Posted on 09/09/2004 7:38:55 AM PDT by IGOTMINE
Today's big Boston Globe story on President Bush's Air National Guard service is based on memos to file from the personal records of the late Lieutenant Colonel Jerry B. Killian: "Bid cited to boost Bush in Guard."
The Globe story is itself based on last night's 60 Minutes report: "New questions on Bush Guard duty." The online version of the 60 Minutes story has links to the memos. Killian died in 1984; CBS states that it "consulted a handwriting analyst and document expert who believes the material is authentic." Reader Tom Mortensen writes:
Every single one of the memos to file regarding Bush's failure to attend a physical and meet other requirements is in a proportionally spaced font, probably Palatino or Times New Roman. In 1972 people used typewriters for this sort of thing (especially in the military), and typewriters used mono-spaced fonts.
The use of proportionally spaced fonts did not come into common use for office memos until the introduction high-end word processing systems from Xerox and Wang, and later of laser printers, word processing software, and personal computers. They were not widespread until the mid to late 90's.
Before then, you needed typesetting equipment, and that wasn't used for personal memos to file. Even the Wang and other systems that were dominant in the mid 80's used mono-spaced fonts. I doubt the TANG had typesetting or high-end 1st generation word processing systems.
I am saying these documents are forgeries, run through a copier for 15 generations to make them look old. This should be pursued aggressively
PING
BUMP
I hope you're right. But my mother had an Olivetti typewriter circa 1975 that featured proportional spacing.
Did it allow for a reduced-size superscript like the kind used in the first memo for "111th"?
bump
Roger. Did the usual search...
Moderator, please pull this thread.
I thing that IBM Selectrics also had proportional-spaced fonts. And those were pretty common in govt offices and other places where cost is no object.
>>>Did it allow for a reduced-size superscript like the kind used in the first memo for "111th"?<<<
Not that I recall, but I can't be positive.
A commander's notes are not part of the official file.
Any soldier's (airman's) personnel file is governed by strict regulations on what can and cannot go into it. Great care is taken NOT to allow non-approved items within the personnel file that would do damage. Careers are made and broken on the basis of this file.
Therefore, the bottom line is this:
These forged memos, even if they were real, were NOT in Lt Bush's personnel file because his commander, who had the authority to put things in his personnel file, chose not to put them there. They were preliminary, process, memory-jogs, whatever.
What we know -- are CERTAIN OF -- is that this commander REJECTED them for inclusion in Lt Bush's personnel file. Otherwise, he could have pushed to have the information in them noted in some derogatory fashion for inclusion in the file.
And a "memo for record" does not mean anything other than for the writer's personal files; not the files of someone he's writing about.
Posted on taht other thread, by MineralMan:
"The IBM Executive typewriter, available at that time, created documents with proportional spacing. The military had lots and lots of them.
I know this, because about the time these memos were supposed to have been written, I used an IBM Executive to typeset the body text for a small magazine I published at the time.
This argument won't fly.
Does anyone know if it had superscript capabilities like those seen in the first doc?
No, the IBM Selectric 'bouncing ball' typewriters never had anything but monospaced fonts. However, the IBM Executive typewriter did offer proportional spacing. However, the superscripted 'th' looks like a special key???
dvwjr
I just took a gander at those 'documents'. No typewriter typed that straight and clean (a ruler couldn't be any straighter than those lines). My immediate impression is that a laser printer was used in the creation of these docs. There are no strikemarks that a typewriter would make (and would still be visible on a copy) and there is no evidence of the blurring that would occur as the ink from a typewriter was absorbed into the fiber of the paper.
In short, the media is perpetratin' a fraud. Again.
The remarks about mono spaced fonts are tuue. Where I worked as a lawyer in 1970 and 1971 we used the best available IBM Selectric typewriters. They all typed a mono spaced font. When I was in the Army in 1968 and 1969 we used the same kind of typewriters.
I was in law school and beginning the practice in the 1965-1970 period when the first expensive, primitive word processors initially appeared. The commonest was the IBM MTST, about the size of a grand piano. None of these used proportionally spaced fonts.
Byron York's article on BUSH'S REAL GUARD SERVICE. Many points were new to me...
Bushs National Guard years
Before you fall for Dems spin, here are the facts
What do you really know about George W. Bushs time in the Air National Guard?
That he didnt show up for duty in Alabama? That he missed a physical? That his daddy got him in?
News coverage of the presidents years in the Guard has tended to focus on one brief portion of that time to the exclusion of virtually everything else. So just for the record, here, in full, is what Bush did:
The future president joined the Guard in May 1968. Almost immediately, he began an extended period of training. Six weeks of basic training. Fifty-three weeks of flight training. Twenty-one weeks of fighter-interceptor training.
That was 80 weeks to begin with, and there were other training periods thrown in as well. It was full-time work. By the time it was over, Bush had served nearly two years.
Not two years of weekends. Two years.
After training, Bush kept flying, racking up hundreds of hours in F-102 jets. As he did, he accumulated points toward his National Guard service requirements. At the time, guardsmen were required to accumulate a minimum of 50 points to meet their yearly obligation.
According to records released earlier this year, Bush earned 253 points in his first year, May 1968 to May 1969 (since he joined in May 1968, his service thereafter was measured on a May-to-May basis).
Bush earned 340 points in 1969-1970. He earned 137 points in 1970-1971. And he earned 112 points in 1971-1972. The numbers indicate that in his first four years, Bush not only showed up, he showed up a lot. Did you know that?
That brings the story to May 1972 the time that has been the focus of so many news reports when Bush deserted (according to anti-Bush filmmaker Michael Moore) or went AWOL (according to Terry McAuliffe, chairman of the Democratic National Committee).
Bush asked for permission to go to Alabama to work on a Senate campaign. His superior officers said OK. Requests like that werent unusual, says retired Col. William Campenni, who flew with Bush in 1970 and 1971.
In 1972, there was an enormous glut of pilots, Campenni says. The Vietnam War was winding down, and the Air Force was putting pilots in desk jobs. In 72 or 73, if you were a pilot, active or Guard, and you had an obligation and wanted to get out, no problem. In fact, you were helping them solve their problem.
So Bush stopped flying. From May 1972 to May 1973, he earned just 56 points not much, but enough to meet his requirement.
Then, in 1973, as Bush made plans to leave the Guard and go to Harvard Business School, he again started showing up frequently.
In June and July of 1973, he accumulated 56 points, enough to meet the minimum requirement for the 1973-1974 year.
Then, at his request, he was given permission to go. Bush received an honorable discharge after serving five years, four months and five days of his original six-year commitment. By that time, however, he had accumulated enough points in each year to cover six years of service.
During his service, Bush received high marks as a pilot.
A 1970 evaluation said Bush clearly stands out as a top notch fighter interceptor pilot and was a natural leader whom his contemporaries look to for leadership.
A 1971 evaluation called Bush an exceptionally fine young officer and pilot who continually flies intercept missions with the unit to increase his proficiency even further. And a 1972 evaluation called Bush an exceptional fighter interceptor pilot and officer.
Now, it is only natural that news reports questioning Bushs service in The Boston Globe and The New York Times, on CBS and in other outlets would come out now. Democrats are spitting mad over attacks on John Kerrys record by the group Swift Boat Veterans for Truth.
And, as it is with Kerry, its reasonable to look at a candidates entire record, including his military service or lack of it. Voters are perfectly able to decide whether its important or not in November.
The Kerry camp blames Bush for the Swift boat veterans attack, but anyone who has spent much time talking to the Swifties gets the sense that they are doing it entirely for their own reasons.
And it should be noted in passing that Kerry has personally questioned Bushs service, while Bush has not personally questioned Kerrys.
In April before the Swift boat veterans had said a word Kerry said Bush has yet to explain to America whether or not, and tell the truth, about whether he showed up for duty. Earlier, Kerry said, Just because you get an honorable discharge does not, in fact, answer that question.
Now, after the Swift boat episode, the spotlight has returned to Bush.
Thats fine. We should know as much as we can.
And perhaps someday Kerry will release more of his military records as well.
Byron York is a White House correspondent for National Review. His column appears in The Hill each week. E-mail: byork@thehill.com
So he couldn't have a say in how Bush performed? Why did Bush get an honorable discharge when he supposedly had these complaints against his service. And I don't know why Bush didn't take a desk job-why would a dummy want to fly one of those jets? I am sick of the media. Nov. 2 will tell and put an end to them. I want to see them suffer.
If forgeries, then they should be prosecuted.
If out of deceased Lt Col Killian's files, then it's certain that he rejected them for inclusion in Lt Bush's file.
The media is slimey here because they know that LTC Killian is deceased. Dead men can't straighten things out.
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