The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 02, 1981, Image 18

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    1
Page 2B THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1901
National
The end
of the
Brown
Bag
Blues
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Reagan aides say
Newsweek article
just flat wrong’
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United Press International
LOS ANGELES — President
Reagan is “very disappointed”
with unidentified aides who por
trayed him as a lazy, part-time
chief executive in a news maga
zine article, a top White House
official says.
In an interview Monday, White
House chief of staff James Baker
branded as “unfortunate and
erroneous” a Newsweek story that
suggested Reagan is a disengaged
president and quoted one anony
mous assistant as saying the presi
dent spends at most “two or three
hours a day on real work.”
Baker attributed the remarks to
a few dissatisfied staffers. He said
he told Reagan that out of some
1,700 employees, ’’there are
bound to be a disaffected few on
any staff, particularly those not in
the mainstream, whose ideas have
been rejected.”
Newsweek quoted one top
presidential assistant as complain
ing Reagan often would rather
“tell stories about his movie days
than make a decision.” Said Baker:
“That is just flat wrong. ”
He conceded Reagan might be
“disengaged when he is on vaca
tion, but that is certainly not the
case in Washington, D.C., or on
the road.”
Baker said in Reagan’s first
seven months in office, he
achieved historic legislative
accomplishments with passage of
his budget and tax cuts.
“The best way to judge whether
this president is engaged is to
judge him on the results of his
presidency,” said Baker. He
likened Reagan’s legislative
achievements to those of Franklin
D. Roosevelt and Lyndon B.
Johnson.
Baker acknowledged that
Reagan, near the end of a month
long vacation, still is taking it easy
and will continue to do so until
departing Wednesday for Chica
go, where he has two speeches
before flying to Washington on
Thursday.
On Monday, the president had
only two appointments. He met
for a half-hour with Wilson Riles,
California’s superintendent of
public instruction, to discuss
youth unemployment, after which
Riles said he found Reagan “very
lively, feeling good and always
ready with a story to illustrate a
point. ”
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1504 Holleman
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4407 Texas Ave.
“The conclusion is totally false,
inaccurate,” Baker said, noting
Reagan was “very disappointed”
with the story.
“Do they really think this of
me?” the president was quoted as
asking.
In defense of the president’s
work style, deputy press secretary
Larry Speakes told reporters: “We
don’t punch time clocks in the
White House.”
Later Monday afternoon, the
president had a 45-minute visit
with cowboy singer Rex Allen and
Western bootmaker Tony Lama,
who came to present him with four
pairs of cowboy boots decorated
with the presidential seal.
As they were leaving, Allen said
he had apologized to Reagan,
saying: “Mr. President, we have
taken a lot of your time, and you
have a lot more important things
to do than stand here and fool with
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“No, four pairs of boots in 45
minutes is pretty good,” Reagan
replied.
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United Press International
NEW YORK —GoodlooL
more impressive if they f
accompanied by an appei
name, a Tulane University it
said.
The September issue i
Psychology Today reported ff-
study by Tulane psychology
Cray Garwood that indicated)*'
pie find a woman more attracts
she is named Christine ratherfc
Gertrude.
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Using the St. Joseph’s
contest at Tulane as the test.Cf
wood and his students assip:
“nice” names — Kathy,
and Christine — to the picture
three candidates and ‘‘unalfc
live ” names — Gertrude, Ed'
and Harriet — to the others. !>
six candidates had been n»
equals in looks.
The “nice” name group
158 votes while the plainly n# :
received only 39. The resS
showed 83 percent of the
ters were guilty of name (
nation, as were 77 percentoi:
females.
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