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- Newsgroups: alt.fan.dan-quayle
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!csus.edu!netcom.com!madhaus
- From: madhaus@netcom.com (Maddi Hausmann)
- Subject: Dave Barry & Dan Quayle (again)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.023439.18268@netcom.com>
- Organization: Society for Putting Things on Top of Other Things
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 02:34:39 GMT
- Lines: 371
-
- Dave Barry's "Year in Review" column has a few choice political
- comments. An earlier discussion on this group speculated whether
- Barry disliked Clinton more than Bush and our Hero, Quayle. To
- illustrate my contention that Daves loves to whomp on B/Q as
- much as we do, here are the political excerpts from the column.
-
-
- JANUARY
- 1 -- In the White House, George Bush, during a high-level discussion
- of possible U.S. responses to a strike by cork harvesters in Portugal,
- glances out the Oval Office window and notices that the darned U.S.
- economy is STILL in trouble. He vows to write a stern note to his
- economic advisers, Wayne and Garth, just as soon as he gets back from
- the upcoming meeting of The Six or Seven Top World Leaders Club, at
- which they are expected to agree, after two years of negotiations, on a
- secret handshake. Meanwhile, Bill Clinton -- a virtual unknown on the
- national scene, despite the fact that he has been governor of Arkansas
- since he was 17 -- arrives in New Hampshire with a truck containing 957
- separate eight-point policies, a 55-gallon drum of nasal decongestant
- and enough hair spray to immobilize the Brazilian rain forest.
-
- 8 -- President Bush flies to Japan accompanied by 237 high-level
- aides, 322 leading U.S. business executives, 517 journalists, 856
- security personnel, the first lady, 26 grandchildren and both White
- House dogs. Left behind, tragically, is the black briefcase containing
- the presidential Pepto-Bismol.
-
- 10 -- In Tokyo, President Bush scores an economic coup as the Japanese
- government, under intense pressure to open its doors to U.S. imports,
- agrees to purchase a 1992 Chevrolet Caprice. At a formal dinner hosted
- by the prime minister, the president formalizes the agreement by
- performing the ceremonial Ralph of Friendship.
-
- 22 -- The New Hampshire primary campaign is thrown into an uproar when
- the major news media, having vowed to focus on The Issues, give
- extensive coverage to allegations by Gennifer Flowers in a supermarket
- tabloid that, over a 12-year period, she and Bill Clinton repeatedly met
- in secret to discuss his program for national health insurance.
-
- 24 -- An estimated 750 journalists attend an emotional press
- conference at which Gennifer Flowers plays a tape recording of a man,
- whom she identifies as Bill Clinton, revealing intimate details of his
- position on federal alfalfa subsidies.
-
- 26 -- In the most surprising Super Bowl finish in the game's 27-year
- history, the Washington Redskins and the Buffalo Bills agree to stop
- playing in the third quarter so they can watch Bill and Hillary Clinton
- discuss their marriage on ``60 Minutes.''
-
- FEBRUARY
- 7 -- President Bush, responding to allegations that his use of the
- potent sleeping-pill Halcion has caused him to act erratically, angrily
- tells reporters that they are ``big Methodist spiders.''
-
- 11 -- In New Hampshire, Bill Clinton's character comes under further
- scrutiny when the news media obtain a 1969 photograph showing him
- reporting for a draft physical wearing a dress.
-
- 18 -- President Bush's political vulnerability is exposed brutally in
- the New Hampshire primary balloting when he finishes just barely ahead
- of Pat Buchanan, and 47 points behind Mrs. Bush.
-
- 20 -- Appearing on ``Larry King Live,'' H. Ross Perot announces that
- if his supporters put him on the ballot in all 50 states, he will have
- them all investigated.
-
- MARCH
- 1 -- Pat Buchanan wins the Austrian primary.
-
- 3 -- Business and academic professionals around the world are gripped
- by panic following dire warnings from numerous experts that tens of
- thousands of computers could be infected with the dread Michelangelo
- virus, set to strike on March 6.
-
- 4 -- A grim President Bush places U.S. armed forces on Full Red Alert
- in preparation for the expected onslaught of the dread Michelangelo
- virus.
-
- 10 -- Jerry Brown wins the Disneyland primary.
-
- 30 -- Bill Clinton, wooing the weenie vote, says he tried marijuana,
- but was unable to inhale.
-
- APRIL
- 6 -- True Item: The ceremonial first pitch of the 1992 baseball
- season, thrown by President Bush in Baltimore's new stadium, lands in
- the dirt.
-
- 9 -- Great Britain elects an entire new government following a
- campaign that took less time, total, than U.S. politicians will need,
- later in the year, to agree on a debate format.
-
- 10 -- The Bush administration proposes legislation to shorten the
- distance between the pitcher's mound and home plate.
-
- 12 -- In a triumph for the Bush administration following the U.S.
- invasion of Panama and a trial costing millions of dollars, a Miami jury
- convicts Manuel Noriega on charges of receiving stolen buttons.
-
- 13 -- Ross Perot announces that the country is all messed up, but that
- he has ordered a plan to fix everything and will reveal it just as soon
- as he takes delivery. His polls soar.
-
- 14 -- Bill Clinton's political strategists, concerned that Hillary
- could be hurting the campaign by appearing to harbor opinions, enroll
- her in the Donna Reed Housewife Rehabilitation Clinic, where she is
- confined to the much-feared Heloise Unit.
-
- 15 -- True Item: President and Mrs. Bush's tax returns are made
- public, revealing that in 1991 the President made $2,718 in royalties
- for his autobiography, whereas First Dog Millie made $889,176 for hers.
-
- 18 -- A closer inspection of the Bush tax return shows a business
- deduction for $457,756 worth of ``chew toys.''
-
- 29 -- Riots erupt in Los Angeles after residents obtain an advance
- copy of the ``Murphy Brown'' script in which she becomes an unwed mother.
-
- MAY
- 5 -- Ross Perot's poll ratings surge again after he announces that his
- plan to fix the country finally did arrive, but had to be sent back
- because of a faulty binding. Hillary Clinton, newly released from a
- successful treatment at the Donna Reed Housewife Rehabilitation Clinic,
- declares that the No. 1 concern of the public is ``closet space.''
-
- 18 -- Halcion gets a clean bill of health when a Food and Drug
- Administration panel reports that the controversial drug ``poses
- absolutely no threat to the little talking harmonicas that live in your
- nose.''
-
- 20 -- In a major policy address, Dan Quayle points out that Dumbo's
- mom was unwed, thereby touching off riots in four major cities.
-
- 22 -- At the White House, Dan Quayle is bitten by Millie, best-
- selling author and unwed mother.
-
- JUNE
- 3 -- Bill Clinton, seeking to improve his image among young voters,
- goes on ``The Arsenio Hall Show'' and, after donning a pair of dark
- sunglasses, smokes a joint.
-
- 10 -- Doubts arise concerning Ross Perot's claim to be a Washington
- ``outsider'' after The New York Times reports that the Dallas
- billionaire owns the Smithsonian Institution, the Lincoln Memorial and
- an estimated 53 percent interest in the House of Representatives. New
- ``Tonight Show'' host Jay Leno welcomes special guest George Bush, who
- seeks to improve his image among younger voters by performing ``Smoke on
- the Water'' on the ukulele.
-
- 13 -- Ross Perot, appearing on the David Letterman show, wows young
- voters with a rendition of ``Stairway to Heaven'' on a nose flute.
-
- 15 -- President Bush's brain trust, seeking some positive press
- coverage, shrewdly decides to send the President to Panama, where he is
- welcomed by happy natives who stage an enthusiastic welcoming
- demonstration until they are driven off by tear gas.
-
- 17 -- Seeking to boost the sagging U.S. humor industry, Vice President
- Quayle gives a spelling lesson.
-
- 27 -- Ross Perot, angered by allegations of former campaign staff
- members that he pried into their private lives, threatens to release
- photographs of them naked. Education Vice President Quayle explains to a
- Detroit high-school science class that airplanes can fly because of
- ``big bees in the wings.''
-
- JULY
- 1 -- With the economy mired in a recession and Democrats preparing to
- nominate a highly skilled campaigner in Bill Clinton, Republican Party
- strategists realize that their only realistic hope for guaranteeing
- George Bush's re-election is to mess up Ross Perot's daughter's wedding.
-
- 10 -- Bill Clinton, in a shrewd tactical move designed to woo the
- crucial department-store-mannequin vote, picks Al Gore as his running
- mate.
-
- 14 -- In New York, delegates to the Democratic Convention, sensing a
- chance for victory after 12 years out of power, roar with approval when
- a passionate Mario Cuomo declares that he ``might still be available.''
-
- 16 -- Ross Perot, sacrificing personal gratification to save the
- nation from the devastation that would inevitably result from the
- international conspiracy to mess up his daughter's wedding, announces
- that he does not wish to be president, forcing many of his followers to
- turn to their second choice, the Rev. Sun Myung Moon. The surprise
- announcement sends a wave of elation through the Democratic convention
- in New York, where new nominee Bill Clinton, launching into his
- acceptance speech, boldly declares that he loves his mom.
-
- 17 -- Increasingly suspicious U.N. arms inspectors observe as Iraqi
- dictator Saddam Hussein, visiting a street market, purchases a 17-foot-
- long ``zucchini'' clearly labeled ``50 megatons.'' A grim-faced
- President Bush threatens to ``send troops partway to Baghdad, then order
- them to stop.'' In New York, Bill Clinton nears the halfway mark in his
- acceptance speech.
-
- 18 -- Bill Clinton concludes his acceptance speech and sets out on a
- bus tour of the Heartland with Al Gore, whose body is unable to bend
- enough to fit in the bus seats, so his aides just stick him up on the
- luggage rack, still in a waving position.
-
- AUGUST
-
- 18 -- As the Republican Party, facing an uphill fight, gathers in
- Houston for a crucial convention, millions of issues-conscious American
- voters focus their full attention on Woody Allen and Mia Farrow.
-
- 19 -- Pat Buchanan gives the Bush-Quayle ticket a nice boost,
- appealing to a broad spectrum of Americans with a speech entitled,
- ``Vote For Us; We're Better Than You.''
-
- 20 -- At the Republican Convention, it's Traditional Family
- Values night, as delegates burn a suspected witch.
-
- 21 -- In a widely praised speech accepting his renomination, President
- Bush, showing a new awareness of the task ahead, pledges to ``think up
- some programs or something.'' Hillary Clinton challenges Barbara Bush to
- a bake-off.
-
- 22 -- Vice President Quayle, shrewdly stealing a page from the
- Democrats' strategy, embarks on an Oscar Meyer Weinermobile Tour of the
- Heartland.
-
- 23 -- In politics, representatives of the Bush and Clinton camps
- begin negotiating the bake-off format.
-
- 27 -- In politics, bake-off negotiations are stalled when the Clinton
- camp rejects a proposed all-cookie format; a spokesperson argues that
- ``there has to be pie representation.''
-
- SEPTEMBER
- 1 -- President Bush, in a move that his aides stress has nothing to do
- with electoral votes, announces plans to build a major naval base in
- Illinois.
-
- 9 -- In a political scandal that the Bush administration can ill
- afford, newspapers report that a State Department political appointee
- has improperly used the Freedom of Information Act to obtain and
- distribute crucial information concerning Hillary Clinton's brownie
- ingredients. Bake-off negotiations collapse.
-
- 28 -- The political world is thrown into an uproar when Ross Perot,
- having thwarted the intergalactic plot to mess up his daughter's
- wedding, hints he may re-enter the presidential race. He invites Bush
- and Clinton campaign officials to visit him and indicate their views by
- spelling out words with their tongues on his shoes.
-
- 30 -- Political observers begin to suspect that something is afoot
- when Ross Perot, in what a spokesperson describes as ``merely a gesture
- of appreciation, with no strings attached,'' donates $750 million to the
- Electoral College.
-
- OCTOBER
- 1 -- Bill Clinton, wooing voters without lives, appears on
- ``As the World Turns.''
-
- 2 -- Ross Perot re-enters the presidential race, pledging to ``clean
- up this mess in Washington'' and ``get these tiny CIA computers out of
- my teeth.'' President Bush appears on the Home Shopping Network.
-
- 5 -- After more than a month of on-again, off-again negotiations, a
- debate format is finally agreed upon, and all four major news networks
- interrupt their prime-time programming to present the first of four
- scheduled prime-time confrontations between Mia Farrow and Woody Allen.
-
- 10 -- True item: The Associated Press reports that a West Virginia man
- who had been drinking beer decided to clean three handguns, and wound up
- shooting himself in the foot THREE TIMES. He is immediately hired to
- direct strategy for the Bush campaign.
-
- 13 -- In the first of four presidential debates, Bill Clinton promises
- to increase spending for jobs, education, health care, the environment,
- the infrastructure, the outfrastructure and parking, while at the same
- time reducing the deficit and cutting taxes for the middle class. Bush
- says Clinton is a bozo. Ross Perot says it's time to cut bait and talk
- turkey. All three candidates perform well in the Swimsuit Competition.
-
- 16 -- The three major vice-presidential candidates debate. Here is the
- complete transcript: ``MY turn!'' ``No, MINE!'' ``What?'' ``Doodyhead!''
- ``Weiner brain!'' ``Where am I?'' ``ARE TOO!'' ``AM NOT!'' ``What's
- going on?'' ``Liar liar pants on fire!'' ``Nanny nanny boo-boo!'' ``Who
- are these people?''
-
- 19 -- In the second presidential debate, Bill Clinton promises to
- increase spending on the inner cities, suburbs, rural areas, the
- wilderness, the ozone layer and the asteroid belt, while at the same
- time eliminating government waste and heart disease. George Bush says
- Clinton is a communist whoremonger. Ross Perot says you have to bale hay
- while the tractor is warm.
-
- 23 -- In the third presidential debate, Bill Clinton promises to give
- every single voter a briefcase full of money, then clean the voter's
- garage, while at the same time fighting cavities and saving Bambi's mom
- from the hunters. George Bush says that Clinton is Satan. Ross Perot
- says you can't feed grits to a dead hog.
-
- 26 -- In the fourth and final presidential debate, Bill Clinton
- promises to give voters a magic pill that will enable them to live
- forever while at the same time never suffering from hair loss. George
- Bush bites Clinton on the leg. Ross Perot says it takes two snakes to
- cross a puddle. A post-debate poll of prospective voters shows that the
- majority of them believe the Braves should have used their relief
- pitchers more.
-
- 29 -- Bill Clinton loses his voice and stops talking. He surges in the
- polls.
-
- NOVEMBER
- 5 -- In post-election activity, President Bush, insisting that he is
- ``not bitter at all,'' orders the missile cruiser Cowpens to fire a
- strike against his own campaign headquarters. Meanwhile, Clinton,
- speaking in sign language, indicates that he may not be able to
- IMMEDIATELY fulfill all of his campaign promises, but he does expect,
- within the first 100 days, to ask Congress to declare National Reed
- Instruments Week.
-
- 6 -- News analysts, bored to death, declare that the Clinton
- presidency has failed.
-
- 8 -- Clinton is plunged into the first major controversy of his failed
- presidency when top-level military officials object to his plan to
- eliminate the armed forces' long-standing policy against admitting
- people who have good haircuts.
-
- 10 -- The failed Clinton presidency faces yet another crisis, this
- time a potential trade war that looms when France, in negotiations over
- the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, defiantly rejects a U.S.
- demand that the French Ministry of Agriculture stop subsidizing escargot
- ranchers.
-
- 16 -- Bill Clinton angrily defends his choice of Vernon Jordan as
- transition chief, claiming that Jordan's ties to the tobacco industry
- will have ``no effect'' on Cabinet appointments. In the worsening Trade
- War, Hillary Clinton, taking a more aggressive role now that the
- election is over, orders the missile cruiser Cowpens to fire a strike
- against the French wine tanker LeSnot.
-
- 19 -- Clinton names Joe the Camel as secretary of agriculture.
-
- 20 -- The trade war ends with a total French capitulation after
- Hillary threatens to place a 300 percent export duty on Jerry Lewis
- movies.
-
- DECEMBER
- 1 -- What begins as a friendly transitional get-together between the
- Bushes and Clintons ends in tragedy when Millie ralphs up what is later
- identified as Socks the cat.
-
- 19 -- In a surprise Cabinet move, Bill Clinton appoints Gennifer
- Flowers as secretary of human affairs.
-
- 24 -- Reaching across party lines, Bill Clinton appoints Orrin Hatch as
- Proctologist General.
-
- 31 -- Meanwhile, bands of white men in dark suits are converging on New
- Hampshire to begin laying the groundwork for their bids for the 1996
- presidential primary. Fortunately, however, serious campaigning is not
- expected to begin until next week.
-
- ________________________
-
- So, do you think Barry has it in for Clinton? I think he
- was far harsher to Bush (what an out-of-touch loser wimp)
- and Quayle (what a maroon), then Clinton (what a wonk).
-
-
- --
- Maddi Hausmann madhaus@netcom.com
- Humorist, Satirist, Tech Writer. Take your pick.
-
- Centigram Communications Corp, San Jose California 408/428-3553
-