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ON GUARD — OR AWOL?

(This is an updated and expanded version of a story which first appeared in this space last week.)

Two members of the Air National Guard unit that President George W. Bush allegedly served with as a young Guard flyer in 1972 had been told to expect him late in that year and were on the lookout for him. He never showed, however; of that both Bob Mintz and Paul Bishop are certain.

The question of Bush’s presence in 1972 at Dannelly Air National Guard base in Montgomery, Alabama — or the lack of it — has become an issue in the 2004 presidential campaign. And that issue, which picked up steam last week, continues to rage.

Recalls Memphian Mintz, now 62: “I remember that I heard someone was coming to drill with us from Texas. And it was implied that it was somebody with political influence. I was a young bachelor then. I was looking for somebody to prowl around with.” But, says Mintz, that “somebody” — better known to the world now as the president of the United States — never showed up at Dannelly in 1972. Nor in 1973, nor at any time that Mintz, a FedEx pilot now and an Eastern Airlines pilot then, when he was a reserve first lieutenant at Dannelly, can remember.

“And I was looking for him,” repeated Mintz, who said that he assumed that Bush “changed his mind and went somewhere else” to do his substitute drill. It was not “somewhere else,” however, but the 187th Air National Guard Tactical squadron at Dannelly to which the young Texas flyer had requested transfer from his regular Texas unit — the reason being Bush’s wish to work in Alabama on the ultimately unsuccessful U.S. Senate campaign of family friend Winton “Red” Blount.

It is the 187th, Mintz’s unit, which was cited, during the 2000 presidential campaign, as the place where Bush completed his military obligation. And it is the 187th that the White House continues to contend that Bush belonged to — as recently as last week, when presidential spokesman Scott McClellan released payroll records and, later, evidence suggesting that Bush’s dental records might be on file at Dannelly.

Late last weekend, the White House even made available what it said was the entirety of Bush’s service record. Even so, the mystery of the young lieutenant’s whereabouts in late 1972 remains.

“THERE’S NO WAY WE WOULDN’T HAVE NOTICED a strange rooster in the henhouse, especially since we were looking for him,” insists Mintz, who has begun poring over such documents relating to the matter as are now making their way around the Internet. One of these is a piece of correspondence addressed to the 187th’s commanding officer, then Lt. Col. William Turnipseed, concerning Bush’s redeployment.

Mintz remembers a good deal of base scuttlebutt at the time about the letter, which clearly identifies Bush as the transferring party. “It couldn’t be anybody else. No one ever did that again, as far as I know.” In any case, he is certain that nobody else in that time frame, 1972-73, requested such a transfer into Dannelly.

Mintz, who at one time was a registered Republican and in recent years has cast votes in presidential elections for independent Ross Perot and Democrat Al Gore, confesses to “a negative reaction” to what he sees as out-and-out dissembling on President Bush’s part. “You don’t do that as an officer, you don’t do that as a pilot, you don’t do it as an important person, and you don’t do it as a citizen. This guy’s got a lot of nerve.”

Though some accounts reckon the total personnel component of the 187th as consisting of several hundred, the actual flying squadron — that to which Bush was reassigned — numbered only “25 to 30 pilots,” Mintz said. “There’s no doubt. I would have heard of him, seen him, whatever.”

Even if Bush, who was trained on a slightly different aircraft than the F4 Phantom jets flown by the squadron, opted not to fly with the unit, he would have had to encounter the rest of the flying personnel at some point, in non-flying formations or drills. “And if he did any flying at all, on whatever kind of craft, that would have involved a great number of supportive personnel. It takes a lot of people to get a plane into the air. But nobody I can think of remembers him.

“I talked to one of my buddies the other day and asked if he could remember Bush at drill at any time, and he said, ‘Naw, ol’ George wasn’t there. And he wasn’t at the Pit, either.’”

The “Pit” was The Snake Pit, a nearby bistro where the squadron’s pilots would gather for frequent after-hours revelry. And the buddy was Bishop, then a lieutenant at Dannelly and now a pilot for Kalitta, a charter airline that in recent months has been flying war materiel into the Iraq Theater of Operations

“I never saw hide nor hair of Mr. Bush,” confirms Bishop. . “In fact,” he quips, mindful of the current political frame of reference, “I saw more of Al Sharpton at the base than I did of George W. Bush.”

IN AIR NATIONAL GUARD CIRCLES, BISHOP, who now lives in Goldsboro, N.C., is something of a legendary figure. Known to his mates as “Papa Whiskey” (for “P.W.”) Bishop, he is a veteran of Gulf War I, a conflict in which he was the ranking reservist. During the current conflict, on behalf of Kalitta, Bishop has flown frequent supply missions into military facilities at Kuwait…

Some years ago, he flew a Kalitta aircraft, painted over with Air Force One markings, in the movie Air Force One starring Harrison Ford. Bishop did the rolls, tumbles, and other stunt maneuvers that looked in the movie like stressful motions afflicting the hijacked and embattled plane.

Bishop voted for Bush in 2000 and believes that the Iraq war has served some useful purposes — citing, as the White House does, disarmament actions since pursued by Libyan president Moammar Khadaffi — but he is disgruntled both about aspects of the war and about what he sees as Bush’s lack of truthfulness about his military record.

“I think a commander-in-chief who sends his men off to war ought to be a veteran who has seen the sting of battle,” Bishop says. “In Iraq: we have a bunch of great soldiers, but they are not policemen. I don’t think he [the president] was well advised; right now it’s costing us an American life a day. I’m not a peacenik, but what really bothers me is that of the 500 or so that we’ve lost almost 80 of them were reservists. We’ve got an over-extended Guard and reserve.”

Part of the problem, Bishop thinks, is a disconnect resulting from the president’s own inexperience with combat operations. And he is well beyond annoyed at the White House’s persistent claims that Bush did indeed serve time at Dannelly. Bishop didn’t pay much attention to the claim when candidate Bush first offered it in 2000. But he did after the second Iraq war started and the issue came front and center.

“It bothered me that he wouldn’t ‘fess up and say, Okay, guys, I cut out when the rest of you did your time. He shouldn’t have tried to dance around the subject. I take great exception to that. I spent 39 years defending my country.”

Like his old comrade Mintz, Bishop, now 65, was a pilot for Eastern Airlines during their reserve service in 1972 at Dannelly. Mintz then lived in Montgomery; Bishop commuted from Atlanta, a two-hour drive away. Mintz and Bishop retired from the Guard with the ranks of lieutenant colonel and colonel, respectively.

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 not saying it wasn’t possible, but I can’t imagine Bill not introducing him around,” Mintz said. “Unless he [Bush] was an introvert back then, which I don’t think he was, he’d have spent some time out in the mainstream, in the dining hall or wherever. He’d have spent some time with us. Unless he was trying to avoid publicity. But he wasn’t well known at all then. It all seems a bit unusual.”

Bishop was even more explicit. “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.

“Maybe we’re all getting old and senile,” Bishop said with obvious sarcasm. “I don’t want to second-guess Mr. Calhoun’s memory and I would hate to impugn the integrity of a fellow officer, but I know the rest of us didn’t see Lt. Bush.” 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.

As Bishop noted, “Fighter pilots, and that’s what we were, have situational awareness. They know everything about their environment — whether it’s an enemy plane creeping up or a stranger in their hangar.”

In any case, said Bishop, “If what he [Calhoun] says is true, there would be documentation of the fact in point summaries and pay documents.”

AND THAT’S ANOTHER MYSTERY.

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’s 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

“You had to get to 50 to get the gratuitous points, which applied toward your retirement benefits,” the former chief administrative officer recalls. “If you were 49, you stayed at 49; if you were 50, you got up to 65.”

Bishop raises yet another issue about Bush’s ANG tenure — the cancellation after 1972 of the final year of his six-year obligation — ostensibly to pursue a post-graduate business degree at Yale.

That didn’t sit well with the veteran pilot. “When you accept a flying slot with the Air National Guard, you’re obligated for six years,” Bishop said. “Even if you grant him credit for that missing year in Alabama which none of us remember, he still failed to serve his full commitment. Even graduate school, for which he was supposedly released, is attended during the week usually. It wouldn’t have conflicted with drill weekends, whether he was in Connecticut or Massachusetts or wherever. There would have been no need for an early release.”

Bishop paused. “Maybe they do things differently in Texas. I don’t want to malign the commander-inc-chief, but this is an issue of duty, honor country. You must have integrity.”

BISHOP, ESPECIALLY, IS BITTER ABOUT THE FATE of Eastern Airlines, which went bankrupt during the administration of President George H.W. Bush, the current incumbent’s father. “I watched my company dissolve under his policies. They let the airline fall victim to a hostile takeover,” Bishop said. Both Bushes were “children of privilege,” unlike himself and Mintz.

“Our fathers were poor dirt farmers. We would not have been given the same considerations he and his father were,” says Bishop, who maintains that, just as the junior Bush used family and political influence to jump himself ahead of 500 other flight training applicants, the senior Bush “apparently” did something similar when he became a naval aviator during World War Two. “I applaud him for volunteering, but he should have waited his turn like everybody else.”

But, says Bishop, “At least I can give him credit for serving his country.” That is more, he suggested, than can be granted the younger Bush.

Would he consider voting for the president’s reelection? “Naw, this goes to an integrity issue. I like either [John] Kerry or [John] Edwards better.” And who would Mintz be voting for? “Not for any Texas politicians,” was the Memphian’s sardonic answer.

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News News Feature

FROM MY SEAT

VERMONT MAVERICK IN KING JERRY’S COURT

It’s confession time. I’m going to the Grizzlies game Tuesday night, when our local NBA outfit will host the Dallas Mavericks. And I’ll be rooting for the wrong team . . . the “bad guys.”

Until the Grizzlies came to town almost three years ago, of course, there were no “bad guys” when it came to one’s loyalties in the NBA, or any other major professional sport, for that matter. Funny what “Memphis” across the jersey can do to your rooting interest, isn’t it? Well, for a few reasons, my rooting interest — NBA variety — hasn’t changed. Conflicted at times, yes. But I hear what my heart tells me.

Allow for some background. Growing up in central Vermont (by way of Knoxville, Atlanta, and southern California), I was an NBA orphan. Aside from Larry Bird, my dad could give a flip about pro basketball, so there was no inherited loyalty. Furthermore, Vermont is a hockey-first region, so there were no Celtics pennants or Knicks jerseys to persuade my affection one way or the other. Then, in the summer of 1983, the Dallas Mavericks drafted Dale Ellis.

I may not have had an NBA team of choice as a 14-year-old, hoops-playing soon-to-be high school freshman, but I knew my roots on the University of Tennessee campus, and I absolutely adored Dale Ellis (a first-team All-America his senior season at UT). When he became a Maverick as the ninth pick in the Ô83 draft, I became one with him.

The Mavericks were a bit of a phenomenon in the early Eighties, albeit one dramatically overshadowed by the transcontinental rivalry of Bird and Magic Johnson. They had progressed from an expansion season with only 15 wins (1980-81) to 38 wins in 1982-83. With Ellis on board, this team led by Mark Aguirre and Rolando Blackman won 43 games and reached the second round of the 1984 playoffs. They even managed to beat the mighty Lakers in Game 3 of their second-round series. And they had a new fan . . . somewhat displaced, but attached like a soggy wristband.

Despite trading Ellis to Seattle in 1986, the Mavs were a fun team to follow throughout the decade, and came within a single game of reaching the 1988 Finals (again, their foil was the Lakers). But with Aguirre and Blackman aging, and the now-infamous drafting of Roy Tarpley as the franchise’s centerpiece, Dallas went into a free fall that lasted longer than the Grizzlies (Memphis and Vancouver combined) have existed. Nary a playoff appearance from 1991 through 2000. Like that soggy wristband you just can’t throw in the laundry, though, I stuck by.

Which brings us to 2004, and an NBA very different from the 23-team league of 1983, one with my own home team a short drive from my front door. When the news of the Grizzlies’ arrival hit this city like, er, straightline winds in 2001, I found myself wondering how to morph my passion for Maverick basketball — they enjoyed their finest season in more than a decade that spring and made the playoffs — into doing the “right thing” behind this city’s first big-league operation.

Almost three years later, I know where my heart is, and it’s not beating with the pace of a Jason Williams dribble-drive. Steve Nash, Dirk Nowitzki, and (my man) Michael Finley . . . this is my NBA family. Harboring loyalty to a “second” team is akin to romancing a second love . . . can’t be done with any integrity. So I’ll continue to dream of a Mavericks championship, and the hope that I’m the only smiling patron to leave The Pyramid when Dallas is in town.

That said, my home is Memphis. And I continue to wish (more with my brain than my heart, I suppose) every success for our own NBA franchise. The rise of FedExForum is inspiring, powerful stuff for Mid-South sports fans. Shane Battier, James Posey, Lorenzen Wright, and Mike Miller are classy players, easy to root for. And Jerry West? Keep pinching yourself, Memphis. The playoffs, All-Star games, and brand new heights are drawing closer and closer on the horizon. There’s no limit to what the future may bring.

But please, oh please . . . no playoff series with Dallas. Agreed?

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

WILDER LETS FLY AT THE COURTS

Lt. Governor John Wilder, avowing that he was “not on an ego trip” and was ready to “do another deal” if the state Senate chose in the near future to elect someone else as speaker, on Saturday defended his “non-partisan” conduct of the presiding position which the octogenarian and nominal Democrat has held since 1971 and delivered himself of some unusually straightforward opinions.

Addressing attendees at the monthly Dutch Treat Luncheon at Picadilly’s Restaurant in southeast Memphis, the Somerville lawmaker cautioned at one point that “I’m going to turn some of you off.” There was no indication, however, that he did so with Saturday’s conservative-oriented audience — even when he expressed himself bluntly on issues relating to the courts.

“Our United State Supreme Court says separate was inequal,” he mused. “It took them 75 years to find out separate wasn’t equal. They said it had to be identical. Identical! What did they do? They went to preferential treatment.” Wilder segued from the issue of “women and blacks going against white men for jobs” to that of abortion, concerning which the lieutenant governor said, “They discriminated against all men. What about the husband? Ought not it be a unanimous decision to kill the baby? Or does just one of them have the right to kill the baby?”

Wilder was equally adamant about what he considered judicial presumption on the issue of a state income tax — the controversial and polarizing issue on which the Senate speaker maintained an ambivalent position during the last stormy years of the administration of Republican governor Don Sundquist. Wilder was anything but ambivalent Saturday, though.

“It’s unconstitutional!” the speaker thundered at one point., going on to say, “When the court rewrites a constitution, they violate their oath to uphold the constitution.. That’s an impeachable offense.” At another point he characterized judicial overreaching as violating “an oath to Jesus Christ.”

Wilder was also critical of a ruling by the Internal Revenue Service which prevented him from preparing legislation that would redefine the sales tax as a “privilege” tax, thereby making it subject to deduction from one’s federal income tax. The lieutenant governor has crusaded for years to achieve such a result on the ground, as he normally puts it, that “Uncle Sam taxes taxes.”

During a Q and A session, audience member Jim Jamieson complained of unnamed Senate committee chairmen who were “embarrassing” to the state and Shelby County and were guilty of “political arrogance and unethical behavior.” He later identified the main subject of his scorn as state Senator John Ford.

Meanwhile, Wilder evidently divined as much. “We probably don’t see eyeball to eyeball I think I know who you’re talking about,” he responded, “and he has a lot of ability you don’t know about, and he has a lot of honesty and integrity you don’t know about. And he knows health care pretty well.”

The speaker had devoted much of his prepared remarks to a demonstration that TennCare had proved to be an almost ruinously costly program and was crowding out spending on other state programs. “Our cash flow has been good, but our problem has been TennCare.It has eaten us alive,” he said.

Wilder’s remarks on the subject were consistent with recent ones on the same subject from Democratic Governor Phil Bredesen, a former HMO executive who has promised to unveil plans — perhaps as early as this week — to scale back the state-run healthcare system for the uninsured and uninsurable.

“We have a good governor,” Wilder said. “I believe he’s the best CEO we’ve had. He knows health care.” The lieutenant governor later declined to make comparisons between Bredesen and his immediate predecessor Sundquist, but he was willing to name two other recent Tennessee governors — Ned Ray McWherter and Ray Blanton, both Democrats — as executives possessing good administrative abilities.

On other issues, Wilder suggested that tax reform was a proper subject for the constitutional-amendment process and defended the fairness of recent Senate redistricting. In reponse to criticism of the latter, the lt. governor noted that Sen. Jo Ann Graves of Lebanon, “a yellow dog Democrat,” had presided over the last effort but said the efforts of her committee had been “fair,” pointing out that the districts of Republicans Curtis Person and Mark Norris, both Shelby Countians, had been left independent.

At one point, said Wilder, a self-proclaimed “no-good Democrat” who almost bolted the party in 1986, he was forced to intervene. The Senate speaker, who boasted that “for 30 years, they [Senate redistricters] did what I told them to do,” said he took care of a complaint from Sen. Roy Herron (D-Dresden), who lamented that his district had been drastically changed while that of Wilder had been altered to put challenger Bob Schutt “way off in the bushes.”

Said Wilder: “I told him, I’ll leave you just exactly where you are and I’ll beat Bob Schutt,’ and that’s what I did.”.

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We Recommend We Recommend

sunday, 15

Jim Duckworth & Friends Jim Spake, Herman Green, and Clint Wagner are at the Glass Onion tonight. And The Grown-Up Wrongs are at the Full Moon Club.

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We Recommend We Recommend

saturday, 14

Ah, Valentine s Day. Time to take that special someone out to a karaoke bar in Frayser and buy him or her a few longnecks. Or you could check out Premiere Palace, where there s tonight s Love-a-Rama with The Minivan Blues Band, The Joint Chiefs, Thingamajig, Hedge Creep, The James Family, The Skyscrapers, Crypt Orchid, and Johnny Smash & The Cash. Or you could go to The Orpheum tonight for Ballet Memphis production of The Rescue, based on the life of famous Memphian Tom Lee, and High Lonesome, set to the music of Beck.

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We Recommend We Recommend

friday, 13

If you re making the gallery rounds tonight, there are openings at Painted Planet Artspace (in its new location at 2160 Young) for glass work for Tatis Johnson; Jack Robinson Photography Gallery for 24 Hours Downtown, photographs of one day in the life of Downtown Memphis by 12 photographers, works which originally appeared in Memphis magazine; CBU s University Gallery for pottery by Dale and Brin Baucum; and at Memphis College of Art for the annual Works of Heart Auction, the Memphis Child Advocacy Center fund-raiser, which features an auction of specially created hearts by area artists, architects, designers, and celebrities. At The Lounge tonight, it s Barbara Blue s Valentine Scream, a CD-release party for Blue s newest recording, Memphis 3rd & Beale. There s a Fashion Show with The Viva L American Deathray Music at Young Avenue Deli. And, as always, The Chris Scott Band is at Poplar Lounge.

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News The Fly-By

friday, 13

Community in review Our daily newspaper has be gun to run book reviews penned by readers who belong to the Commercial Appeal Book Club. A recent book column announced that on February 15th the CA will run a reader-penned review of Patricia Cornwell s novel Blow Fly. While the pesky Fly knows absolutely nothing about Cornwell or her work (making us perfect candidates for the CA s new stable of writers), we would like to offer the following commentary: Great title!

Plante: How It Looks

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Hot Properties Real Estate

Escapee

We live in a police state. We are encouraged to police our every possession. The Fashion Police would have you clean out half your closet every year or two and update your wardrobe. The Housing Police currently mandate granite countertops lighted by halogen pendants. The Auto Police still suggest bigger is better, damn the price of gas.

It is rare to find an old house that hasn’t been the victim of serial updates. In this house’s 100-year existence, it has been inhabited by only three families. The current state of the house suggests they all wore very sensible shoes. Sure, there are now three bathrooms (none of which is original), and the kitchen was last updated when dark wood cabinets and avocado were the height of fashion. The biggest crime on the scene is the installation of sheet paneling (probably when the avocado kitchen went in) in the kitchen and dining room. However, restitution is simple. Rip the paneling off the walls, fill the small nail holes, and the evidence is gone.

The style of the house is distinctly Queen Anne. On the outside, there is a wraparound porch with a round pavilion at the corner covered by a turreted roof. Decoratively cut cedar shakes fill the front-facing gable and dormer. The main pyramidal roof with front-facing gables and multiple dormers is conclusive proof of the style.

Inside, the ground-floor rooms all have 12-foot ceilings. Tall, four-panel doors with transoms above still have their intricately cast doorknobs and escutcheon plates. Some of the floors are narrow oak, but even they appear to be over earlier heart of pine. The front door and sidelights have very ornate leaded and beveled glass panels. There are six major rooms downstairs: living room, dining room, kitchen, and three bedrooms. There is also a large pantry, two bathrooms, and a glassed-in back porch. I would deduce that the two bedrooms in front of the dining room and kitchen were originally a double parlor connected by pocket doors, which may still be in the walls. It would be most elegant to return the house to this plan, but you would sacrifice one bedroom downstairs.

Upstairs are two rooms tucked under the multiple gables and dormers. The floors are pine, and walls and slanted ceilings are finished with tongue-and-groove beadboard. The staircase has a massive newel post at the bottom and a wide landing that overlooks the front entry with its original art-glass light fixture.

The yard is huge by today’s standards, most of it in the rear. The backyard is privacy-fenced with a single-car garage and large workshop. A white picket fence separates the rear yard from the front. The landscaping is as classically simple as the interior: There is a row of ancient boxwood at the drive, one large oak in the front yard to the west of the house, one cedar tree, and one holly. All that’s missing is a bed of peonies.

It would be a crime to buy this and knock out a lot of walls to make a modern interior. The proportions of the rooms are too fine and the architectural details too numerous. An elegant restoration of this house would not handcuff you to a period Victorian interior. If you dream of escaping a boring interior, minimal furnishings within these grand rooms might set you free.

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News

BUSH A NO-SHOW AT ALABAMA BASE, SAYS MEMPHIAN

Copyright 2004 The Memphis Flyer

SEE UPDATE — “ON GUARD — OR AWOL?” CLICK HERE OR GO TO http://www.memphisflyer.com/ADMIN/dailydose.asp?action=EDIT&ID=2837.)

MEMPHIS — Two members of the Air National Guard unit that President George W. Bush allegedly served with as a young Guard flyer in 1972 had been told to expect him and were on the lookout for him. He never showed, however; of that both Bob Mintz and Paul Bishop are certain.

The question of Bush’s presence in 1972 at Dannelly Air National Guard base in Montgomery, Alabama — or the lack of it — has become an issue in the 2004 presidential campaign.

Recalls Memphian Mintz, now 62: “I remember that I heard someone was coming to drill with us from Texas. And it was implied that it was somebody with political influence. I was a young bachelor then. I was looking for somebody to prowl around with.” But, says Mintz, that “somebody” — better known to the world now as the president of the United States — never showed up at Dannelly in 1972. Nor in 1973, nor at any time that Mintz, a FedEx pilot now and an Eastern Airlines pilot then, when he was a reserve first lieutenant at Dannelly, can remember.

“And I was looking for him,” repeated Mintz, who said that he assumed that Bush “changed his mind and went somewhere else” to do his substitute drill. It was not “somewhere else,” however, but the 187th Air National Guard Tactical squadron at Dannelly to which the young Texas flyer had requested transfer from his regular Texas unit — the reason being Bush’s wish to work in Alabama on the ultimately unsuccessful U.S. Senate campaign of family friend Winton “Red” Blount.

Bob “Buck” Mintz in his Germantown den.

It is the 187th, Mintz’s unit, which was cited, during the 2000 presidential campaign, as the place where Bush completed his military obligation. And it is the 187th that the White House continues to contend that Bush belonged to — as recently as this week, when presidential spokesman Scott McClellan released payroll records and, later, evidence suggesting that Bush’s dental records might be on file at Dannelly.

“There’s no way we wouldn’t have noticed a strange rooster in the henhouse, especially since we were looking for him,” insists Mintz, who has pored over documents relating to the matter now making their way around the Internet. One of these is a piece of correspondence addressed to the 187th’s commanding officer, then Lt. Col. William Turnipseed, concerning Bush’s redeployment.

Mintz remembers a good deal of base scuttlebutt at the time about the letter, which clearly identifies Bush as the transferring party. “It couldn’t be anybody else. No one ever did that again, as far as I know.” In any case, he is certain that nobody else in that time frame, 1972-73, requested such a transfer into Dannelly.

Mintz, who at one time was a registered Republican and in recent years has cast votes in presidential elections for independent Ross Perot and Democrat Al Gore, confesses to “a negative reaction” to what he sees as out-and-out dissembling on President Bush’s part. “You don’t do that as an officer, you don’t do that as a pilot, you don’t do it as an important person, and you don’t do it as a citizen. This guy’s got a lot of nerve.”

Though some accounts reckon the total personnel component of the 187th as consisting of several hundred, the actual flying squadron — that to which Bush was reassigned — numbered only “25 to 30 pilots,” Mintz said. “There’s no doubt. I would have heard of him, seen him, whatever.” Even if Bush, who was trained on a slightly different aircraft than the F4 Phantom jets flown by the squadron, opted not to fly with the unit, he would have had to encounter the rest of the flying personnel at some point, in non-flying formations or drills. “And if he did any flying at all, on whatever kind of craft, that would have involved a great number of supportive personnel. It takes a lot of people to get a plane into the air. But nobody I can think of remembers him.

“I talked to one of my buddies the other day and asked if he could remember Bush at drill at any time, and he said, ‘Naw, ol’ George wasn’t there. And he wasn’t at the Pit, either.’”

The “Pit” was The Snake Pit, a nearby bistro where the squadron’s pilots would gather for frequent after-hours revelry. And the buddy was Bishop, then a lieutenant at Dannelly and now a pilot for Kalitta, a charter airline that in recent months has been flying war materiel into the Iraq Theater of Operations.

“I never saw hide nor hair of Mr. Bush.”

“I never saw hide nor hair of Mr. Bush,” confirms Bishop, who now lives in Goldsboro, N.C., is a veteran of Gulf War I and, as a Kalitta pilot, has himself flown frequent supply missions into military facilities at Kuwait. “In fact,” he quips, mindful of the current political frame of reference, “I saw more of Al Sharpton at the base than I did of George W. Bush.”

Bishop voted for Bush in 2000 and believes that the Iraq war has served some useful purposes — citing, as the White House does, disarmament actions since pursued by Libyan president Moammar Khadaffi — but he is disgruntled both about aspects of the war and about what he sees as Bush’s lack of truthfulness about his military record.

“I think a commander-in-chief who sends his men off to war ought to be a veteran who has seen the sting of battle,” Bishop says. “In Iraq: we have a bunch of great soldiers, but they are not policemen. I don’t think he [the president] was well advised; right now it’s costing us an American life a day. I’m not a peacenik, but what really bothers me is that of the 500 or so that we’ve lost almost 80 of them were reservists. We’ve got an over-extended Guard and reserve.”

Paul Bishop (l) with two ANG mates in the ’70s.

Part of the problem, Bishop thinks, is a disconnect resulting from the president’s own inexperience with combat operations. And he is well beyond annoyed at the White House’s persistent claims that Bush did indeed serve time at Dannelly. Bishop didn’t pay much attention to the claim when candidate Bush first offered it in 2000. But he did after the second Iraq war started and the issue came front and center.

“It bothered me that he wouldn’t ‘fess up and say, Okay, guys, I cut out when the rest of you did your time. He shouldn’t have tried to dance around the subject. I take great exception to that. I spent 39 years defending my country.”

Like his old comrade Mintz, Bishop, now 65, was a pilot for Eastern Airlines during their reserve service in 1972 at Dannelly. Mintz then lived in Montgomery; Bishop commuted from Atlanta, a two-hour drive away. Mintz and Bishop retired from the Guard with the ranks of lieutenant colonel and colonel, respectively.

Bishop, especially, is bitter about the fate of Eastern, which went bankrupt during the administration of President George H.W. Bush, the current incumbent’s father. “I watched my company dissolve under his policies.” Both Bushes were “children of privilege,” unlike himself and Mintz.

“Our fathers were poor dirt farmers. We would not have been given the same considerations he and his father were,” says Bishop, who maintains that, just as the junior Bush used family and political influence to jump himself ahead of 500 other flight training applicants, the senior Bush “apparently” did, too, when he became a naval aviator during World War Two. “I applaud him for volunteering, but he should have waited his turn like everybody else.”

But, says Bishop, “At least I can give him credit for serving his country.” That is more, he suggested, than can be granted the younger Bush.

Would he consider voting for the president’s reelection? “Naw, this goes to an integrity issue. I like either [John] Kerry or [John] Edwards better.” And who would Mintz be voting for? “Not for any Texas politicians,” was the Memphian’s sardonic answer.

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TENNESSEE PRIMARY RESULTS : A BRIEF ANALYSIS

TENNESSEE (2/10 primary): Kerry Nabs Double-Digit Win; Gore’s Endorsed Candidate Comes In Fourth

from The Hotline

ÊÊÊÊÊ John Kerry won the TN primary. By AP’s count, Kerry won 31

delegates, while John Edwards won 20 delegates and Wesley Clark

won 18 (AP, 2/11). Results with 100% of precincts reporting (AP, 2/11).

Ê

WH '04 Dem Primary Results

                    votes  %age

    Kerry          151,436  41%

    Edwards         97,746  27

    Clark           85,182  23

    Dean            16,094   4

    Sharpton         6,105   2

    Lieberman        3,191   1

    Uncommitted      2,708   1

    Braun            2,435   1

    Kucinich         2,277   1

    Gephardt         1,406   -

    LaRouche           297   -

    

Exit Polls — 51% Of Voters Decided In The Last Week

ÊÊÊÊÊ The National Election Pool exit poll; conducted 2/10 by Edison Media

Research/Mitofsky Int’l; surveyed 2,513 Dem primary voters as they left randomly

selected polling locations across the state; margin of error +/- 3% (AP, 2/11).

Ê

WH '04 Dem Primary Vote

                     Men Wom Dem GOP Ind Lib Mod Con Wht Blk

    All              46% 54% 75%  5% 20% 38% 45% 17% 74% 23%

    Kerry            41  42  46  20  31  46  41  31  40  47

    Edwards          27  27  25  26  32  23  28  32  31  15

    Clark            22  23  22  30  25  20  24  26  21  28

    Dean              4   4   4   4   7   5   4   4   5   3

    Sharpton          21  2   51  21  21  6

    Kucinich       1  -1  21  1   -1  1   -

    Lieberman      1  1   -   5   21  -   21  -

    Uncommitted    1  1   -   2   21  1   -1  -

                    18-29 30-44 45-64 65+ Union Military

    All               7%   22%   49%  23%  15%     24%

    Kerry            36    42    39   49   43      46

    Edwards          25    28    27   26   25      24

    Clark            22    20    25   20   21      22

    Dean              8     5     4    4    5       3

    Sharpton          3     2     2 1   4       2

    Kucinich       1    2     -    -    -       1

    Lieberman      1 1 1   -    -       1

    Uncommitted       3  1 1   - 1      1

    When Did You Finally Decide Who To Vote For?

                           All Clark Dean Edwards Kerry Kucin Lieb Sharp

    Today/Last 3 days/

     Last week             51%  19%    4%   31%    43%     1%   1%    1%

    Last month/Before that 48   25     5    24     41   11    2

    Did You Vote For Your Candidate More Because You Think:

                           All Clark Dean Edwards Kerry Kucin Lieb Sharp

    Can defeat Bush        37%  17%    2%   21%    59%     -%   -%    -%

    Agrees with you on

     the major issues      55   27     5    31     31   11    3

    Which Comes Closest To Your Feelings About The Bush Admin:

                           All Clark Dean Edwards Kerry Kucin Lieb Sharp

    Angry                  39%  20%    5%   25%    47%     1%   -%    1%

    Dissatisfied, but not

     angry                 45   26     4    24     43      -    -     2

    Satisfied, but not

     enthusiastic          11   24     4    37     27      -    2     2

    Enthusiastic            3   14     7    35     14      5   10     5

    How You Feel About The U.S. Decision To Go To War With Iraq:

                           All Clark Dean Edwards Kerry Kucin Lieb Sharp

    Approve                26%  22%    4%   32%    34%     1%   2%    2%

    Disapprove             69   23     4    25     44   1   -     2

    Issue That Mattered Most In Deciding How You Voted Today:

                           All Clark Dean Edwards Kerry Kucin Lieb Sharp

    Economy/Jobs           39%  18%    3%   32%    42%     1%   -%    2%

    Health care/Medicare   19   19     5    27     45      - 1    2

    The war in Iraq        15   29     6    16     47   1   -     -

    Education               9   25     5    28     36   1   -     2

    Taxes                   6   28     8    19     41      -    2     2

    Nat'l sec./Terrorism    4   28     4    23     31      -    5     3

    Candidate Quality That Mattered Most In Deciding How You Voted Today:

                           All Clark Dean Edwards Kerry Kucin Lieb Sharp

    Can defeat Bush        25%  15%    1%   18%    64%     -%   -%    -%

    Cares about people

     like me               19   23     2    40     29      -    -     3

    Has right temperament   5   23     9    41     17      -    2     5

    Stands up for what he

     believes              20   27    11    19     34      2    2     3

    Has right experience   10   37     2     8     50   11    -

    Has a positive message 14   19     4    42     34   11    1

    He understands TN       2   20  1   49     28      -    -     2

    

ÊÊÊÊÊ ABC’s Langer notes “some Southern soft spots” for Kerry — he

won whites “by a comparatively narrow nine points”; “did much less well with

conservatives”; and “did less well with independents.” However, “Kerry’s

strengths more than compensated” (release, 2/11).

Ê

LOCAL RACES:

ASSESSOR OF PROPERTY – DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY – MEMPHIS

277 of 283 prec. reporting

Rita Clark, 24,174 – 59 percent

Michael Hooks, 16,827 – 41 percent

ASSESSOR OR PROPERTY – REPUBLICAN PRIMARY – MEMPHIS

277 of 283 prec. reporting

Harold Sterling, 3,155 – 59 percent

Bob Kahn – 2,216 – 41 percent

GENERAL SESSIONS COURT CLERK – DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY – MEMPHIS

277 of 283 prec. reporting

Roscoe Dixon – 21,697 – 56 percent

Rebecca Clark, 17,287, – 44 percent

GENERAL SESSIONS COURT CLERK – REPUBLICAN PRIMARY – MEMPHIS

277 of 283 prec. reporting

Chris Turner – 7,459 – 87 percent

Charles Fineberg – 1,136 – 13 percent