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'Doonesbury' Offers $10,000 for
Proof Bush Served
Washington -
President Bush has an unlikely ally in his effort to show
that he did his National Guard duty during the Vietnam War: the often
political and frequently irreverent "Doonesbury" comic strip.
The strip is offering $10,000 to
anyone who can show Bush served in the Alabama Air National Guard.
"That's right -- we're offering
$10,000 cash to anyone who can prove George W. Bush fulfilled his
Guard duty in Alabama," Wednesday's strip said. "So if you served with
Mr. Bush -- even if only in the officers' club -- we want to hear from
you right now!"
Readers are referred to the Web site
doonesbury.com, where a Witness Registration Form asks for online
testimony. The site says the prize money is being underwritten by
Doonesbury creator Garry Trudeau. "Thanks to Bush's massive tax cuts
for people who don't need them, GBT is flush."
The hitch is the winner will not
actually receive the reward. Instead the Web site says the cash will
be donated in the winner's name to the United Service Organization (USO),
which entertains American troops.
The strip first offered the reward on
Monday and already there are hundreds of responses, according to David
Stanford, duty officer at the online Doonesbury Town Hall.
"We're only in day three and have
already received witness forms from over 600 contestants, with more
streaming in every hour," Stanford said in an e-mail response to
questions.
"We'll be carefully processing all of
them, but what's immediately striking is that so many who've plunged
into the depths of their 1972 memories have surfaced with accounts
that involve automobiles, alcohol, aliens, secret ops and Elvis,"
Stanford said.
The White House had no comment on the
contest, but Christine Iverson of the Republican National Committee
said laughingly, "It sounds like a stunt worthy of a comic strip."
Documents released earlier this month
offered no new evidence to show that Bush actually turned up for
National Guard duty in Alabama during the latter part of 1972, a
period when Democratic National Committee chairman Terry
McAuliffe has accused him of being absent without leave. -- Reuters
Brudirect.com
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