a `` scut sundae, '' which consisted of pepper, ice cream, oysters,<br />

and raw liver. Later that night he reported to the South Church cemetery, where he had to<br />

wait for two hours for the members to arrive. <strong>The</strong>re followed the usual horseplay--the<br />

scut was used as a tackling dummy, threats were made to lock him in a tomb, and various<br />

other ceremonies observed. On Saturday afternoon the scut was taken on a long walk<br />

around town, being forced to stop at some houses and ask for food, to urinate on a few<br />

porches, and generally to make a fool of himself. On Saturday night came the initiation<br />

proper. <strong>The</strong> scut was prepared by reporting to the cellar in his underwear and having dirt<br />

and flour smeared all over his body. He was finally cleaned up and brought to the<br />

initiation room, where a solemn ceremony followed, ending with the longed-for words ``<br />

Let him have light, '' at which point his blindfold was removed, some oaths were<br />

administered, and the boy was finally a member....<br />

Shortly after 1915 the present [A.U.V.] house was constructed. From then until the<br />

Society crisis of the 1940s, A.U.V. continued strong and successful. <strong>The</strong>re were, to be<br />

sure, some problems. In the mid-1920s, the scholarship average of the Society dropped<br />

abysmally. <strong>The</strong> members had also been pledging students illegally--without the approval<br />

of the Faculty guardian. In one initiation a boy had been so battered that he was unable to<br />

run in the Andover-Exeter track meet.... Yet the Society managed to overcome these<br />

problems and well deserved its position as one of the big three among the school's<br />

Societies....@s1@s9<br />

From all available evidence, at Andover prep <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was completely obsessed with<br />

status, with seeming to be important. His 1980 campaign biography boasts that he<br />

achieved this goal:

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