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Portrait of George Bush in '72


Guest Harry Hope

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Guest Harry Hope

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/20/politics/campaign/20bama.html?ex=1253419200&en=c7418758b1be6c73&ei=5088

 

MILITARY SERVICE

 

Portrait of George Bush in '72: Unanchored in Turbulent Time

 

Published: September 20, 2004

 

Sara Rimer reported from Montgomery for this article, Ralph Blumenthal

from Texas, and Raymond Bonner from Texas and Washington.

 

 

MONTGOMERY, Ala., Sept. 17 -

 

Nineteen seventy-two was the year George W. Bush dropped off the radar

screen.

 

He abandoned his once-prized status as a National Guard pilot by

failing to appear for a required physical.

 

He sought temporary reassignment from the Texas Air National Guard to

an Alabama unit but for six months did not show up for training.

 

He signed on as an official in the losing campaign of a Republican

Senate candidate in Alabama, and even there he left few impressions

other than as an amiable bachelor with a good tennis game and a famous

father.

 

"To say he brought in a bunch of initiatives and bright ideas," said a

fellow campaign worker, Devere McLennan, "no he didn't."

 

This year of inconsequence has grown increasingly consequential for

President Bush because of persistent, unanswered questions about his

National Guard service - why he failed to take his pilot's physical

and whether he fulfilled his commitment to the Guard.

 

If anything, those issues became still murkier this past week, with

the controversy over the authenticity of four documents disclosed by

CBS News and its program "60 Minutes" purporting to shed light on that

Guard record.

 

Still, a wider examination of his life in 1972, based on dozens of

interviews and other documents released by the White House over the

years, yields a portrait of a young man like many other young men of

privilege in that turbulent time - entitled, unanchored and safe from

combat, bouncing from a National Guard slot made possible by his

family's prominence to a political job arranged through his father.

 

In a speech on Tuesday at a National Guard convention, Mr. Bush said

he was "proud to be one of them," and in his autobiography he writes

that his service taught him respect for the chain of command.

 

But a review of records shows that not only did he miss months of duty

in 1972, but that he also may have been improperly awarded credit for

service, making possible an early honorable discharge so he could turn

his attention to a new interest: Harvard Business School.

 

Mr. Bush, nearly 26, went to Alabama in mid-May 1972 to work on the

campaign of Winton M. Blount, a construction magnate known as Red who

was a friend of Mr. Bush's father.

 

The Democratic opponent was Senator John J. Sparkman, chairman of the

Senate banking committee, a legendary power in what was still a

solidly Democratic South.

 

Mr. Bush, while missing months of the Guard duty that allowed him to

avoid Vietnam, was the political director of the Blount campaign,

which accused Mr. Sparkman - a hawk on the war - and the national

Democrats of supporting "amnesty for all draft dodgers" and of showing

"more concern for coddling deserters than for patriotic American young

men who have lost their lives in Vietnam."

 

In the last week of the race, the Blount campaign ran a radio

advertisement using an edited recording of Mr. Sparkman that made him

appear to support forced busing of schoolchildren, which he opposed.

 

Although campaign records list Mr. Bush as third in command, people

who worked in the race said he was not involved in those tactics or

with the overall agenda.

 

Mr. Bush's connection was Jimmy Allison, a political operative from

Midland, Tex., who was running the campaign and was a close friend of

George H. W. Bush, having managed the elder Mr. Bush's 1966

Congressional victory in Houston.

 

Mr. Allison's widow, Linda, who volunteered in the Blount campaign,

said she became curious about the young Mr. Bush's job after noticing

his coming into the office late and leaving early.

 

"I asked Jimmy, 'What does Georgie do?' '' Mrs. Allison, 73, said in

an interview, repeating the account she had given to Salon, the online

publication.

 

"He just said George had called him and told him that Georgie was

having some difficulties in Houston.

 

Big George thought it would be beneficial to the family and George Jr.

for him to come to Alabama to work on the campaign with Jimmy."

 

Wandering Pleasure-Seeker

 

In Houston, nearly five years out of Yale, Mr. Bush had been adrift,

without a career or even a long-running job.

 

He had been rejected by the University of Texas law school and had

briefly considered, then abandoned, a run for the Texas Legislature.

 

Acquaintances recall him tooling around town in his Triumph sports

car, partying with a crowd of well-to-do singles.

 

His jobs had mostly come through family ties, and in 1971 he was hired

as a management trainee at Stratford of Texas, an agricultural and

horticultural conglomerate owned by a Bush family friend, Robert H.

Gow.

 

Mr. Bush's immediate supervisor, Peter Knudtzon, then Stratford's

executive vice president, recalls him as a smart, dutiful worker who,

while lacking direction, was keenly interested in the process of

politics - "how people get elected, where the power is."

 

Every so often, he would take off work to fly with the National Guard.

His entree to the Guard had come through Ben Barnes, then the

lieutenant governor of Texas, who has said that he helped get Mr.

Bush, among other well-connected young men, a slot at the request of a

Bush family friend.

 

When Mr. Bush applied, in 1968, one of the forms he filled out asked

if he would volunteer for overseas duty; he checked "I 'do not'

volunteer for overseas."

 

And he got off to a splashy start. After basic training and a year at

flight school in Georgia, he was assigned to Ellington Air Force Base

outside Houston, where he flew F-102 fighter jets.

 

In March 1970, with his father, himself a World War II Navy pilot, in

Congress, the Texas Air National Guard issued a news release

announcing that the young Mr. Bush "doesn't get his kicks from pot or

hashish or speed," but from "the roaring afterburner of the F-102."

 

As he wrote in his autobiography, "It was exciting the first time I

flew, and it was exciting the last time."

 

In a November 1970 evaluation, his squadron commander, Lt. Col. Jerry

B. Killian, called him a "top-notch" pilot and a "natural leader."

 

By 1972, though, something had changed; the excitement seemed to have

waned.

 

Mr. Bush's flying buddy from Ellington, Dean Roome, said Mr. Bush may

have been frustrated because the unit's growing role as a training

school left young pilots fewer opportunities to log hours in the air.

 

Others who knew him believe he simply lost interest.

 

He was once again at loose ends, without a regular job, having left

Stratford after a year or so, unhappy in the company's buttoned-down

atmosphere.

 

Whatever precisely was drawing Mr. Bush away from flying, it was then,

in the spring of 1972, that the Alabama job came along.

 

He had worked for Jimmy Allison before - on a 1968 Senate campaign in

Florida - but this would be his first full-time job in the family

business, politics.

 

Still, there was the matter of his commitment to the Guard. Moving to

Alabama meant taking a temporary leave from his Texas unit;

 

Guard officials say it was not unusual for civilian officers to take

jobs away from their home states.

 

Mr. Bush did not wait to line up a spot with an Alabama unit before

arriving in Montgomery in mid-May.

 

Mr. Bush first tried to join the 9921 Air Reserve Squadron in

Montgomery, which was classified as a "standby reserve unit."

 

Unlike his unit in Texas, the Alabama unit had no planes and its

members were neither paid nor required to attend monthly drills.

 

In July, though, senior Guard officials rejected Mr. Bush's transfer,

saying he had to continue with a "ready reserve unit," which requires

monthly attendance.

 

In that same period - the precise timing is not clear - he did

something that brought his dwindling flying ambitions to a close:

 

he failed to take the annual physical exam required of all pilots.

 

In his 1999 book, "A Charge to Keep," Mr. Bush did not mention the

missed physical or the suspension.

 

"I was almost finished with my commitment in the Air National Guard,"

he wrote, "and was no longer flying because the F-102 jet I had

trained in was being replaced by a different fighter."

 

In fact, when he missed his physical he had almost two years left in

the Guard.

 

Later, an aide to Mr. Bush explained that he had missed his physical

because he was waiting to get examined by his personal physician.

 

But pilots were required to be examined by military doctors.

 

More recently the White House has said that he did not take the

physical because Alabama units were not flying the F-102.

 

But his second application to transfer to Alabama - after the rejected

transfer in July - was filed in September 1972, at least two months

after he had missed his physical.

 

Whatever the reason, on Sept. 5, Mr. Bush was notified that he was

suspended from flying "for failure to accomplish annual medical

examination."

 

By that time, still without an Alabama unit, he had not attended a

required monthly drill for almost five months, according to records

released by the White House.

 

Under the law at the time, he could have been sent to Vietnam.

 

But in the relatively relaxed world of the Guard, and with hardly

anyone being called up for active duty anymore, officials took no

action.

 

He was free to stay in Montgomery and work on the Blount campaign.

 

Richard Nelson, who had been Mr. Blount's political director,

remembers briefing Mr. Bush when he arrived in town.

 

"He was a bright young man," Mr. Nelson recalled.

 

"I knew who his father was."

 

The months in Montgomery were part of what Mr. Bush has described as

his "nomadic" years, when he "kind of floated and saw a lot of life."

 

No one remembers him worrying about his Guard status - or, for that

matter, much of anything else.

 

He worked the phones in the Montgomery office and drove around the

state meeting with county chairmen.

 

He played tennis at Winton Blount's mansion and partied with the other

young campaign workers at watering holes like the Top of the Star, at

the Montgomery Holiday Inn.

 

Kay Blount Pace, 52, the candidate's daughter, said Mr. Bush did not

act like the son of the man who was then the United States ambassador

to the United Nations.

 

"This was just Joe Blow - cute, fun George Bush, who fit in with the

campaign," Ms. Pace said.

 

Murphy Archibald, a nephew of Winton Blount's, remembers Mr. Bush

rolling into the office at noon and joking about how much he had had

to drink the night before.

 

"I found him to be far younger than his age," recalled Mr. Archibald,

a Democrat in Charlotte, N.C., who had gone to Vietnam in 1968.

 

One way or another, Vietnam ran through the lives of the young

campaign workers in Montgomery.

 

Devere McLennan said he figured he got lucky when, after enlisting in

the Marines, he washed out of Quantico with a bad back.

 

Another campaign worker, Emily Marks, had a college boyfriend who had

been killed by a land mine in Vietnam a couple of years before.

 

In 1972, Ms. Marks, the daughter of an old Montgomery family, was

dating George Bush, and she remembers that he was in the Guard but

could offer no detailed recollections.

 

"A lot of people were doing Guard duty," she said in an interview.

 

That September, grounded from flying but still obligated to his Guard

service, he wrote to his Texas squadron commander, Colonel Killian,

asking for permission to perform his monthly drills with the 187th

Tactical Reconnaissance Group in Montgomery for September, October and

November, according to documents released by the White House.

 

"We told him that was O.K. with us," said Bobby W. Hodges, then a

commander in the Texas Guard.

 

He was told he would have to do drills there, Mr. Hodges added.

 

"He may or may not have done it. I don't know."

 

Payroll records released by the White House show that in addition to

being paid for attending a drill in Alabama the last weekend in

October, Mr. Bush was also paid for a weekend drill after the Blount

election, on Nov. 11 and 12, and for meetings on Nov. 13 and 14.

 

But there are no records from the 187th indicating that Mr. Bush, in

fact, appeared on those days in October and November, and more than a

dozen members of the unit from that era say they never saw him.

 

The White House said last week that there were no records from the

Alabama unit because Mr. Bush was still officially part of the Texas

Guard.

 

But Mr. Hodges, the former Texas commander, said the 187th "should

have a record of his drills."

 

Mr. Bush's former campaign colleagues remember being aware that he had

some relationship with the Guard.

 

Mr. McLennan recalled going with Mr. Bush to the dry cleaner to pick

up his Guard uniforms.

 

Joe Holcombe, who managed the Montgomery office, remembers Mr. Bush

missing a meeting at the candidate's house.

 

"Jimmy said, 'He's with the Guard,' '' Mr. Holcombe said.

 

A Fight Between Hawks

 

That fall, political observers were predicting a big victory for the

incumbent, but the Blount campaign fought hard.

 

Although both candidates were hawks in a fiercely pro-military state,

Mr. Blount tried to align his opponent with George McGovern, the

Democratic Party's antiwar presidential candidate.

 

Then, a few days before the election, the Blount campaign broadcast a

radio commercial in which Mr. Sparkman, a staunch segregationist, was

heard saying "busing is all right."

 

According to an account in The Birmingham News, the Blount campaign

had produced the commercial by deleting part of Mr. Sparkman's lengthy

answer to a question about busing during a radio interview, and

switching a question and answer on the subject.

 

The Blount campaign maintained at the time that the interview had

simply been compressed for time's sake, but the Sparkman campaign said

the tape was doctored to inject racial innuendo.

 

Blount campaign workers say these tough tactics had the mark of Mr.

Allison.

 

Mr. Bush's own retelling of the Blount campaign leaves out any

negative aspects.

 

He described Mr. Allison, who died in 1978, as "a wonderful friend"

and "a mentor in a way."

 

He wrote that "I witnessed firsthand the effects of populist

campaigning."

 

Gov. George Wallace, who was shot that spring, taped a radio

commercial for Mr. Sparkman casting Mr. Blount as an elitist

multimillionaire who lived in a mansion with 26 bathrooms.

 

Winton Blount lost in a landslide.

 

"A good man went down to defeat," Mr. Bush wrote.

 

A Return to Houston

 

After the election, Mr. Bush returned to Houston, moving out of his

small rented bungalow in Montgomery.

 

He left the place a mess, with a broken light fixture and piles of

debris, according to Mary Smith, whose husband was the bungalow's

caretaker.

 

Ms. Smith said her husband, who has since died, sent Mr. Bush a bill

for professional cleaning but never heard back.

 

By January 1973, Mr. Bush had a new job, with an inner-city youth

program organized by John L. White, a former professional football

player who knew his father.

 

And he continued his erratic relationship with the National Guard,

where he had 18 months left of his six-year commitment.

 

A review of records raises questions about whether he was properly

credited for his service.

 

Documents released by the White House show that he was paid for drills

in January, April and several days in early May 1973.

 

These drills were in Alabama, the White House said, and his old friend

Emily Marks, now Emily Marks Curtis, said she remembered Mr. Bush

returning to Montgomery for Guard duty.

 

But Mr. Bush had been authorized to drill in Alabama only from

September through November 1972.

 

By the summer of 1973, Mr. Bush had decided to go to Harvard Business

School.

 

According to documents released by the White House, he wanted an early

discharge from the Guard but did not have enough service points for

1972 and 1973, since he had missed months of training.

 

Guardsmen were required to earn 48 points each fiscal year, or four

points for each weekend drill every month.

 

Although missed drills can be made up, regulations at the time said it

had to be done within 30 days and in the same fiscal year.

 

As the time for his early discharge neared, Mr. Bush was lacking

enough points; according to records for July 1973, he attended drills

on 18 days that month.

 

When questions arose about Mr. Bush's Guard service, the White House

asked a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, Albert C. Lloyd Jr., to

review his record.

 

In a memorandum released by the White House in February, Mr. Lloyd

wrote that from May 1973 through May 1974, Mr. Bush accumulated 35

training points and 15 points for being a Guard member "for a total of

56 points.''

 

It is not clear how Mr. Lloyd came up with 56, instead of 50.

 

Another military document released by the White House indicates that

Mr. Bush had earned only 38 points from May 1973 until his discharge

that October.

 

A retired Army colonel, Gerald A. Lechliter, who has prepared an

extensive analysis of Mr. Bush's National Guard record, described Mr.

Lloyd's memorandum as "seemingly an attempt to whitewash Bush's

record."

 

Mr. Lloyd declined comment last week.

 

Mr. Lechliter, who describes himself as a political independent, also

said that Mr. Bush was not entitled to 20 credits he received from

Nov. 13, 1972, until July 19, 1973, because the service was being made

up improperly.

 

Mr. Lechliter also said that Mr. Bush should not have been paid for

these sessions.

 

"That would appear to be a fraud," he said in an interview last week.

 

However the points added up, on Oct. 1, 1973, Mr. Bush was awarded an

honorable discharge.

 

By that time he was already at Harvard.

 

_________________________________________________________

 

And read

 

http://www.glcq.com

 

Harry

 

 

The monthly U.S. death toll through August 8 is 25

 

3,683 American troops are dead, 27,279 have been wounded

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Guest Gandalf Grey

"Osama Bin Babs" <Terrorists @ RNC . org> wrote in message

news:5fadndghlITXKiHbnZ2dnUVZ_o2vnZ2d@comcast.com...

> POLITICAL POINTS

>

> Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher than a Squash but only just.

>

> By JOHN TIERNEY

>

> Published: October 24, 2004

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Guest SO WHAT?

"Gandalf Grey" <gandalfgrey@infectedmail.com> wrote in message

news:46bcba06$0$18738$9a6e19ea@news.newshosting.com...

>

> "Osama Bin Babs" <Terrorists @ RNC . org> wrote in message

> news:5fadndghlITXKiHbnZ2dnUVZ_o2vnZ2d@comcast.com...

>> POLITICAL POINTS

>>

>> Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher than a Squash but only just.

>>

>> By JOHN TIERNEY

>>

>> Published: October 24, 2004

 

http://static.flickr.com/103/287874038_8a751236f4_o.jpg

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Guest Barack  Hussein  Osama  Bin  Ladin

"SO WHAT?" <GayBush@CrawfordRanch.net> wrote in message

news:Z_2vi.119$924.49@newssvr23.news.prodigy.net...

>

POLITICAL POINTS

 

Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher than Kerry's

 

By JOHN TIERNEY

 

Published: October 24, 2004

 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/24/politics/campaign/24points.html?ei=5070&en=84771a545695cd0b&ex=1144814400&pagewanted=print&position=

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Guest Gandalf Grey

"Osama Bin Babs" <Terrorists @ RNC . org> wrote in message

news:5fadndghlITXKiHbnZ2dnUVZ_o2vnZ2d@comcast.com...

> POLITICAL POINTS

>

> Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher than a Squash but only just.

>

> By JOHN TIERNEY

>

> Published: October 24, 2004

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Guest Barack  Hussein  Osama  Bin  Ladin

"Gandalf Maggot Eater Grey" <gandalfgrey@infectedmail.com> wrote in message

news:46bcbdb5$0$18424$9a6e19ea@news.newshosting.com...

>

> "POLITICAL POINTS

 

Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher than Kerry's

 

By JOHN TIERNEY

 

Published: October 24, 2004

 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/24/politics/campaign/24points.html?ei=5070&en=84771a545695cd0b&ex=1144814400&pagewanted=print&position=

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Guest Gandalf Grey

"Osama Bin Babs" <Terrorists @ RNC . org> wrote in message

news:5fadndghlITXKiHbnZ2dnUVZ_o2vnZ2d@comcast.com...

> POLITICAL POINTS

>

> Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher than a Squash but only just. Gets

> better than 50% on >games of chance played with garden vegetables.

>

> By JOHN TIERNEY

>

> Published: October 24, 2004

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Guest Barack  Hussein  Osama  Bin  Ladin

"

"Gandalf Maggot Eater Grey" <gandalfgrey@infectedmail.com> wrote in message

news:46bcbdb5$0$18424$9a6e19ea@news.newshosting.com...

>

> "POLITICAL POINTS

 

Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher than Kerry's

 

By JOHN TIERNEY

 

Published: October 24, 2004

 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/24/politics/campaign/24points.html?ei=5070&en=84771a545695cd0b&ex=1144814400&pagewanted=print&position=

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Guest Gandalf Grey

"Osama Bin Babs" <Terrorists @ RNC . org> wrote in message

news:5fadndghlITXKiHbnZ2dnUVZ_o2vnZ2d@comcast.com...

> POLITICAL POINTS

>

> Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher than a Squash but only just. Gets

> better than 50% on >games of chance played with garden vegetables.

>

> By JOHN TIERNEY

>

> Published: October 24, 2004

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Guest Deaf Power

On Fri, 10 Aug 2007 15:06:49 -0400, "Neoclown" <Terrorists @ RNC .

org> wrote:

>POLITICAL POINTS

>

>Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher

 

Stick with the topic, retarded.

 

 

 

--

The Rising Corporate Military Monster

http://www.counterpunch.org/mokhiber04232004.html

http://www.iraqwar.org/micomplex.htm

 

"In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition

of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the

military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of

misplaced power exists and will persist." - Dwight D. Eisenhower

 

"Fascism should rather be called corporatism, as it is the merging of

government and corporate power." -- Benito Mussolini

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Guest @SO WHAT?

"Barack Hussein Osama Bin Ladin" <Terrorists @ DNC . org> wrote in message

news:WYKdnUykVYMBXyHbnZ2dnUVZ_gadnZ2d@comcast.com...

>

> "

> "Gandalf Maggot Eater Grey" <gandalfgrey@infectedmail.com> wrote in

> message

> news:46bcbdb5$0$18424$9a6e19ea@news.newshosting.com...

>>

>> "POLITICAL POINTS

>

> Secret Weapon for Bush? Bush IQ Higher than Kerry's

>

> By JOHN TIERNEY

>

> Published: October 24, 2004

>

>

> http://wwww.nytimes.com/2004/10/24/politics/campaign/24points.html?ei=5070&en=84771a545695cd0b&ex=1144814400&pagewanted=print&position=

 

Caption this:

http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/2003/04/30_ap_bushpreview/images/bush_large.jpg

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