YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Ronald Reagan Biography
Essays 31 - 60
In five pages this paper discusses how Reagan ranked in 10 areas delineated by the CSpan Survey of historians. There are no other...
in meeting his goals. Real GDP declined by one-half of one percent in 1980, which was the last year of the Carter administration;...
a lack of hierarchical organization that critics deem so essential to a nations overall political and economic structure. One mig...
disaster. It was his administration, after all, that had been intent on having the Shuttle be declared operational while it was i...
his second term in office (Gwertzman, 2004). Walter Russell Mead, a respected historian, claims that the election was "a turning p...
the only person who could make him feel lonely "simply by leaving the room" (Bock, 2004). Her love for him in return was as clear ...
Info, 1988). The straw that broke the camels back in terms of Carters flexibility was the murder of four churchwomen in El Salvad...
White house and Congress were running in to state to their folks back home that they had supported Reagan from the beginning. Acco...
The outcome of the 1984 presidential election is the topic of this twelve page paper. The term rhetoric is discussed in a positiv...
of San Salvador in November 1989 and the government continued to be responsible for murders carried out by right-wing death squads...
In six pages this paper discusses President Ronald Reagan's dismissal of air traffic controllers within the context of Kant's phil...
In six pages this paper discusses how the Cold War conclusion of the Soviet Union's collapse was due more to Mikhail Gorbachev's r...
In five pages this paper critically reviews Lou Cannon's unbiased biographical portrait of President Ronald Reagan entitled simply...
a fairly recent advertising campaign - this is not your fathers battleground. Ironically, thirteen years after Reagans introducti...
tests." They also point out that the SAT test only verbal and math skills and is no longer enough of a base to determine the appr...
had fulfilled his 1980 campaign pledge to restore "the great, confident roar of American progress and growth and optimism" (Past P...
deleterious rather than positive. It is important to remember, however, that the New Deal emerged in one of the most taxing times...
(Kennedy, 2002, p. 165). This kind of reaction to attacks could not continue and the current President George W. Bush intends to ...
as the way to economic health, rather than moving through macroeconomic methods (Answers.com, 2005). During the 1980s, such measur...
came at that time (called the Progressive Movement) that there may very well have been some sort of internal revolt by the working...
to think much of President Reagan. In fact, he says that Reagan gave the people "a sense of direction and moral purpose, but not o...
clearly delineate between good guys and bad guys and believes that President George W. Bush and his administration serve as the be...
those who want to help the poor, such as in the 1930s. There was relatively little opposition to Roosevelts New Deal because times...
that charmed his audiences was John F. Kennedy. Even though his presentation was not as fluid as that of Reagans, nonetheless, Ke...
the second of what would become fairly regular Fireside Chats, FDR (1933) went directly to the American people via radio to outlin...
ways that non-students of foreign policy can easily understand. FitzGeralds attitude concerning her subject matter is established...
British Prime Minister) in 1946 that required immediate attention. Proposing that atomic energy be placed under international con...
power because he placed himself above the law in authorizing the Watergate break-in. The tapes from the Nixon White House show a m...
In twelve pages this paper discusses how the public perceives presidential leadership effectiveness is molded by both the environm...
House portrayed the work of the president as lackadaisical. Photo opportunities generally saw the president jogging or eating a Bi...