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Spotlight: William A. Wilson, '36 Reagan's Man in the Vatican
Launching the embassy was an "extremely challenging job that broke new ground for the United States," Wilson says. A convert to Catholicism since 1943, he broached sensitive issues ranging from nuclear weapons to birth control. He recalls with particular pride his efforts -- ultimately successful -- to promote diplomatic relations between the Vatican and Israel and to encourage Reagan to lift economic sanctions against Poland. Wilson stepped down in 1986. He returned to Los Angeles, where he owned a manufacturing company and had built a successful career in real estate. He had lived and worked in Southern California since college, and it was there that he and his wife, Betty (Johnson), '38, who died in 1996, had befriended the Reagans in the 1950s.
Today, still living in West L.A., the former ambassador and presidential adviser serves on the boards of several international enterprises, keeps tabs on a cattle ranch he bought in Mexico and enjoys ham radio broadcasting -- a hobby he nurtured at the Delta Tau Delta house as an engineering student on the Farm. Though his old golf partner is all but lost to Alzheimer's disease, Wilson fondly recalls Reagan's playfulness in a tale from the gubernatorial days. "One weekend, for Nancy's birthday, Betty and I invited the Reagans down to our ranch in Temecula. A squad of California guards accompanied them. On the picnic, Ronald said to me, 'Let's shoot some tin cans.' So I went inside and brought out two .22s. When the guards saw us walk into the bushes with rifles, they leaped. They didn't know what we were up to, and they raced after us." Good ol' boys will be boys. -- Bud Lesser, '36 |