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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Interestingly, <strong>Bush</strong> came in second on `` Most Faculty Drag ''--the teachers' pets--even<br />

though <strong>Bush</strong> did not appear at all on the school's Scholastic Honors list. In fact, no<br />

member of the Rockefeller-<strong>Bush</strong> A.U.V. was on the Honors list--despite chanting<br />

incantations, being smeared with filth and urinating on porches.<br />

Barbara Pierce's Tradition<br />

<strong>The</strong> Japanese attacked the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii on Dec. 7, 1941,<br />

bringing America into World War II. Because of his family's involvement with the Nazis,<br />

this would later pose a very different problem for Andover senior Poppy <strong>Bush</strong> than for<br />

the ordinary young man his age.<br />

Meanwhile, the social whirl went on. A couple of weeks after Pearl Harbor, during<br />

Christmas vacation, <strong>George</strong> went to a `` cotillion at the Round Hill Country Club in<br />

Greenwich, Connecticut. It was a social affair attended by upcoming debutantes and<br />

acceptable young men. ''@s2@s3<br />

Here <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> met his future wife, Barbara Pierce, whose family was in the High<br />

Society set in nearby Rye, New York. Barbara was an attractive 16-year-old girl, athletic<br />

like <strong>George</strong>'s mother. She was home for the holidays from her exclusive boarding school,<br />

Ashley Hall, in Charleston, South Carolina. Her breeding was acceptable:<br />

`` Barbara's background, though not quite so aristocratic as <strong>George</strong>'s, was also socially<br />

impressive in a day when Society was defined by breeding rather than wealth. Her father,<br />

Marvin Pierce, was a distant nephew of President Franklin Pierce (1853-57).... Barbara's<br />

mother, Pauline Robinson ... was [the daughter of] an Ohio Supreme Court justice.<br />

''@s2@s4<br />

Barbara's father, Marvin Pierce, was then vice president of McCall Corporation,<br />

publisher of Redbook and McCall's magazines. After his daughter joined the banking<br />

oligarchy by marrying into the <strong>Bush</strong> family (1945), Pierce became McCall's chief<br />

executive. Pierce and his magazine's theme of `` Togetherness ''--stressing family social<br />

existence divorced from political, scientific, artistic or creative activities--played a role in<br />

the cult of conformity and mediocrity which crushed U.S. mental life in the 1950s.<br />

A great deal is made about Barbara Pierce <strong>Bush</strong>'s family connection to U.S. President<br />

Franklin Pierce. It is inserted in books written by <strong>Bush</strong> friends and staff members.<br />

Barbara <strong>Bush</strong>'s gossip-column biographer says: `` Her own great-great-great uncle<br />

President Franklin Pierce had his [White House] office in the Treaty Room.... '' In fact,<br />

President Pierce was a distant cousin of Barbara Pierce's great-great grandfather, not his<br />

brother, as this claim would imply. **<br />

** [Established through consultation with the New Hampshire Historical<br />

Society and Pierce family experts in Pennsylvania, this fact is<br />

acknowledged by Mrs. <strong>Bush</strong>'s White House staff.]

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