Page 2/The Battalion/Wednesday, June 1, 1988 Opinion e, Nancy, and the White House Coffee Po I have seen an advance copy of Wanda Grobnik’s book “Me, Nancy, and the White House Coffee Pot” and it will surely be the next politi cal blockbuster. Wanda writes, ’’but I looked in the cof fee pot and told her, no, your destiny is to go to Hollywood, become an actress and marry a movie star. Just don’t do cheesecake. You ain’t got the legs for it.” Wanda later joined the Reagans in California where she resumed her oc cult counseling. Few people know that Wanda Gorbnik, an aunt of my friend Slats Mike Royko Grobnik, worked for many years in the White House kitchen. “I remember looking in the coffee grounds one morning and I said: ‘Don’t trust monkeys.’ Nancy asked me what that meant. I said I didn’t know what it meant. But that’s what I saw. Monkeys are strictly out. “Nancy didn’t tell Ron to do anything without asking me to check the pot first. She’d ask me: ‘Should he have a press conference?’ I’d look in the coffee pot and tell her: ‘No. It is a better time for him to get a haircut. And not too long on the sideburns.’ She’d say: ‘Is this a good week for him to meet with the am bassador from Russia?’ I’d look in the pot and say: ‘No, it is a good week for him to spend the afternoons drinking Ovaltine and watching the soaps on TV.’ She was listed on the federal payroll as a cook, but the title was merely a cover for her top-secret duties. “So what does he do? He makes that Bonzo movie, and sure enough, his ca reer goes downhill from there. See, I warned them not to trust monkeys. “But sometimes we got our signals crossed. Her true job was looking into the fu ture by reading coffee grounds, a rare gift she was born with. She would share the visions she saw in the coffee pot with Nancy Reagan, who would then use them to tell the presi dent how to run the country. “At that time, Nancy was worried and asked me what they should do. I looked in the pot and said he should find a new line of work. She said he didn’t know how to do anything. I looked in the pot again and said: ‘OK, if he can’t do any thing, he should go into politics.’ “Like the time he got his first nomi nation and Nancy was trying to decide who his vice president should be. “Well, it happened that I had a hard day. I mean, every time a problem came up, I had to make a fresh pot of coffee so I’d have new grounds to look at. ‘She wanted to become a beautician,’ And that, Wanda writes, is how the Reagan political saga began. “So Nancy come in the kitchen. My feet hurt and my back aches and I tell her: ‘I’m bushed.’ The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Richard Williams, Editor Sue Krenek, Managing Editor Mark Nair, Opinion Page Editor Curtis Culberson, City Editor Becky Weisenfels, Cindy Milton, News Editors Anthony Wilson, Sports Editor Jay Janner, Art Director Editorial Policy The Batuilion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspa per operated as a community service to Texas A&M and Bryan-Coilege Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editorial board or the author, and do not necessarily rep resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, fac- ultv or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography classes within the Department of Journalism. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas A&M regular semesters, except for holiday and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are $17.-14 per semester, $34.62 per school vear and $36.44 per full sear. Advertising rales furnished on t equest. Our address: The Battalion. 230 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M Universitv, College Station. TX 77.S43-1 111. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. POSTMAS I F.R; Send address changes to 'The Battal ion. 216 Reed McDonald. Texas A&M L’niversitv, Col lege Station TX 77843-4 111. BLOOM COUNTY “She misunderstands me and goes running out, and the next tiling I know, there’s Ron holding up (George) Bush’s hand at the convention. to anyone else. Who knows, mail crazy thing will work.’ ” “And I remember when she came in the kitchen while I was watching a ball game on TV and there was a bad call and I was really mad and yelling about it. She goes running out. T hen I pick up the newspaper and read where he called the Russians ‘the Evil Empire.’ As Wanda says in her book:“1(1 tell that the coffee grounds givegi'l sion because their first term wait bad.” j HOI S IX man climbt where a wor last month, traded gro Bengal tiger But like many of the recent it authors, Wanda displays a certair,; fulness in describing her eventual! with the Reagans. “1 asked Nancy why he did that. She said: ‘You said you saw it in the pot.’ I told her, no, I was just talking about the umpire.” “Another time, she comes in the kitchen and I tell her: T seen Star Wars.’ She goes running out and all of a sud den they come out with all their plans for the goofy space defense system. “I left after the first term and'! started listening to those Califori gazers. And look what happened^ his second term. The scandal abot arms for the crazy ayatollah,ant North and Meese, Deaver and No the dope-pusher. What a mess 1 had stuck with my coffee pot wouldn’t have all these troubles. ■I'l'lie inckf jflrrified crc rial Day spe dav after t\v were return time since tb of keeper Ri Robert La bui was cha pass and jai bond, police “The next time she comes in, I tell her: ‘Look, Nancy, 1 was just trying to tell you that I saw a good movie, that “Star Wars” thing, and I thought you and the president might get a kick out of it. And why did Nancy abandonk her longtime adviser? As Wanda explains in the core of her book: ■Lavoie w; intoxicated ; foi his actic was on druf by police a: by zoo emj)l ■ “He was down to the Bavating <• “She said they were switching! slant decaf. My coffee was keepirj nie awake all af ternoon.” ‘She said: ‘Oh. Well, don’t mention it Copyright 1988, Tribune Media Senmi .s. indu Old poor Aunt Fanni loses all her dough to religious vultures iOVI Aunt Fannie, who’s 90, never got married and never had any children. For the past several years, she has lived as a T"i recluse apartment in Charleston, S.C. you, who can I talk to?” AUSTI tst, a Lai World W; fecently i nous vet< Soviet Un The h< Jjven For fto the Stn ■’ears afte fliers bef pilot dm pays. The letter continues with a did of how Feed My People needs to pay off a contractor who something called an Emergency] Headquarters. ..,1 u “Now, here is what 1 am asking' do,” Stewart’s letter goes on. Relatives tried to visit, but Aunt Fannie would re- Lewis Grizzard fuse to open the door for them. “Rush $300 back to us today foil need. Just think, your $300 w working for you long after you' gone to heaven. “She was living,” said a grandniece, Beth Speaks, of Stone Mountain, “on powdered milk and cereal. A man who lived next door to her called and said when she walked to the mailbox, she was in shreds.” “. . . if yon don’t have $300 noj can use your credit card . . . U could talk to you. You love thechiij just as much as 1 do, don’t you Fannie?” t he Fn forest’s ] lear the I lis crew s bets, wh threw ni| honor an srs-in-arr As a si soviet m; oly and jresentet is he bo; ^cription icy back ilecloth.’ Forest iprized r< forged it Iflict. Beth Speaks’ father, Aunt Fannie’s nephew, finally talked to her landlord and was able to get inside the apart ment, which he found in shambles. “Those letters made Aunt K think the entire cause depem her,” said Beth Speaks. He also found that Aunt Fannie, who was thought to be quite comfortable fi nancially, was nearly broke. Aunt Fannie’s situation got wore! cently. She fell and no Ion get can'■ care of herself. She has been placed.; nursing home and faces welfare. “She had been eaten up,” said Beth Speaks, “by religious vultures.” Beth’s father obtained power of attor ney for his aunt and found she had been giving away to $500 a month in dona tions to religious organizations. “I don’t know,” said Beth Spij “Maybe she felt she needed to maw for something by giving this way. don’t know how those people can! on old folks the way they do.” Forest eled to 1 shevnikc 1945. r around, ing the annual P with a p | dox mo bows wi lishers ai “Frier I tries has let it be i Most of her money had been sent to Feed My People out of Phoenix, Ariz., which is headed by a Rev. Don Stewart. What Eline Conley of Feed Myf pie said was, “We’re sorry, but wet no way of knowing the condition of people we send our letters to. We chase our lists of names.” I HOU5 agents si; the Paki “Aunt Fannie still thinks this Stewart is the most wonderful person who ever hit this earth,” Beth Speaks explained. Beth Speaks’ father called Feed!? People and demanded they send! more mail from her belovedDonf art. grestaurai Bee is H ployer of “What larrv G Here is a part of the sort of letters Don Stewart has been sending out to the Aunt Fannies of the world: “Dear Fannie: By the way, Don. New, AuntFaf needs your help. Right now. Send! her money back. “I must talk to you. I must talk to you NOW. Please listen. If I can’t talk to Don’t have the cash? Use yourc card. Slick. Copyright 1988, Cowles Syndicate rant own Immij service ind noti yers for dent am Marco’s operates That em officials by BerKe Breath* owy. u/mrze WZ TRYttib 72? . CArme HZRe? ,, coNdaouduese. OWN, B/U- BABY / Project/ potrr,0ABY f pour/ SAN : vest Te acuity, he Tex;