Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bush buoyed by tributes to wife A speech to remember

Remembranc­es pour in from all over the world

- By Michael Graczyk

HOUSTON — In his first public comments since his wife’s death, former President George H.W. Bush said Wednesday that he used to tease his spouse of 73 years that he had a complex about how much people liked her.

That fact, he said, is buoyed by stories about Barbara Bush’s warmth and wit following her death. Tributes have poured in from around the world, from former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to a U.S. Navy commander who recalled Mrs. Bush handing out cookies to sailors on a battleship.

“I always knew Barbara was the most beloved woman in the world, and in fact I used to tease her that I had a complex about that fact,” the nation’s 41st president said in a statement released Wednesday.

His wife died Tuesday as their Houston home, where he held her

WATERVILLE, Maine — The commenceme­nt speech that Barbara

Bush gave in 1990 at all-women Wellesley College in Massachuse­tts still resonates with the graduates who heard it that day.

Christine Bicknell Marden, who gave the student commenceme­nt speech, reflected Wednesday how Mrs. Bush called her beforehand and even gave her a hug as she made her way through the graduate receiving line.

Marden says she and her classmates thought Mrs. Bush showed “grace and class” in delivering her speech. She adds that many have looked back on that speech in the years since and have “taken away nuggets” in their own lives. hand, all day, before she died at age 92. They had been married longer than any other presidenti­al couple.

The former president referred to his wife as “The Enforcer,” a term of endearment bestowed by her family as she ran their household while he pursued careers in the Texas oil business and later politics and public service. He said the outpouring of support and friendship toward his wife following her death “is lifting us all up.”

Their son, former President

George W. Bush, told an audience at his presidenti­al library in Dallas on Wednesday that his mother was “funny to the end.” He recalled a phone conversati­on they had this week.

“The day before she died, I said ‘Mom, I just want you know you’ve been a fabulous mother and I love you dearly.’ And she said, ‘I want you to know that you’re my favorite son — on the phone,’” Bush told the audience.

“I hope you don’t feel sorry for any of us, particular­ly me,” he added. He said he was at peace because his mother was at peace. “She believes in an afterlife and was joyously looking forward to that afterlife,” he said.

A tearful Laura Bush added that watching her mother-in-law taught her “how to be a first lady, and I’m so grateful for her example.”

Other tributes heralded the former first lady as a warm woman of strength devoted to not only her family, but to child and adult literacy programs.

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