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  • [[Image:Ronaldreagan.jpg|President Ronald Reagan|right|thumb]] ...dent Reagan riding with [[Queen Elizabeth II]] of United Kingdom, courtesy Ronald Reagan Library|262px]]
    22 KB (3,346 words) - 10:08, 28 February 2024
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 21:48, 7 October 2007
  • * D'Souza, Dinesh. ''Ronald Reagan: How an Ordinary Man Became an Extraordinary Leader'' (1999), popular. [htt * Evans, Thomas W. ''The Education of Ronald Reagan: The General Electric Years'' (2006) [http://www.amazon.com/Education-Ronal
    21 KB (2,993 words) - 23:27, 11 April 2008
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  • 29 bytes (3 words) - 17:13, 17 February 2008
  • {{rpl|Efforts to impeach Ronald Reagan}}
    734 bytes (90 words) - 12:38, 3 December 2023
  • ...to impeach [[President of the United States of America|U. S. president]] [[Ronald Reagan]], but none of those efforts got so far as a vote by the lower house of [[C ...avage]] and [[Parren J. Mitchell]] in proposing ''"A resolution impeaching Ronald Reagan, President of the United States, of the high crime or misdemeanor of orderi
    6 KB (734 words) - 10:54, 21 December 2022
  • ...[POTUS|US President]] through [[impeaching a US President|impeachment]], [[Ronald Reagan]] only got to the first stage of impeachment
    291 bytes (42 words) - 09:31, 21 December 2022
  • {{rpl|Ronald Reagan}}
    349 bytes (48 words) - 11:09, 20 December 2022

Page text matches

  • [[U.S. Attorney General]] in the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]].
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  • #REDIRECT [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • #Redirect [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • #Redirect [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • #redirect [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • [[Director of Central Intelligence]] during the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]] and leader of [[Iran-Contra Affair]]; attorney; in
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  • ...ator of the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention in the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]]
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  • ...]], appointed by [[President of the United States of America|President]] [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] in 1986.
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  • ...-1977; U.S. Trade Representative and [[U.S. Secretary of Labor]] in the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]]; Member, [[Committee on the Present Danger]]
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  • Invasion of the small Caribbean nation of Grenada under U.S. President [[Ronald Reagan]].
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  • An order issued by [[Ronald Reagan]], clarifying some authorities of, and restrictions on, the [[United States
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  • Won by [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] candidate [[Ronald Reagan]], running against [[Walter Mondale]]
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  • ...er for Military Readiness; [[U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland]] during the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]] (1981-83) and (1985-86); Head of the White House Of
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  • An American television and radio commentator, self-identified as a [[Ronald Reagan]] [[American conservatism|conservative]]
    159 bytes (17 words) - 14:24, 19 July 2009
  • ...e caught destroying incriminating documents to thwart [[efforts to impeach Ronald Reagan]]
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  • ...ter for International Education in the [[U.S. Department of Education]], [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]]
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  • ...Supreme Allied Commander Europe]], NATO; [[U.S. Secretary of State]] for [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • {{rpl|Efforts to impeach Ronald Reagan}}
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  • Commission appointed by President Ronald Reagan whose mission was to investigate the cause of the Challenger disaster and r
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  • ...]]; before entering law, speechwriter in the [[Jimmy Carter|Carter]] and [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administrations]] at the Federal Trade Commission and the US Departm
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  • The '''1984 U.S. Presidential campaign''' was won by Republican candidate [[Ronald Reagan]], running against [[Walter Mondale]].
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  • ...th and Human Services]] and associate director for public liaison in the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]]; legislative assistant to Sen. [[Chuck Grassley]]
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  • ...U.S. Congress]] barred funding the Contras through official channels the [[Ronald Reagan]] Presidency got caught funding them, "off the books", through illegal arms
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  • ...justice, [[Supreme Court of the United States]] during the Presidency of [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • ...nse anti-communist in the 1940s; awarded [[Medal of Freedom]] in 1985 by [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • ...dia and political consultant, first for [[Richard Nixon]] especially for [[Ronald Reagan]]; executive producer for [[CNBC]]
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  • ...y Council]]; Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs to [[Ronald Reagan]]; advisor, [[Partnership for a Secure America]]
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  • ...ector, [[American Security Project]]; [[White House Chief of Staff]] for [[Ronald Reagan]], 1988-1989
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  • ...State]], [[George W. Bush Administration]]; Deputy Secretary of Defense, [[Ronald Reagan]] administration
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  • Career U.S. defense official who served in policy posts in the [[Ronald Reagan]],[[George H. W. Bush]], [[Bill Clinton]] and [[George W. Bush Administrati
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  • ...] former member and acting chairman of [[Council of Economic Advisers]] ([[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]]; director of economics, [[Ford Motor Company]], pro
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  • ...r of the Office of Policy Planning, [[George H.W. Bush]] administration; [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]] CEA staff economist
    652 bytes (87 words) - 16:02, 11 July 2010
  • ...h was circumvented with the [[Iran-Contra Affair]] by individuals in the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]], possibly unknown to the President.
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  • {{r|USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76)|''USS Ronald Reagan'' (CVN 76)}}
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  • {{rpl|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...ense]] and Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs for [[Ronald Reagan]]; Deputy Director of Central Intelligence; served in a variety of subcabin
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...tices. He served as Counsel to the President of the United States in the [[Ronald Reagan]] administration, as deputy counsel Associate Counsel for [[Richard Nixon]
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • {{rpl|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...ning in press conferences during the U.S. presidential administration of [[Ronald Reagan]]. Donaldson went on to become co-anchor of ''PrimeTime Live'' with [[Diane
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  • ...Chief of Staff to Senator [[Richard Lugar]], Senior Advisor to President [[Ronald Reagan]] and Director of the [[Office of Management and Budget]] under President [
    386 bytes (53 words) - 14:01, 20 March 2023
  • ...[POTUS|US President]] through [[impeaching a US President|impeachment]], [[Ronald Reagan]] only got to the first stage of impeachment
    291 bytes (42 words) - 09:31, 21 December 2022
  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...] and Visiting Fellow, Heritage Foundation; Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan
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  • ...U.S. to the U.N. Human Rights Commission; Special assistant to President [[Ronald Reagan]] , 1982-1984, as liaison to the Jewish community
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...ffairs]]; [[Joint Economic Committee]]; [[Secretary of the Navy]] in the [[Ronald Reagan]] administration; [[United States Naval Academy]] graduate and [[United Sta
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  • ...foreign and national security policy; first National Security Adviser to [[Ronald Reagan]]; [[Defense Policy Board]] in [[George W. Bush Administration]]; Co-chair,
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...riented, the '''Defense Forum Foundation (DFF)''' was created during the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]] to present, to bipartisan Congressional staff, abo
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...presidential helicopter pilot and military aide to [[Jimmy Carter]] and [[Ronald Reagan]]; commanded Marine aviation forces in [[Operation Restore Hope]] in [[Som
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  • ...to impeach [[President of the United States of America|U. S. president]] [[Ronald Reagan]], but none of those efforts got so far as a vote by the lower house of [[C ...avage]] and [[Parren J. Mitchell]] in proposing ''"A resolution impeaching Ronald Reagan, President of the United States, of the high crime or misdemeanor of orderi
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • see also the Bibliography at [[Ronald Reagan]] * Pemberton, William E. ''Exit with Honor: The Life and Presidency of Ronald Reagan'' (1998) short biography by historian [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=
    4 KB (514 words) - 10:13, 15 May 2009
  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • signed into effect on December 4th, 1981, by [[United States President]] [[Ronald Reagan]].<ref name=EO12333> | author=[[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • ...r in Baker & Hostetler in Washington, D.C.; in advisory positions in the [[Ronald Reagan]] and [[George H. W. Bush]] administrations; Visiting Fellow at the [[Nixo
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...he [[Supreme Court of the United States]]. He was appointed by President [[Ronald Reagan]] in 1986. He studied at [[Georgetown University]] and [[Harvard Law School
    628 bytes (88 words) - 13:50, 4 March 2009
  • ...rican]] politician who served as [[U.S. Attorney General]] in the second [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]] (1985-1989). He is a member of the [[Republican Pa He worked under [[Governor of California]] [[Ronald Reagan]], from 1967 to 1974, in various senior positions, including as his [[chief
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  • ...minee in the 1984 Presidential Election, suffering a landslide defeat to [[Ronald Reagan]], the second largest after [[George McGovern]]'s loss in 1972. Prior to th
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  • ...0. It is a [[satire]] about an "[[Imperial Presidency]]", poking fun at [[Ronald Reagan]].
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...he U.S.A.]]", about an unemployed [[Vietnam War|Vietnam veteran]], which [[Ronald Reagan]] used as campaign theme music unaware of the lyrical meaning, until Spring
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • {{rpl|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...ll.com; Senior Fellow for Family Empowerment, [[Family Research Council]]; Ronald Reagan Distinguished Fellow for Public Policy at the [[Buckeye Institute]]; board,
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...partisan and frequently operates in coalition, but was formed during the [[Ronald Reagan]] Administration and its board members are generally seen as centrist to li
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...1980), he was Senior Defense Advisor and Defense Policy Coordinator during Ronald Reagan's 1979-1980 Presidential campaign. After the election, he was the Director
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  • {{Image|Reagan Gorbachev.jpg|right|250px|US President [[Ronald Reagan]] greets Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev at Hofdi House during t
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  • ...Space Shuttle]] [[Space Shuttle Challenger|''Challenger'']], President [[Ronald Reagan]] appointed the '''Presidential Commission on the Space Shuttle Challenger
    990 bytes (132 words) - 18:27, 14 April 2010
  • ...chool, and is a Class I [[trauma center]] known for caring for President [[Ronald Reagan]] after he was shot in an assassination attempt.
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  • ...ashington in the 1980s, he perhaps reacted against the chauvinism of the [[Ronald Reagan]] years; but his writing invariably stressed the European (and especially B
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  • {{Ronald Reagan}}
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  • * [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • ...for his investigation of the [[Iran-Contra]] scandal, in which President [[Ronald Reagan]] reportedly sold weapons to Iran in order to secretly bankroll the rebelli
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  • ...mbination of voters that [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] [[Ronald Reagan]] assembled to produce a major [[political realignment]] with his landslide ...were Democrats before the Reagan years, and afterwards, but who voted for Ronald Reagan in 1980 and 1984 (and for [[George H. W. Bush]] in 1988), producing their l
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...arauga]] had politically weakened Reagan. Although a [[Efforts to impeach Ronald Reagan|motion in the House to impeach Reagan]] failed to pass, according to [[Mich
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  • ...enant Colonel]] in the Marine Corps when he served as a military aide in [[Ronald Reagan]]'s [[National Security Council]].<ref name=bpcbakbusconfOlliNorth/> ...d if these documents became public they would trigger [[Efforts to impeach Ronald Reagan|Reagan's impeachment]].<ref name=nytimes1989-03-29/> North was initially c
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan||#}}
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  • ...ted social conservatives. This coalition was important in the campaigns of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush, although in recent years the tension
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  • * Pemberton, William E. ''Exit with Honor: The Life and Presidency of Ronald Reagan'' (1998) biography by historian; [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=49534
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • | 1980 || [[Jimmy Carter]], Democrat || [[Ronald Reagan]], Republican; [[John B. Anderson]], independent || <span style="color:red" | 1984 || [[Walter Mondale]], Democrat || [[Ronald Reagan]], Republican || <span style="color:red"> Reagan</span>
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  • ...ed Carter for the malaise and he was defeated by conservative Republican [[Ronald Reagan]] in a landslide in 1980. After leaving the White House Carter went on nume
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  • ...rt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit]]. He was appointed to the bench by [[Ronald Reagan|President Reagan]] on July 19, 1983 and entered on duty August 1, 1983. A f
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  • ...epublicans as sponsors. [[Abraham Lincoln]], [[Theodore Roosevelt]] and [[Ronald Reagan]] are cited as role models. Rep. [[Tom Davis]] (R-[[Virginia (U.S. state)|V
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  • ...iew]]''. The [[American Conservative Union]] presented him with their 2001 Ronald Reagan Award.
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...]] and [[Henry Kissinger]] moved to the [[detente]] position, while the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]] chose a more aggressive [[rollback policy]].
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  • First elected to Congress in 1984, and a strong supporter of Ronald Reagan, he was known for bipartisan collaboration while staying with conservative ...id "Newt's position was, presidents get blamed for shutdowns, and he cited Ronald Reagan. My position was, Republicans get blamed for shutdowns. I argued that it is
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • In the '''Iran-Contra Affair''', U.S. officials in the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]], with help from civilians, continued to assist [[Ni
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  • * D'Souza, Dinesh. ''Ronald Reagan: How an Ordinary Man Became an Extraordinary Leader'' (1999), popular. [htt * Evans, Thomas W. ''The Education of Ronald Reagan: The General Electric Years'' (2006) [http://www.amazon.com/Education-Ronal
    21 KB (2,993 words) - 23:27, 11 April 2008
  • * Wapshott, Nicholas. ''Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher: A Political Marriage.'' (2007) 329 pp.
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  • ...ID), widely considered a pseudoscience. Founded by Bruce Chapman, a former Ronald Reagan|Reagan appointee in a variety of positions, the think-tank covers a variety
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • On February 1, 1986, Ronald Reagan issued a policy, "The National Program for Combatting Terrorism".<ref name= | author = Ronald Reagan
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  • ...oration. Prior to joining Thiokol, McCoy was appointed by former President Ronald Reagan as the Acting Secretary of the Air Force. He also served as the Assistant S
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  • Image:Ronaldreagan.jpg|Ronald Reagan
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  • ...1979 to 1987, under the administration of President [[Jimmy Carter]] and [[Ronald Reagan]]. He wielded vast power over U.S. economic policy in the midst of simultan
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • In the Ronald Reagan administration, he was a member of the Policy Planning Staff of the State D
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...), and as a senior policy analyst in Office of Policy Development of the [[Ronald Reagan]] White House (1987-1988). Before that Administration, he was a senior fell
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  • He was a speechwriter and legal advisor in the [[Ronald Reagan]] and [[George H. W. Bush]] Administrations, and a research associate at th
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  • |rowspan=2| [[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...e the early 1990s. Marginal tax rates are vastly lower than they were when Ronald Reagan was running for President. The welfare system has been reformed. The Soviet
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  • ...ed States of America|U.S. President]] [[Ronald Reagan]], courtesy of the [[Ronald Reagan Library]].]]
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  • ...cal scene, personified by the election and popular support for President [[Ronald Reagan]] and the [[1994 Republican Revolution]]. ...han what it had been before Carter's Presidency. The Republicans nominated Ronald Reagan as their candidate for President, a man who had been dismissed years earlie
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  • He speaks of a "beautiful moment" in the gulag when [[Ronald Reagan]]'s [[Evil Empire speech]] reached the prisoners. Initially, they were caut ...o Israel, hoping he would follow. Public diplomacy, including efforts by [[Ronald Reagan]], obtained his release, as part of a prisoner exchange, in 1986. Israel me
    8 KB (1,254 words) - 15:33, 4 April 2024
  • ...e British government of [[Margaret Thatcher]] and the U.S. government of [[Ronald Reagan]].
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  • | author = Ronald Reagan
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  • ...g abortion unconstitutional. They were highly important in the election of Ronald Reagan, becoming a key plank with what came to be called the Reagan coalition. Geo
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  • *[[USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76)|USS ''Ronald Reagan'' (CVN 76)]]
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  • .... [[Andrew Bacevich]] also describes it is a basis for the thinking of [[Ronald Reagan]] and the post-[[Cold War]] period.
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  • | Jan. 22, 1981 || Feb. 2, 1985 || [[Ronald Reagan]] | Feb. 3, 1985 || Aug. 17, 1988 || [[Ronald Reagan]]
    9 KB (969 words) - 06:30, 26 June 2023
  • [[Image:Ronaldreagan.jpg|President Ronald Reagan|right|thumb]] ...dent Reagan riding with [[Queen Elizabeth II]] of United Kingdom, courtesy Ronald Reagan Library|262px]]
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  • Fiscal Conservatism was rhetorically promoted during the presidency of [[Ronald Reagan]] (1981-1989). During his tenure, Reagan pushed through economic policies w
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  • *[[Ronald Reagan]] (1911-2004), President of the United States, (1981 - 1989)
    3 KB (351 words) - 13:06, 9 August 2023
  • ...|[[Ronald Reagan]]||1981-1989||||Republican||[[Image:Ronaldreagan.jpg|50px|Ronald Reagan]]
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  • ...four summits, including Mr. Nixon’s historic opening to China in 1972, and Ronald Reagan’s Reykjavik summit in 1986 with Mikhail Gorbachev.
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  • ...ntelligence agencies. The ban on assassinations was continued by President Ronald Reagan in 1981, (EO 12333, Sec 2.11) and extended to apply specifically to intelli ...intelligence may have assumed that the Iranians were involved; President [[Ronald Reagan]] made accusations. <ref name=Reason2007-09-27>{{citation
    7 KB (1,043 words) - 12:01, 31 March 2024
  • ...sistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs in the State Department in the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]]. In 1989, he returned to his brothers in the cattl
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  • ...t pressure on the [[apartheid]] regime of South Africa in the 1980s, and [[Ronald Reagan]] banned the import of Krugerrands into the United States in 1985. Most Eur
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  • ...' was foreign policy doctrine, adopted in the second term of President [[Ronald Reagan]] designed to weaken the [[Soviet Union]] by targeting the overthrow of its
    14 KB (2,066 words) - 12:13, 13 March 2024
  • ...n the Marine Protective Detail for [[United States President|President]] [[Ronald Reagan]].
    4 KB (574 words) - 08:47, 20 March 2024
  • ...vilege of labeling objects in the picture. A Trojan Horse with the head of Ronald Reagan is labeled SUPPLY-SIDE ECONOMICS, with warriors labeled MILITARY-WASTE, WEL
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  • *Peterson, Christian (2003). ''Ronald Reagan and Antinuclear Movements in the United States and Western Europe, 1981-198
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...ncluding Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs in the [[Ronald Reagan]] Administration, and [[U.S. Secretary of State]] in the first term of the ...many. After only six months, however, he accepted a direct request from [[Ronald Reagan]] to rejoin Carlucci, as deputy Assistant to the President for National Sec
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  • ...ipedia:Grover Norquist|long article about Grover Norquist</ref> before the Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration asked him to start Americans for Tax Reform.
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  • {{rpl|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • {{r|Ronald Reagan}}
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  • ...but whose urban policing theories have some experiential validation. He is Ronald Reagan Professor of Political Science at Pepperdine University, where he teaches:<
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  • *Pemberton, William E. ''Exit with Honor: The Life and Presidency of Ronald Reagan'' (1998) [http://www.questia.com/library/book/exit-with-honor-the-life-and-
    16 KB (2,019 words) - 17:44, 12 March 2024
  • ...ul speaker of the Assembly (1961-1969), defeated for governor in 1970 by [[Ronald Reagan]]; state treasurer from 1975 until his death in 1987. * Dallek, Matthew. ''The Right Moment: Ronald Reagan's First Victory and the Decisive Turning Point in American Politics.'' (200
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  • ...selling guns by mail. In 1980 the group endorsed a presidential candidate, Ronald Reagan, for the first time.
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  • ...ially at the Strait of Hormuz, was deemed a critical priority by President Ronald Reagan.<ref name=NSAEBB82-26>{{citation | first = Ronald | last = Reagan | authorlink = Ronald Reagan
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  • {{r|USS Ronald Reagan (CVN-76)|''USS Ronald Reagan'' (CVN-76)|**}}
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  • Between 1984 and 1988, during the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan administration]], as a Deputy Assistant Attorney General, she set up
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  • Following Louis' death, President [[Ronald Reagan]] said, "Joe Louis was more than a sports legend -- his career was an indic |title=Statement By President Ronald Reagan on the Death of Former World Heavyweight Boxing Champion Joe Louis April 13
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  • Following Louis' death, President [[Ronald Reagan]] said, "Joe Louis was more than a sports legend -- his career was an indic |title=Statement By President Ronald Reagan on the Death of Former World Heavyweight Boxing Champion Joe Louis April 13
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  • ...evident in the former. (See, for example, discussions of Reaganomics in [[Ronald Reagan]] and the [[Republican Party (United States)]].)
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  • ...ul speaker of the Assembly (1961-1969), defeated for governor in 1970 by [[Ronald Reagan]]; state treasurer from 1975 until his death in 1987. * Dallek, Matthew. ''The Right Moment: Ronald Reagan's First Victory and the Decisive Turning Point in American Politics.'' (200
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  • ...preclearance of his own memoirs, which were highly critical of President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s policies.<ref name=Snepp1999>Snepp1999, pp. 359-360.</ref> Turner, who
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  • ...90s. It was also famously used in a campaign commercial for US President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s successful 1984 reelection bid.
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  • He succeeded Weinberger as [[Ronald Reagan]]'s Secretary of Defense. Carlucci did not undertake extensive organization
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  • ...d as a [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] in 1988 to follow [[Ronald Reagan]]. His single term as President saw the collapse of [[Communism]] and victo ...ntial nomination. He outlasted all of his rivals in the primaries except [[Ronald Reagan]]. Bush's most memorable phrase in the campaign was the term "voodoo econom
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  • ...ism|conservative]] who received the [[American Conservative Union]]’s 2002 Ronald Reagan Award, she has referred to President [[Barack Obama]]'s policy of permittin
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  • ...turn television into an asset rather than a liability, and continued with Ronald Reagan.
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  • ...had great influence on numerous governments, especially in the 1980s on [[Ronald Reagan]] in the U.S. and [[Margaret Thatcher]] in Britain.<ref> Ebenstein (2007) i
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  • | 43 || [[George H. W. Bush ]] || 1981-1989 || [[Ronald Reagan ]]
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  • ...urred at the Pantages in 1952, hosted by [[Bob Hope]] with commentary by [[Ronald Reagan]].
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  • ...ued. In foreign policy, she collaborated closely with American President [[Ronald Reagan]], especially in his efforts to end the [[Cold War]] by, as she put it, "do * Wapshott, Nicholas. ''Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher: A Political Marriage.'' (2007) 329 pp.
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  • ...ng ideals, especially those of [[Woodrow Wilson]], [[Jimmy Carter]], and [[Ronald Reagan]]. The [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]] administration foreign policy was based in In 1976 Ford was challenged by [[Ronald Reagan]] for the GOP nomination. Ford won, but the détente policy was the focus o
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  • ...ecades ago, might have been seeking a "true" conservative to run against [[Ronald Reagan]]. I don't begrudge these activists their views and they are entitled to us Ronald Reagan would not have been welcome at today's CPAC or a [[Tea Party Movement|tea p
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  • ...ean Hannity''' (1961-) is a U.S. media commentator, self-identified as a [[Ronald Reagan]] [[American conservatism|conservative]]. His major outlets are cable tele
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  • ...h the [[Soviet Union]], incurring the wrath of the conservatives, led by [[Ronald Reagan]]. He narrowly defeated Reagan for renomination in 1976 by the [[Republican ...uman rights, was signed in August 1975. Republican conservatives, led by [[Ronald Reagan]], bemoaned détente as another indicator of the slippage of American power
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  • |[[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • ...8-18/><ref name=nytimes1984-10-28/> Occuring early in the presidency of [[Ronald Reagan]], the invasion occurred under the operational name of ''Operation Urgent F
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  • ...n District of Alabama]] (1975-1977), Sessions was nominated by President [[Ronald Reagan]] in 1981 and confirmed by the Senate to serve as the [[United States Attor
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  • ...ation, quoted Ted Olson, Solicitor General (U.S.)|Solicitor General in the Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration, as <blockquote> The ethos of the bar is built on the
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  • ...hat variously tries to regain the political success of the coalition under Ronald Reagan, or, alternatively, tries to redefine the right, which may or may not mean The next resurgence came with Ronald Reagan. While a wide range of conservatives, from different factions, point to Rea
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  • ...Service He was Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence in the Ronald Reagan|Reagan Admistration, Assistant Secretary of State for Politico-Military Aff
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  • Douthat and Salam believed that [[Ronald Reagan]] was not opposed to a positive model of the welfare state, and "would atta
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  • ...l of Congress was split. The dominant leader of the 6th Party System was [[Ronald Reagan]], with Republicans using his as their standard of proper politics into the
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  • In 1976 Ford was challenged by [[Ronald Reagan]] for the GOP nomination. Ford won, but the détente policy was the focus o ...the [[Solidarity]] movement in Poland, said in 2004, "When talking about Ronald Reagan, I have to be personal. We in Poland took him so personally. Why? Because w
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  • In the [[Ronald Reagan]] and [[George H.W. Bush]] administrations, he served as Regional Represent
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  • In April 1982, President Ronald Reagan signed National Security Decision Directive (NSDD) 30<ref name=NSDD30>{{cit | author = Ronald Reagan
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  • * Pemberton, William E. ''Exit with Honor: The Life and Presidency of Ronald Reagan'' (1998) biography by historian; [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=49534 * Dallek, Matthew. ''The Right Moment: Ronald Reagan's First Victory and the Decisive Turning Point in American Politics.'' (200
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  • ...Second Circuit. Before finishing law school, she was a speechwriter in the Ronald Reagan administration, working at the White House, the Department of Transportatio
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  • * Ronald Reagan Commemorative Medal, Farewell to Office
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  • ...ms continued to be a feature of antitrust policy until appointees of the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] administration took steps to limit that use of the legislation, fo
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  • ...ogue, and through that dialogue, to our legal institutions.” ''- President Ronald Reagan''
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  • - [[Ronald Reagan]] -
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  • ...s helped Habré take power in the first clandestine operation launched by [[Ronald Reagan]]'s CIA chief, [[William J. Casey]], when he took over the agency in 1981.
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  • From 1981 to 1986, he served in the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan administration]], first as Special Assistant to the Attorney General
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  • ...e later), and [[Sandra Day O'Connor]], who was appointed to the court by [[Ronald Reagan|President Reagan]] in 1981.</ref> decision in ''Dickerson v. U.S.'', 530 U.
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  • * Greenstein, Fred I. "Ronald Reagan. Another Hidden-Hand Ike?" ''PS: Political Science and Politics,'' Vol. 23,
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  • ...s of supervisory jobs were given to local Democratic machines; one went to Ronald Reagan's father. The 3.5 million voters on relief payrolls during the 1936 electi The European ethnic groups came of age after the 1960s. [[Ronald Reagan]] pulled many of the working class social conservatives into the Republican
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  • ...Iranian seizure of the U.S. Embassy]], with diplomats held hostage until [[Ronald Reagan]] took office. The seizure caused intense friction between the U.S. and Ira The U.S. began its "tilt to Iraq" in 1982, under the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]]. February, 1982.<ref name=NSAEBB82>{{citation
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  • ...te for human rights changed radically with the election of [[President]] [[Ronald Reagan]]. In February 1981, the Administration ordered representatives to "intern
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  • ...[[The Day After]]'' which was scheduled to be aired for November sweeps. [[Ronald Reagan]] had also scrapped the concept of ''[[détente]]'', and had moved to deplo
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  • ...d [[Robert A. Taft]] in the 1940s, [[Barry Goldwater]] in the 1960s, and [[Ronald Reagan]] in the 1980s. Important writers and spokesmen of the past included [[Rus ...1964. His supporters regrouped under new leadership, especially that of [[Ronald Reagan]] in California, and regained strength in the 1966 elections. Conservatives
    54 KB (7,923 words) - 10:44, 16 April 2024
  • ...formerly worked in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under Ronald Reagan. He used various outlets to spread the FRC's message, such as testifying be
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  • | title = Glenn Beck Vs. Ronald Reagan & Bruce Springsteen Ironically, Ronald Reagan, whom Beck claims as a hero, had used the same music as a campaign theme so
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  • ...and [[Clarence Kelley]], were convicted and later pardoned by President [[Ronald Reagan]].
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  • ...Jr. of West Virginia and former Rep. Dan Rostenkowski. In 1988, President Ronald Reagan appointed him as judge for the Superior Court of the District of Columbia.
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  • ...importance new base in the party, led by movie-star politicians such as [[Ronald Reagan]], who strongly supported Roosevelt and Truman at this time. ...ntial politics in the 1970s and 1980s, giving strong support to Republican Ronald Reagan and rejecting the liberal northern candidates. The Democrats responded by n
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  • ...ained equality and dominance in presidential elections in the 1980s with [[Ronald Reagan]] and his conservative followers opposed to Communism abroad and big govern ...solution to our problem; government is the problem."<ref>{{cite web |title=Ronald Reagan's Inaugural Address, January 20, 1981 |publisher=The American Presidency Pr
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  • ...en defense of an unassailable nuclear arsenal, and support for President [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]]'s [[Strategic Defensive Initiative]] ("Star Wars") [[ballistic mis During the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] Administration, he was a major influence in the president's propo
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  • [[Ronald Reagan|President Reagan]]'s visit in 1986 provided a valuable opportunity for a qu
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  • ...983. To provide a stronger, more lasting solution in the region, President Ronald Reagan took steps to transform the RDJTF into a permanent unified command over a t
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  • ...es, and was later elevated to the position of chief justice by President [[Ronald Reagan]]. ...]], and his inability to appeal directly to the populace like [[FDR]] or [[Ronald Reagan]]. After his downfall he wrote a series of penetrating books which helped
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  • ...this pardon (even within his own party), and in 1976 he barely defeated [[Ronald Reagan]] for the nomination. The taint of Watergate and the nation's economic dif ..."moderate Republicans," in contrast to the conservatives who rallied to [[Ronald Reagan]].
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  • ...ept responsibility for his policy mistakes in Iraq and Afghanistan. Former Ronald Reagan|Reagan speechwriter Peggy Noonan dismissed it as “an extended effort at b
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  • ...security adviser [[Zbigniew Brzezinski]]. During the administrations of [[Ronald Reagan]] (1981-1989) and [[George H.W. Bush]] (1989-1993), the secretary overshado
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  • ...her=EPA}}</ref> Implementation of the program in early years, during the [[Ronald Reagan administration]], was ineffective, with only 16 of the 799 Superfund sites
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  • ...on television, that style was vicariously enjoyed by large audiences. Like Ronald Reagan, Clinton used his rhetorical skills to achieve political success; he surviv
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  • ...ton. ''Not So Free to Choose: The Political Economy of Milton Friedman and Ronald Reagan'' Praeger, 1987; attacks Friedman's policies from the left [http://www.ques
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  • * Ronald Reagan, from the silver screen to the White House. (2005). [sound recording]. [Lo
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  • ...military emergency experience, one who had been an emergency advisor to [[Ronald Reagan]] when he was governor of California.
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  • ...preclearance of his own memoirs, which were highly critical of President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s policies.<ref name=Snepp1999>Snepp1999, pp. 359-360.</ref> Turner, who ...ned a report from a professor that agreed with his view, which convinced [[Ronald Reagan]] that there was a threat.<ref>[[The Power of Nightmares]] Part 1 'Baby it'
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  • * Wapshott, Nicholas. ''Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher: A Political Marriage.'' (2007) 329 pp.
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  • ...usiest airports in the US and the Northern Virginia area is also served by Ronald Reagan National Airport. Richmond has a substantial airport.
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  • ...ease, are the [[president of the United States of America|US president]] [[Ronald Reagan]], the [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom| UK Prime minister]] [[Harold
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  • ...ort the Nicaraguan Contras. Since the arms-for-hostages deal struck by the Ronald Reagan| Reagan Administration channeled money for to the Contras, the legal interp
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  • ...ociety. [[Richard Nixon]] continued many of the spending programs. While [[Ronald Reagan]] reduced funding or ended some of them, many of the these programs, includ ...tments. Funding for many of these programs were further cut in President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s first budget in 1981.
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  • ...ociety. [[Richard Nixon]] continued many of the spending programs. While [[Ronald Reagan]] reduced funding or ended some of them, many of the these programs, includ ...tments. Funding for many of these programs were further cut in President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s first budget in 1981.
    31 KB (4,591 words) - 09:01, 1 September 2013
  • ...iet vulnerabilities on its maritime flanks, came to operation during the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] administration in the 1980s. The strategy, which witnessed a major
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  • In 1981, [[Ronald Reagan]] introduced [[Reaganomics|fiscally-expansive economic policies]], cutting
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  • During the Ronald Reagan|Reagan administration, there was a return to a strong counterforce strategy
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  • ..."the system would allow him or her to be no more than a Jimmy Carter or a Ronald Reagan."
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  • ...g credit, but also gave her credit for an ability, comparable to that of [[Ronald Reagan]], for convincing sincerity and actual belief in her presentation. It does, ...wish Mrs. Palin had more intellectual depth like [[Jeane Kirkpatrick]], [[Ronald Reagan]]'s United Nations U.S. ambassador? Of course. But that can be developed if
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  • ...ing the administrations of [[Woodrow Wilson]], [[Dwight Eisenhower]] and [[Ronald Reagan]]. However, each attempt was met with the assertion that the Justice Depart
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  • ...1964. His supporters regrouped under new leadership, especially that of [[Ronald Reagan]] in California, and regained strength in the 1966 elections. Conservatives
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  • ...ng Clark Gable, Greta Garbo, Joan Crawford, Red Skelton, Buster Keaton and Ronald Reagan.
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  • ...einhold Niebuhr]], [[Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.]], [[Hubert Humphrey]], and [[Ronald Reagan]]. The ADA was hostile to the Soviet Union, battled American Communists and
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  • * 1981 - President [[Ronald Reagan]] escalates "Second Cold War" with heavy new military spending and research
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  • The GOP under [[Ronald Reagan]] and [[George H.W. Bush]] abandoned the protectionist ideology, and came o
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  • In 1988, President Ronald Reagan issued National Security Decision Directive 298 (NSDD-298)
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  • ...e ticket. In 1976, a Washington elector cast his presidential ballot for [[Ronald Reagan]] instead of [[Gerald Ford]].</ref>
    37 KB (5,701 words) - 19:18, 7 September 2023
  • ...free market and anti-union policies, and deregulation, especially under [[Ronald Reagan|President Reagan]], came into play.<ref name="wolf"/> These pressures only
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  • ...who were overthrown in 1992. Following a new [[rollback]] strategy the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan Administration]] tried and succeeded in creating "another Vietnam" f
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  • Taking office in early 1981, President [[Ronald Reagan]] began a rollback strategy of supporting insurgencies in Nicaragua, Cambod
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  • ...s athletes for the [[United States of America]] Olympics team; President [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] with Olympian Mary Lou Retton in 1987.]]
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  • The Obama administration also overturned a policy by former President [[Ronald Reagan]] on federal funds for international [[family planning]] clinics that offer
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  • ...o those in the entertainment industry, though, as it also played host to [[Ronald Reagan]], former presidents [[Harry S. Truman]] and [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]], and
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  • }}</ref> Hitz also said that under an agreement in 1982 between Ronald Reagan's Attorney General William French Smith and the CIA, agency officers were n
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  • ...y, Republicans picked [[Alan Keyes]], an African American diplomat under [[Ronald Reagan]] and a [[American conservatism|conservative]] activist from Maryland, to r
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  • *[[Ronald Reagan]] - redirect from [[Ronald Wilson Reagan]]
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  • ...])</ref> - a conclusion that accorded well with the libertarian views of [[Ronald Reagan]] in America and [[Margaret Thatcher]] in Britain, and they introduced ban
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  • ...cres of Hazaras in Afghanistan] Human Rights Watch</ref> Under President [[Ronald Reagan]], the USA covertly funded the [[Contras]], various armed guerilla groups t
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  • ...cres of Hazaras in Afghanistan] Human Rights Watch</ref> Under President [[Ronald Reagan]], the USA covertly funded the [[Contras]], various armed guerilla groups t
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  • ...ion" <ref>[http://www.reagan.utexas.edu/archives/speeches/1982/101582b.htm Ronald Reagan ''Remarks on Signing the Garn-St Germain Depository Institutions Act of 198
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  • #[[Ronald Reagan]]
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  • ...of the explosion.<ref>Hansen, pp.&nbsp;60–603.</ref> In 1986, President [[Ronald Reagan]] appointed him to the [[Rogers Commission Report|Rogers Commission]] which
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  • ...st Iraq goes back to unconventional warfare during the Iran-Iraq War under Ronald Reagan, the Gulf War under George W. Bush and various operations under Bill Clinto
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