Letters: Oct. 20, 2003

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RONALD REAGAN: THE GREAT PEN PAL

"Thank you for publishing Reagan's letters. I hope everyone will recognize the intelligence and the wonderful morality of the man." LUCY M. CRONIN Key Largo, Fla.

As someone who has studied President Reagan since his first year in office, I am not surprised to see that his letters reveal what many of us have known all along [BOOK EXCERPT, Sept. 29]: Ronald Reagan was always his own man, a man of principle who believed in a better tomorrow. Much of the analysis and opinion about his presidency in the past 15 years has been clouded by partisan thinking. I am confident that in time the depth of Reagan's vision will be confirmed by historians. BRETT KOTTMANN Centerville, Ohio

The excerpts present the true personality of an American President who survived the cold war era. The words reveal Reagan's humanity and his sensitivity, not only to great events but also to his roles as father, husband and friend. The letters changed my view of Reagan, whom I had viewed mostly as a political leader. Deep inside the man is the soul of a person who understood life and learned much from it. RODERICK DARWIN P. SANTOS New York City

Reagan was the best president the U.S. ever had. His ability to manage people and allow them to work independently will be remembered as his strongest attribute. DAVE QUEEN Apex, N.C.

In his letters, Reagan comes across as a man desperately in need of approval. He had to assure his correspondents, and perhaps himself, that he was doing the right thing. Sadly, the letters show Reagan as a mediocrity, a man who skims the front page of the paper and studies the sports page and the comics. Reagan was born to preside over a Chamber of Commerce. He would have been splendid as the president of a Rotary Club. Unfortunately, he was President of the U.S., and it took us years to recover from his Administration. JEAN MARTIN Pittsburgh, Pa.

The Reagan letters illuminate so much more than the man and the influences that shaped his life. They give notice that letter writing is a dying art, succumbing to the modern-day requisite for immediacy, as reflected in the increasing use of e-mail and instant messaging. Our written communications have lost a quality of intimacy that makes the anticipation of replies to our letters agonizing and exquisite. Where will future historians and biographers find the primary source material to gain insight into their subjects? Modern technology has provided much that is indispensable, but it has also stripped our correspondence of a key essence and deprived our descendants of a rich legacy. DAVID LACHER New Rochelle, N.Y.

The excerpts from Reagan's letters are fascinating and inspiring. You presented them in an unbiased fashion so that we were free to make our own judgments of the man and his purpose. CHRIS MARLOWE Shreveport, La.

PAKISTAN'S BALANCING ACT

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