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Wednesday, February 18, 2004
Impossible to miss Bush if he was there - no gratuitous points?
BOTH MEN KNEW JOHN "BILL" CALHOUN, the Atlanta businessman who was flight safety officer for the 187th in 1972 and who subsequently retired as a lieutenant colonel. Calhoun created something of a sensation late last week when he came forward at the apparent prompting of the administration to claim that he did in fact remember Lt. Bush, that the young officer has met with him during drill weekends, largely spending his time reading safety manuals in the 187th's safety office.
Even in media venues sympathetic to the president, doubt was cast almost immediately on aspects of Calhoun's statement - particularly his claim that Lt. Bush was at the 187th during spring and early summer of 1972, periods when the White House itself does not claim the young lieutenant had yet arrived at Dannelly.
Mintz and Bishop are both skeptical, as well.
"I'm glad he [Calhoun] remembered being with Lt. Bush and Lt. Bush's eating sandwiches and looking at manuals. It seems a little strange that one man saw an individual, and all the rest of them did not. Because it was such a small organization. Usually, we all had lunch together.
As Bishop (corroborated by Mintz) described the physical environment, the safety office where the meetings between Major Calhoun and Lt. Bush allegedly took place was on the second floor of the unit's hangar, a relatively small structure itself... It was a very close-quarters situation - It would have been "virtually impossible," said Bishop, for an officer to go in and out of the safety office for eight hours a month several months in a row and be unseen by anybody except then Major Calhoun.
Yet another veteran of the 187th is Wayne Rambo of Montgomery, who as a lieutenant served as the unit's chief administrative until April of 1972. That was a few months prior to Bush's alleged service, which Rambo, who continued to drill with the 187th, also cannot remember.
Rambo was, however, able to shed some light on the Guard practice, then and now, of assigning annual service 'points' to members, based on their record of attendance and participation. The bare minimum number is 50, and reservists meeting standard are said to have had "a good year," Rambo said. Less than that amount to an "unsatisfactory" year - one calling for penalties assessed against the reservist' retirement fund and, more immediately, for disciplinary or other corrective action. Such deficits can be written off only on the basis of a "commander?' call," Rambo said - and only then because of certifiable illness or some other clearly plausible reason.
"The 50-point minimum has always been taken very seriously, especially for pilots," says Rambo. "The reason is that it takes a lot of taxpayer money to train a pilot, and you don't want to see it wasted."
For whatever reason, the elusive Lt. George W. Bush was awarded 41 actual points for his service in both Texas and Alabama during 1972 ? though he apparently was given 15 "gratuitous" points -- presumably by his original Texas command -- enough to bring him up from substandard. That would have been a decided violation of the norm, according to Rambo, who stresses that the awarding of gratuitous points was clearly meant only as a reward to reservists for meeting their bottom line.
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