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  • esteem as an ex-president could influence the way scholars write about him in the future, and also the way the public begins to view that pre~idency. Ronald Reagan: "A president who was brought to office by two landslides in the ! 980s, who left office
  • . And when he chose LO address the country on the energy cri is, he deliberately picked the format of the fireside chat. In the 1980 campaign, even Ronald Reagan quoted from FDR to such an extent in his acceptance addre. s that the New York Times titled its
  • ... They cheered every time he had a good line ... They didn ·t care what he said. They were just happy to be there with Ronald Reagan." Even when the press reported it, "it didn't make any differ­ ence at all." "What kind of reporting does make a difference
  • likenesses of Presidents beginning ith John Quincy Adams through Ronald Reagan. All are original prints or produced from original nega­ tives. Included are tintypes, daguerreotypes, albumen prints, gelatin silver prints and chromogenic development prints
  • U.S. Inter­ vention in the Dominican Republic"; Ronald W. Fletcher, "Military Reform: The Congressional Connec­ tion"; Kathleen Hulser, "Colorful Landscapes: Billboards and the Debates over American Public Space, 5 1900-1965"; Jonathan A. Lee
  • Winston Churchill (left). Billie Shaddix (Ford) aid of the pic­ ture below: "This photograph I love. Everyone marching to their own drummer." 2 "Always together" Mary Anne Fackelman-Minor said of Ronald and Nancy Reagan (left). Michael Geissinger (above
  • Jimmy Carter residential Center in Atlanta, the number of presidenti libraries in the U.S. has grown to eight. Plan are already underway for a Ronald Reagan Library at Stanford University in California, and although discussio of a Richard Nixon Library
  • . Ronald Reagan Library. Lyndon B. Johnson Library The LBJ Library is one of ten prcsidcn1ial libmrie.~ admini,1t·rcd by 1hc i'-a1ional Ard1ives and Record., Ad111inis1 r.11 i,>11.
  • Kennedy won the Democratic nomination over Stuart Symington. Hubert Humphrey. and Lyndon Johnson, Strauss said In 1976,Jimmy Carter won it over Sen. Henry Jack­ son. Morris Udall. and Humphrey. ln 19 O. Ronald Reagan beat out G rge Bush and Sens. Howard
  • he preferred briefs or boxer shorts. Ronald Reagan was emphati­ cally a man of Hollywood: Shribman noted that one biography of him is aptly titled President Reagan: The Role of a Lifetime. Noting chat the campaign com­ petition between George W. Bush
  • . Thomas admires him further for "doing the most u eful work of any liv­ ing ex-president." Ronald Reagan: "There was a Reagan revolution," Ms. Thomas affirmed, ··and it continues today." She applauded Reagan for contributing 4 significantly to the dO
  • and the White Hous will be adorned with a downright rn ron." Liz drew the curtain of harity across that one, say­ ing ') won't even comment on that." Liz admir s the way Ronald Reagan used humor to deflect criticism of his administra­ tion. His self-deprecation
  • of anything: they are results. Nobody reflects that better than Ronald Reagan. He is not the cause at all of the country being conservative. His presidency is the result of a conservatising trend that began when he was still a liberal Democrat and head of one
  • in Austin condemned the civil rights portion of Harry Truman ·s Fair Deal as a farce and a sham, an effort, he said. to set up a police state in the guise of history. But if Ronald Reagan, who voted four times for Frank­ lin Roosevelt, could change his mind
  • chose Jimmy Carter. He was highly moral, conscientious, patri­ otic, hard workina, and nol a Washington insider. "But,'" Shields observed, "h se med to change h.is mind a lot. So in I 980 along came Ronald Reagan, who had not changed his mind since 1964
  • in the White House, the answer was, "I learned never to open my mouth around you." In a serious vein Th mas flatly denied the stories that Ronald Reagan was slipping mentaUy near Lheend of hj tenure. Hi managerial ty]e may have convinced observer. that he wa
  • . The turning point came on Septem­ ber 26, 1986, when President Reagan against the unanimous ad ice of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. decided to send the Af­ ghans what they needed mo t: a weapon that could deal with the potent Soviet armed, and ar­ mored, Hind
  • . Johnson was awarclcc.Jthe nation's highe l civilian awarc.J,the Presidential Medal of Freet.lorn. [n 1988, President Ronald Reagan presented her with the Congressional Gol ! M clal. There will be a giant birthday card in the Great Hall for you to sign
  • consequenc was the climax of ew Deal-style liberalism which gav way to a grO\ ing c nservative tide that would c met fruition under Ronald Reagan in th I 80s. Another was the breakdO\ n of the Cold War con ·ensus, with the emergence of dis­ sent ov r Vi tnam
  • for a delighted audience on what life in the White House during their respective fathers' administra­ tions was like. Two---Luci Baines Johnson and S"Usan Ford Bales­ were teenagers at the time. Maureen Reagan was older--40-but she said she learned
  • . And the end ol the Reagan era came on Di::cenibcr-+.I 986. on the o -ed pag • of the Nl'w York T111u·.1. ~hen a rc,pccted eJnor of a foreign policy magazine declared. "It is high time tor America to dcmon.,tratc awarcne ., of its ~trength in the world today
  • of the conference was to formulate a bipar­ tisan agenda setting forth the economic problems facing the country, for the con ideration of the incoming Reagan Administration. No effort was made to arrive at a con­ sensus, but rather the conference served
  • of Washington College in Chestert wn, Maryland, is on October 16. This light moment of President Reagan's, captured on mm, is among prize-winning photographs on uhibit in the Library through October 17, The exhibit contains memorable scenes pn!5erved
  • plants and shrubs. The Center will be the benefi­ ciary of a two-day program of activi­ ties in Washington April 28 and 29 honoring Mrs. Johnson for her dedi­ cation to promoting conservation and beautification. President and Mrs. Reagan and all living
  • as President Reagan's White House Chief of Staff, presented a forceful case for "the Congress returning to the status of a citizen leg­ islature ... An aggregation of citizens who are on temporary duty to repre­ sent their neighbors." Now a private attorney
  • so expen ive. What can be done on a national lev J? Califano cit d two example . " ancy Reagan was widely ridiculed for her slogan ·Just Say o.' but it had a hell or an in1pact;· he aid. "Drug use peaked in 1979, with 25 million u ing. When Len Bia
  • of this newsletter, of course, that she received the Congressional Gold Medal from President Reagan (above). and testimonials from both houses of Congress, for her efforts to beautify the nation and particu­ larly the capitol city. She greeted most of official
  • their annual meeting at the Library at the time of the opening of the World War II exln'bition. Standing are: Ralph Bledsoe, Reagan Library; John Taylor, Nixon Library; Ben Zobrist, Truman Library; Richard Norton Smith, Hoover Library; John Fawcett, Assistant
  • as well, he a1mounced, such as those showing Liz with various president : Clinton, Bush. Reagan, Ford, Johnson, Nixon, Carter-and Lincoln. Her birthday mail brought Liz some new and welcome material for her speaking engagements. She read to the audience
  • the audience. debate," for while bureaucrats argue. Iraqis suffer, even as relief supplies pile up on the docks. ful people we supported in the 1970s and I 980s under Carter anu Reagan. lo drive out the Soviets.'' "The third issue," stated HolbrookL
  • also serves as chaimian of the President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.* ''Established by President Reagan and continued by Presidents Bush and Clinton co encourage private-sector support of the arcs and humanities, the committee
  • CAB and the ICC by Senator Edward Ken­ nedy. These proposals bore fruit under Carter and Reagan for the airlin and the trucking industries and, to a degree, for the railroads. Don't get me wrong. I'm not .aying that the New Deal legacy across the board
  • national poll which indicated that 62% of the public believed that "the anti-poverty programs of the 60s either had little impact on the poor or made things worse for them." Most prom­ inent of the skeptics, of course, is President Reagan. who recently said
  • resumed it when the lapse brought unfavorable attention. Now it's a tradition. Placing the wreath sent by Presi­ dent Reagan on President Johnson's grave at the LBJ Ranch, Library Director Harry Middleton recalled for a group of visitors LBJ's plea early
  • O'Brien IO, OBC Group. "We were in numerous meetings with President Reagan. In good times and bad, when it was going well and when it wasn't, he'd come in, give a little pep talk, tell a funny story. He would say, 'Keep up the good work. I'm with you. You
  • . Bator as­ serted. today held firmly by some in Washington. is that glasnost and per­ estroika would not have happened had it not been for Reagan's def nse buildup in the 1980s. What would Rostow make of the notion Lhat Reagan·s policy forced the Soviets