On my way into work this morning I heard news stories about those 1973 Air National Guard memos on two different radio shows, one on WBZ and Imus was the other. Mainstream Media is picking up the story. Here are excerpts from an ABC News story. Marjorie Connell — widow of the late Lt. Col. Jerry Killian, the reported author of memos suggesting that Bush did not meet the standards for the Texas Air National Guard — questioned whether the documents were real.
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Connell said her late husband would be "turning over in his grave to know that a document such as this would be used against a fellow guardsman," and she is "sick" and "angry" that his name is "being battled back and forth on television."
Her late husband was a fan of the young Bush, said Connell, who remarried after her husband died in 1984. "I know for a fact that this young man … was an excellent aviator, an excellent person to be in the Guard, and he was very happy to have him become a member of the 111th."While no credit was given to bloggers on either radio program, it's obvious that the story originated there, since the points raised in questioning authenticity of the documents were exactly those circulating through the blogosphere yesterday.
The memos were written using a proportional typeface, where letters take up variable space according to their size, rather than fixed-pitch typeface used on typewriters, where each letter is allotted the same space. Proportional typefaces are available only on computers or on very high-end typewriters that were unlikely to be used by the National Guard.
The memos include superscript, i.e. the "th" in "187th" appears above the line in a smaller font. Superscript was not available on typewriters.
The memos included "curly" apostrophes rather than straight apostrophes found on typewriters.
The font used in the memos is Times Roman, which was in use for printing but not in typewriters. The Haas Atlas — the bible of fonts — does not list Times Roman as an available font for typewriters.
The vertical spacing used in the memos, measured at 13 points, was not available in typewriters, and only became possible with the advent of computers.Is this the beginning of a major meltdown for Mainstream Media? Could be. This is a truly desperate attempt by 60 Minutes and CBS to create a scandal for the President in hopes of electing Lord Kerry. What will they do next, when in spite of all their best efforts, Bush now leads Kerry among likely voters?
For the first time in Post-ABC News poll this year, a majority of likely voters say they plan to vote for Bush. Among those most likely to vote in November, Bush holds a 52 percent to 43 percent lead over Kerry, with independent Ralph Nader receiving 2 percent of the hypothetical vote. Among all registered voters, Bush leads Kerry 50 percent to 44 percent.
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