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#21
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Ron wrote:
Parents can not get you your BA or BS degree. They can indeed, especially if they are alumni and/or are public figures. They're what are called legacy degrees. No, that is legacy in terms of points for university acceptance. But that does not help you pass your classe or get you your degree. Never heard of a legacy degree...But it can apply for acceptance into school and frats. Even my old Chinese launderyman understood the concept of "no tickee, no washee". University fundraisers understand "no degree, no contributions" well enough the know how to keep the money flowing. You're kidding yourself if you think it works some other way......it doesn't! They cant get thru F-102 training. The offspring of public figures often are extended courtesies and consideration not available to others. I dont think an IP will care you are you or where you came from. Ask Ed if he ever gave rats ass during Fighter Lead In who someone was. Ed may well not have during his career, but then he may never had a bumbler on his wing only because the guy's daddy had clout. I, too, flew airplanes, and I did it often enough to know that it can and does occasionally happen. I daresay we've both worked for people who were career oriented to the degree that they would have been responsive to potential political influence. It happens. Parents cant make you excel at pilot training and ACM. I don't believe I ever read of a claim that he excelled. When he took his AFOQT, his application form reflected a pencil entry of 25th pctl, which was the lowest level acceptable for entrance into pilot training. I'm not even sure if the pencilled in entry didn't replace a lower original one. I have read often that he was a very good stick at UPT, and he was damn good at ACM while as an F-102 pilot I guess we must have read different stuff. I read that his flying abilities were so limited that his ANG supervisors were pleased when they learned that he grounded himself (by not getting a current flight physical) before he killed himself and destroyed one of their airplanes in the process. Incidentally, I hope you weren't relying on what was said about his performance on those OERs that were written about him....if I was writing one on the son of an influential congressman, I wouldn't have been brutally frank or honest unless my retirement papers had already been approved. Doing something like that was not conducive to a long and satisfying career for the evaluator. They also cant get you your MBA. He himself acknowledged that he was a mediocre student who spent most of his time drinking and doing as little as possible in order to get through the program. My father was a sheet metal mechanic and with a similar academic performance from me, Harvard would have bounced me out on my ass in a heartbeat. Let's not be so naive about the influence of parents who are public figures and/or alumni. Hell, I was a mediocre student too. B average all the way thru..at best. But my IQ, AFOQT, SAT, etc were usually pretty high. He (and I) had an SAT of over 1200, which tranlates pretty high. He certainly had a far better academic record that Gore, but you dont see any Democrats that ever criticized Gore over it You're much too modest. A B average is hardly what anybody would consider mediocre.........it is quite respectable. As for the various test scores you got, that's really quite irrelevent to the discussion. It's all in the eye of the beholder. When all is said and done, he can't divorce his parents nor can he deny that he knows them when they make a judicious call here or there and good things result for him. It doesn't mean he did it all on his own. Bill Gates did it all on his own, but Dubya's nowhere near in the same class. George Z. Yes, but it sounds like you are holding it against him, because of his parents. But then Kerry, Kennedy, Roosevelt, all came from priviledged upbringings too. Sure they did, but the last I heard, none of them majored in Alcoholism 101, and none were C- students. AAMOF, if I recall correctly, you would not have gotten a baccalaureate degree from my undergrad school with a C- average.....it would have taken nothing less than a C average. Let's not confuse earning a degree with being handed one with little if any expenditure of academic effort by the student. At risk of repeating myself, I think I said elsewhere that my father was a sheet metal mechanic and if I had produced academic results no better than those produced by Dubya, Harvard would have bounced my ass out of their MBA program in a heartbeat. George Z. |
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They cant get you thru UPT
They cant get thru F-102 training. The offspring of public figures often are extended courtesies and consideration not available to others. So now you're saying Bush got preferential treatment while going through UPT/IFF and F-102 FTU? I'm sure you've got some proof for that ludicrous claim? BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" |
#23
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No, that is legacy in terms of points for university acceptance. But that
does not help you pass your classe or get you your degree. Never heard of a legacy degree...But it can apply for acceptance into school and frats. Even my old Chinese launderyman understood the concept of "no tickee, no washee". University fundraisers understand "no degree, no contributions" well enough the know how to keep the money flowing. You're kidding yourself if you think it works some other way......it doesn't! But now you are heading toward a grand conspiracy involving university faculty and professors too. Legacy can help get you in, but it does not get you a degree. I have read often that he was a very good stick at UPT, and he was damn good at ACM while as an F-102 pilot I guess we must have read different stuff. I read that his flying abilities were so limited that his ANG supervisors were pleased when they learned that he grounded himself (by not getting a current flight physical) before he killed himself and destroyed one of their airplanes in the process. Incidentally, I hope you weren't relying on what was said about his performance on those OERs that were written about him....if I was writing one on the son of an influential congressman, I wouldn't have been brutally frank or honest unless my retirement papers had already been approved. Doing something like that was not conducive to a long and satisfying career for the evaluator. "advertisement In late 1969, when George W. Bush showed up at Ellington Air Force Base in Texas for flight training, his instructor was a 270-pound judo black belt and self-described "mean S.O.B." named Maury Udell. "I know your dad is a congressman, but that doesn't mean a thing to me," Udell told Bush. After Bush had learned to fly jets, Udell tried to rattle him by getting on his tail in mock dogfights. Bush gave his instructor a hard look and began doing his own high-speed zigzags, "doing his damnedest to lose me," Udell recalled to NEWSWEEK. "He was not a candy a--." Udell rates Bush "among the top 5 percent of fighter pilots I've ever trained." Ron Tanker 65, C-54E (DC-4) |
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#25
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![]() "Grantland" wrote in message ... 362436 (Ron) wrote: In late 1969, when George W. Bush showed up at Ellington Air Force Base in Texas for flight training, his instructor was a 270-pound judo black belt and self-described "mean S.O.B." named Maury "Brown-nose" Udell. "I know your dad is a congressman, but that doesn't mean a thing to me," Udell told Bush. After Bush had learned to fly jets, Udell tried to rattle him by getting on his tail wink in mock dogfights. Bush gave his instructor a hard look and began doing his own high-speed zigzags, "doing his damnedest to lose me," Udell recalled to NEWSWEEK. "He was not a candy a--." Udell rates Bush "among the top 5 percent of fighter pilots I've ever trained." LOL! So now the universities, their faculty, the Texas ANG and who knows how many others are required in the conspiracy. That Gore guy must have lost on purpose too. |
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#27
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Ron wrote:
No, that is legacy in terms of points for university acceptance. But that does not help you pass your classe or get you your degree. Never heard of a legacy degree...But it can apply for acceptance into school and frats. Even my old Chinese launderyman understood the concept of "no tickee, no washee". University fundraisers understand "no degree, no contributions" well enough the know how to keep the money flowing. You're kidding yourself if you think it works some other way......it doesn't! But now you are heading toward a grand conspiracy involving university faculty and professors too. Legacy can help get you in, but it does not get you a degree. No conspiracy....merely facing reality. It happens, perhaps not often, but then again, not rarely either. I have read often that he was a very good stick at UPT, and he was damn good at ACM while as an F-102 pilot I guess we must have read different stuff. I read that his flying abilities were so limited that his ANG supervisors were pleased when they learned that he grounded himself (by not getting a current flight physical) before he killed himself and destroyed one of their airplanes in the process. Incidentally, I hope you weren't relying on what was said about his performance on those OERs that were written about him....if I was writing one on the son of an influential congressman, I wouldn't have been brutally frank or honest unless my retirement papers had already been approved. Doing something like that was not conducive to a long and satisfying career for the evaluator. "advertisement In late 1969, when George W. Bush showed up at Ellington Air Force Base in Texas for flight training, his instructor was a 270-pound judo black belt and self-described "mean S.O.B." named Maury Udell. "I know your dad is a congressman, but that doesn't mean a thing to me," Udell told Bush. After Bush had learned to fly jets, Udell tried to rattle him by getting on his tail in mock dogfights. Bush gave his instructor a hard look and began doing his own high-speed zigzags, "doing his damnedest to lose me," Udell recalled to NEWSWEEK. "He was not a candy a--." Udell rates Bush "among the top 5 percent of fighter pilots I've ever trained." That's one pilot's opinion of another and hardly definitive. BTW, in earlier days, anybody weighing 270 pounds would not have been able to fit into a fighter cockpit. The tall guys inevitably ended up in bombers or transports, and the real heavy guys (like 270 lbs.) ended up as the flight surgeon's medically grounded annual project. Century series cockpits might be far more forgiving and I'd certainly defer to someone like Ed Rasmussen, who'd be far more knowledgeable than I on that subject. Anyway, one might be forgiven for wondering what Udell's supervisors thought of him, and if Udell admired Bush so much because they were cut from the same cloth and excelled at juvenile drinking games in the O Club bar. George Z. |
#28
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That's one pilot's opinion of another and hardly definitive. BTW, in earlier
days, anybody weighing 270 pounds would not have been able to fit into a fighter cockpit. The tall guys inevitably ended up in bombers or transports, and the real heavy guys (like 270 lbs.) ended up as the flight surgeon's medically grounded annual project. Century series cockpits might be far more forgiving and I'd certainly defer to someone like Ed Rasmussen, who'd be far more knowledgeable than I on that subject. Anyway, one might be forgiven for wondering what Udell's supervisors thought of him, and if Udell admired Bush so much because they were cut from the same cloth and excelled at juvenile drinking games in the O Club bar. George Z. But now you are trying to impugn someone else, just over your dislike of Bush, without any real reason to be, and are just speculating. I think that stuff is best left to you know who... Ron Tanker 65, C-54E (DC-4) |
#30
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![]() "George Z. Bush" wrote That's one pilot's opinion of another and hardly definitive. BTW, in earlier days, anybody weighing 270 pounds would not have been able to fit into a fighter cockpit. The tall guys inevitably ended up in bombers or transports, and the real heavy guys (like 270 lbs.) ended up as the flight surgeon's medically grounded annual project. Century series cockpits might be far more forgiving and I'd certainly defer to someone like Ed Rasmussen, who'd be far more knowledgeable than I on that subject. Anyway, one might be forgiven for wondering what Udell's supervisors thought of him, and if Udell admired Bush so much because they were cut from the same cloth and excelled at juvenile drinking games in the O Club bar. You might want to ask Chad Hennings about size and fighter cockpits. 6'6", 291, A-10 pilot, Dallas Cowboys defensive tackle. (ok...the A-10 is not a 'fighter' in the classic sense, but neither is it a tanker, transport, or bomber) Pete |
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