ttalion State Page 5 • Monday, September 27, 1999 ) Bush aide questioned Barnes help BUSH DALLAS (AP) — Six months before Gov. George W. ush announced for president, top aides were dealing H the thorny issue of whether for- fer Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes helped Bush Eito the Texas National Guard dur- jg'the height of the Vietnam War. Mfie Dallas Morning News reported ^rday that longtime Bush friend ad chief fund-raiser Donald L. Evans iRM||Ht to Barnes in September of 1998 r rtflfteijan anonymous letter alleged that dgtush s father, then a Houston con- tesbrnan, had solicited Barnes’ assis- ince with the Guard during an encounter at the Blue- _j)nnet Bowl football game in Houston. ^^Bhe allegation renewed the nagging question of ■ther Bush got special treatment landing a spot as a mbshe Aside fighter pilot during the Vietnam War. e issuer®vans said Barnes told him that he did not remem- includ er whether he had helped Bush get a Guard slot, and id hen esaid nobody in the Bush family, including his father, i it isd adlasked for such help. o find a:g§arnes did say, however, that a Houston business- hat art nan had approached him and asked him to intervene ■lush, Evans said. “I don’t remember Ben mentioning a specific name,” >ahs said. “I just remember that he said, “There was ■be a businessman in Houston, that mentioned that W j t | 1 lush’s desire to enter the Guard to me.’” lox.lB i end. 's’ first tev wa Evans said he met with Barnes on his own initiative, without informing the governor in advance. At the time, he was Bush’s gubernatorial campaign chair. Evans said he told the governor that Barnes con firmed that no Bush family members had sought his help. But, he said, he did not mention the part about the Houston businessman because it seemed too vague. In return, the governor — who says he knows of no special help he received getting into the Guard — jotted a note to Barnes, thanking him for affirming he and his father’s recollection of events. “Thank you for your candor and for killing the ru mor about you and Dad ever discussing my status. Like you, he never remembers any conversation,” Bush wrote in the memo, dated Sept. 9, 1998. “I appreciate your help,” the Republican governor wrote to the longtime Democrat. Barnes’ testimony is scheduled to be taken Monday at an Austin law office by lawyers for former Texas Lot tery Executive Director Lawrence Littwin. Littwin has sued GTECH Corp., the lottery operator, alleging that the company is to blame for his firing in 1997, after four months on the job. According to court records, Littwin’s lawyers want to question Barnes, a former GTECH lobbyist, about whether GTECH was allowed to keep its lucrative state contract in exchange for Barnes’ silence about the Guard matter. Rig capsizes, hunt continues for crewman PORT ARANSAS (AP) — The hunt continued yesterday for a missing crewman from a 122-foot drilling rig that cap sized early Saturday in the Gulf of Mexico. Eleven of the 12 crewmen aboard the jack-up rig DL-Han- son were rescued after it col lapsed about 1:30 a.m. One of its four legs gave way in 150-180 feet of water about 30 miles northeast of Aransas Pass, the Coast Guard said. Jack-up rigs are platforms used for drilling oil and for other sub-surface exploration. They can be floated into place and jacked up on re tractable legs to the proper height. S 3 Sp6C e hit siii carnbe; out-outs can coir lough' 1: icent oil jse ittfe ashing.lA CONROE (AP) — Two men vhichn jwho died when a wing broke to. off their experimental plane as empo i [they were flying over Mont- hereshtigomery County Airport have hkt [Seen identified. rtendbuB Gordon Eugene Brown, 52, of (The Woodlands, and Rudolph lijtci^Mguilar, 47, of Conroe, died on . impact, Conroe police Lt. Russell ■eynolds said. mm’snutr* men were about 1,000 . Beet over the airport tarmac when ~ ythe home-built, single-engine '' Bkywalker Revelation lost its left mc ... wing (about 5:30 p.m. Saturday), ■Reynolds said. "* “The wing just separated,” I Tim leaf, one of several witness- i es > sai d. “It snap-rolled, spun — L / three times and crashed. ” two die in experimental plane crash CPS efforts faulted as lax in toddler's death DALLAS (AP) — An internal review has found that the state agency charged with safeguarding children erred in the case of a toddler who allegedly died at the hands of his parents. The Dallas Morning News report ed in a copyright story. Jabriel Walder, 3, died Oct. 12 1998 of internal in juries from blunt force blows that sev ered his pancreas. His death was ruled a homicide by medical examiners, who recorded 56 scars on the 25-pound boy’s body. The boy’s parents, Karen Walder, 35, and Gary Isaac, 38, have been charged with injury to a child for Jabriel’s death and are awaiting trial. Each denies beating the boy. Doctors, nurses, child-care work ers and police all reported possible abuse. But Child Protective Services (CPS) did not act decisively on the warnings, including a doctor’s notations that “non accidental scars” were present on Jabriel and his twin brother, Nagee, the newspaper reported yesterday. Also ignored was one of the agency’s own case worker’s pleas that the Walder children be taken im mediately into protective custody. “Available information was ignored, leading to poor decision-making, which left these children at high risk of abuse,” according to an internal review by the Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services, CPS’s parent agency. Parts of the review — heavily censored — were released to The Dallas Morning News through the state’s Open Records Act. Officials say the case offers a rare glimpse inside a CPS agency shrouded in confidentiality, beset by high em ployee turnover and low pay and hin dered by bureaucratic slowness. The review blamed faulty supervi sion in investigative and family preser vation units, incomplete record-keeping and bureaucratic delays that weakened the system’s ability to adequately mon itor the Walder family. “A lot of risk factors were missed,” Joyce James, an adminis trator in another CPS office who served on the review team, said. As a result of the Walder case, at least three staff members in the Dallas agency have been fired or chose to resign, and the state has already instituted reforms to increase CPS supervision and caseworker training. Also, in Dallas, special CPS “risk units” now evalu ate serious cases involving physical abuse and neglect of children ages 4 and younger. "... leading to poor decision-making which left children at high risk/ 7 —internal review by Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services Lessons THst Will Lest A Lifetime. OFFICER TRAINING SCHOOL Put that college degree to use by enrolling into the Air Force Officer Training School. 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