George W. Bush headed the Delta Epsilon Kappa fraternity at Yale (as well being a Skull
& Bonesman who take their final vows while kneeling before a Lucifer figure) Bush
was fined & censured for branding initiates with a "D" figure on their backsides
Bush claims that the "D" stands for Delta -- the name of the Frat.
However, this could also be the Devil's Mark which is a
very common ritual in Satanic Ceremonies. In this
case the "D" would stand for "Devil"
Greek "Δ" = English "D"
Greek Word for Devil (Διάβολος)
George W. Bush in Torture Scandal
by Richard Gooding
Star, July 27, 1999
Special Star Investigation
Presidential candidate George W. Bush
once led a Yale fraternity that barbarically branded its new members on
their backsides with a red-hot metal rod as part of a sadistic hazing
practice.
"I got branded and I didn't like it one bit," Professor Bradford Lee of
the elite Naval War College in Newport, R.I.-an ex-football player and
onetime member of Bush's Delta Epsilon Kappa fraternity-told STAR in an
exclusive interview.
"It did burn," he says, recalling the terrifying experience. "I think I still have the mark on me."
Bush, the oldest son of former President George Bush, is now the
runaway front-runner for the Republican nomination for president. His
campaign stresses responsible individual behavior, family values and
compassion for one's fellow citizens.
But a STAR investigation has revealed that he was president of Delta
Epsilon Kappa when the hazing scandal broke in the campus newspaper in
the late '60s-leading to the fraternity being fined and the branding
practice halted.
Amazingly, Bush, now the governor of Texas, defended the illegal
torture of the young fraternity pledges at the time as a harmless
prank-insisting that it was comparable to "only a cigarette burn" which
left "no scarring mark physically or mentally."
But others said the branding resulted in a second-degree burn that left a half-inch scab in the shape of the Greek letter Delta.
Lee-who still bears the mark 32 years later-is not sure who actually
wielded the brand because the pledges were not allowed to look at their
tormentors. "But I do know that George Bush was very active in all the
fraternity activities then."
Lee, who was a guard on the Yale football team, recalled that the
branding came after "a long initiation that went on into the early
morning hours."
He says the idea was to wear you out so much that you allowed your bare
flesh to be singed. "I was already tired from football practice earlier
that day. I was so groggy I wasn't exactly sensitive to what they were
up to. I wasn't very happy about it."
The branding was a key reason why Lee quit the fraternity after just
one year. "It got things off on a sour note, you might say," he notes.
Bill Katz, now a community college teacher in northern New Jersey, told
STAR that the branding was done with "a wire coat hanger twisted into a
triangle and heated up" in the fireplace.
"They touched you just above the buttocks, in the small of the back," he says.
And Boston lawyer Franklin Levy said that to increase the fear of the
moment, the older fraternity men first brandished an actual glowing hot
branding iron-to make them think that was what awaited them.
"When they burned me," Levy remembers, "I jumped a mile."
Before the brandings, pledges had to endure hours of being kicked and a
vicious round of tannings with wooden paddles-another practice that
Yale has ruled taboo.
"On that night," according to an account in the Yale Daily News in
1967, 'each pledge was forced to sit with his head between his legs,
motionless, for two to five hours.
"If he coughed, raised his hand or talked, he was kicked by an older
brother." After all the beatings, recalled one fraternity member, the
branding was almost a relief.
In the wake of the Yale Daily News' expose of the fraternity's hazing,
Bush, whose father was also a DKE at Yale, admitted the branding to the
New York Times in November 1967.
But Bush-whose college nickname was "Lip" for his Texas wisecracks-also
ripped into Yale for being too "Haughty" to "allow this type of
pledging to go on."
Bush's days and nights at Yale were mostly remembered as non-stop party
and prank time by his former fraternity brothers. During his junior
year, he was arrested on a disorderly conduct charge in the theft of a
Christmas wreath from a storefront to decorate the DKE house. At a
football game against Princeton, he helped tear down a goal post and
ended up being hauled to the campus police station.
"We drank heavily at DKE," says Gregory Gallico, now a Boston plastic
surgeon, as he recalled Bush and his other fraternity brothers. "It was
absolutely off the wall-appalling.
"I cannot for the life of me figure out how we all made it through."