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Nancy Reagan WASHINGTON: U.S. President-elect Barack Obama called the late President Ronald Reagan’s widow, Nancy Reagan, on Friday to apologise for joking that she had held séances in the White House. At a news conference in Chicago, Mr. Obama said he had spoken with all living former Presidents as he prepares to take office in January. Then he smiled and said: “I didn’t want to get into a Nancy Reagan thing about doing any séances.” The 87-year-old former first lady had consulted with astrologers during her husband’s presidency, but she did not hold conversations with the dead. Mr. Obama’s spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter said he later called Ms. Reagan “to apologise for the careless and offhanded remark.” She said Mr. Obama “expressed his admiration and affection for Ms. Reagan that so many Americans share, and they had a warm conversation.” One first lady was linked to conversations with the dead in the White House: Mr. Obama’s top Democratic challenger for the presidency, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton. In either case, use of the word “séance” might be overstated. Ms. Reagan consulted an astrologer to help set her husband’s schedule, wrote former White House chief of staff Donald T. Regan. The revelation created a furore and President Reagan even broke with his policy of not commenting on books by former White House staffers. “No policy or decision in my mind has ever been influenced by astrology,” he had said. In his book “The Choice,” Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward described how Ms. Clinton consulted a spiritual adviser who led her through imaginary conversations with Ms. Clinton’s personal heroine, President Fra Newsweek, which was promoting the book, characterised the visits as “séances,” and Clinton White House officials quickly tried to squelch the term. “These were people who were helping her laugh, helping her think,” said Neel Lattimore, Ms. Clinton’s spokeswoman. “These were not séances.” — AP
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