Ronald Reagan and His Times:
Ronald Reagan and His Times:
A Curriculum Resource for Illinois Educators
Developed and Distributed by:
The Ronald Reagan Trail Association
October 2003
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was commissioned by the Ronald Reagan Trail Association, and accordingly, the primary debt that must be acknowledged here is one of appreciation to that group for recognizing the importance of this undertaking. The members who currently serve, and those who have served, on the board of the Reagan Trail Association selflessly perform a valuable service to the citizens of Illinois and to the nation by helping to celebrate and commemorate the historic role that central Illinois communities played in Ronald Reagan’s formative years. Although it is impossible to thank everyone individually, special appreciation is due to Joe Serangeli of Eureka and Jim Burke of Dixon, the respective southern and northern “anchors” of the Trail, for the work that they have done both in helping to create the Reagan Trail and in advancing the work of the Association through their creative vision and boundless enthusiasm.
Two Eureka College students provided tremendous contributions to this effort. Elizabeth Henrichs created many lessons for elementary and middle school classes. Ever a thoughtful student, and certainly a gem of a young teacher, Ms. Henrichs’ ideas incorporated into the lessons evoke a sense of awe and wonder from students who realize how exciting learning can be. Eric Hager contributed hours of research to this project in bringing together a comprehensive bibliography of extant works on Ronald Reagan and the Reagan Era. The bibliography included here will help Illinois librarians to select works for their collections, but it will also benefit others at the national and global levels.
Sarah Wilson provided admirable aid in typesetting portions of the manuscript. Joy Kinder provided cheerful assistance in duplicating drafts of this text as it approached final form. Eldrick Smith worked wonders in keeping a pesky computer from losing large portions of text. Jim Flynn helped to facilitate the printing and distribution of this material to school districts. Barbara Perry offered kind words of encouragement and provided valuable contact information for many school districts in central Illinois. Their efforts, and those of many others, brought this work to its final form.
Corporate support from the Jelly Belly Corporation and from Caterpillar, Inc. have advanced the work of the Reagan Trail Association and make this curriculum possible.
In a final sense, acknowledgment is due to the many communities of the Reagan Trail region that have protected, preserved, and honored their history through the years. The realization that we have so much to offer in central Illinois – so much from which to learn – is a valuable testimony to the foresight of those who have come before us. As such, many of the sites that we see today are vaguely familiar with those that a young Ronald Reagan might have experienced while hitching a ride between Dixon and Eureka. Like a roadway connecting disparate communities and providing common direction to past and present, this curricular packet is designed to link the historic present with its salient past. In our journey, both real and metaphorical, we must remember to thank those who blazed the way, those who built the path and those whose task remains to keep secure the well-worn route upon which history always rides circuit. We are still learning, but in the end that is our essential charge.
PREFACE
As a result of two decades of curricular reform initiatives, the state of primary and secondary education in the United States has become much more regularized than it had been in times past. Today educators focus upon long range goals for their students’ achievement and direct progress toward attaining these goals through a discipline-specific series of content-based objectives. The stated outcome of such a system is determined by whether or not the student can demonstrate competency in the content areas, and this is usually assessed through some form of standardized testing. While such a regularized form of curricular design does have its merits, such a system does not preclude the positive impact that a dynamic teacher or an innovative program of lessons can have on student learning and academic achievement. Students are more apt to learn lessons that they can internalize – lessons that they can relate to the world and circumstances about which they are most familiar. It is in this spirit that this curricular packet is offered to the educators of central Illinois.
Clearly the purpose and scope of this endeavor is to focus learning upon the formative role that central Illinois communities had in the life of Ronald Reagan. The lessons also highlight the life and times of the nation’s fortieth president. All of the activities and exercises included in this packet are designed to develop competencies that are essential to student academic achievement. It is neither the intent of this curriculum nor its designers to suppose that all of these materials should be incorporated into any particular school or classroom setting. Rather, these curricular materials are designed and made available to serve as supplementary tools that can be used to help Illinois educators achieve the stated goals and satisfy the necessary objectives of student learning.
These lessons are not produced to advance a political bias of any sort. The curricular materials that are included here are not designed as a laudatory commentary on the life and achievements of Ronald Reagan. Students are encouraged to think independently, to analyze, to evaluate, and to use critical thinking skills effectively as they work with these curricular materials. As a result, many of the lessons that are included have open-ended questions that require thoughtful, subjective responses from the students. If the material is considered objectively and fairly, students have a tremendous latitude with which to evaluate a variety of issues.
This curricular packet will likely be revised as future editions are prepared and distributed. It is important that those teachers who have used the materials within their classrooms have an opportunity to share their experiences with the Reagan Trail Association. This feedback is essential as we strive to improve the quality and the value of this learning resource. Please feel free to share ideas of what works, what needs to be improved, and what other things might need to be included in further editions of this packet. Our ultimate goal must be upon student achievement. These lessons and activities are simply a means that might be used toward that end. By rooting student learning in that which is familiar in central Illinois we hope to spark curiosity and interest that may enhance academic achievement. In the final analysis, that is the common ground upon which we all can agree.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - xx
Preface - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - xxx
Table of Contents - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - iv
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -5
Note - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6
Elementary School Resources - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7
Middle School Resources - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 32
High School Resources - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 53
Answers - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -80
Appendix - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 91
Ronald Reagan Chronology - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 93
Ronald Reagan Bibliography - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -105
INTRODUCTION
Illinois can claim historical association with three presidents of the United States – Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, and Ronald Reagan. Of these three, only Ronald Reagan was a native-born son of the Prairie State.
In 1999 the Illinois State Legislature authorized the establishment of the Reagan Trail to connect those central Illinois communities that were associated with the formative years of Ronald Reagan’s life in Illinois. Ranging from Tampico and Dixon in the north, respectively his birthplace and boyhood home, to Eureka in the south, where he attended Eureka College from 1928-1932, the Reagan Trail unites distinct communities bound together by a common history.
In similar fashion, this educational resource is a logical extension of the Reagan Trail concept as the common experiences of central Illinois communities, along with the common experiences of the nation and world, are brought into perspective through thoughtful activities and exercises. Just as a journey along the Reagan Trail takes us from one community to another, the intellectual quest presented in this curricular resource connects various academic disciplines and provides essential critical thinking activities to enhance student learning.
NOTE
A few comments about the abbreviations used in this curricular packet are needed here.
Documents designated with the ES prefix are designed primarily for use in the elementary school setting - grades kindergarten through fourth grade. It is possible that some of these items might work well in a middle school setting, but that determination would be based upon the students’ abilities. Keep in mind that there is variation from lower-order to higher-order thinking that is found within these exercises and activities. Teachers should select items that are appropriate for and commensurate with the abilities of their students.
Documents designated with the MS prefix are designed primarily for use in the middle school setting - grades five through eight. It is possible that some of these items might work well either in an elementary school or in a high school setting, but that determination would be based upon the students’ abilities. Keep in mind that there is variation from lower-order to higher-order thinking that is found within these exercises and activities. Teachers should select items that are appropriate for and commensurate with the abilities of their students.
Documents designated with the HS prefix are designed primarily for use in the high school setting - grades nine through twelve. It is possible that some of these items might work well in a middle school setting, but that determination would be based upon the students’ abilities. Keep in mind that there is variation from lower-order to higher-order thinking that is found within these exercises and activities. Teachers should select items that are appropriate for and commensurate with the abilities of their students.
The notation DBQ that is found on some of the lessons stands for “Document Based Question.” These lessons involve the use of an original text, or primary source, that must be read before answering questions that follow. The questions associated with these lessons often produce open-ended responses, and thus the opportunity for subjective response and interpretation is greater here than in many of the other lessons. DBQ lessons often provide excellent opportunities for students to develop their critical thinking skills.
Many of the lessons that are contained in this resource packet lend themselves toward student research that could be done either in a library setting or through the Internet. Depending upon the constraints of both time and of learning resources, teachers may decide to use some of these activities as group work rather than as individual work.
When and where it is possible, teachers may wish to incorporate field trips to selected Reagan historic sites in association with the use of these curricular materials. Ideal locations to visit would be the Reagan birthplace in Tampico, the Reagan Boyhood Home in Dixon, and the Reagan Museum and Reagan Peace Garden at Eureka College.
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL RESOURCES
ES:1 Cities and Towns of the Reagan Trail
ES:2 Ronald Reagan Acrostic
ES:3 Reading Exercise and Acrostic
ES:4 Words and Sentences
ES:5 Lincoln, Grant & Reagan
ES:6 Find the Words
ES:7 Letters to the President
ES:8 Berlin Wall Replication
ES:9 Reagan Trail Math Exercise
ES:10 Spell Time
ES:11 Space Diorama
ES:12 Find Me!
ES:13 U.S. Map Exercise
ES:14 Putting the Phrase Together
ES:15 Presidents Day Art Activity
ES:16 Which Word Does Not Belong?
ES:17 Asking Questions and Finding Answers
ES:18 Always on the Move
ES:19 Find the Spelling Errors
ES:20 “Unearthing” a 1980s Time Capsule
ES:1 Cities and Towns of the Reagan Trail
Directions: See how many of the cities and towns that are located along the Ronald Reagan Trail can be named in the word puzzle found below:
| | | | |___ |___ |___ |R |___ |
|V |I |D |T |D |E |X |O |K |
|D |Y |R |U |F |M |R |I |M |
|R |R |A |D |I |O |W |N |G |
|A |B |M |E |K |V |Z |U |X |
|U |L |A |N |F |I |L |M |S |
|G |H |E |T |L |E |P |N |A |
|E |N |G |P |D |S |T |S |C |
|F |S |P |O |R |T |S |E |T |
|I |M |H |L |R |A |C |U |O |
|L |G |O |V |E |R |N |O |R |
ES:4 Words and Sentences
| | | |___ |C |___ |___ |___ | | |
| | | |___ |A |___ |___ |___ | | |
| | |___ |___ |L |___ |___ | | | |
| | |___ |___ |I |___ |___ | | | |
| | | | |F |___ |___ |___ |___ |___ |
| | | |___ |O |___ |___ |___ |___ | |
|___ |___ |___ |___ |R |___ |___ |___ | | |
| | | |___ |N |___ |___ |___ | | |
| | | |___ |I |___ |___ |___ |___ | |
| | |___ |___ |A |___ |___ |___ | | |
Write the following words into the spaces found in the puzzle:
ACTOR
FAMOUS
FILMS
GIPPER
GOVERNOR
GUILD
MOVIES
RADIO
REAGAN
UNION
Using words from this list (you may also use the word California) write two sentences that tell us something important about Ronald Reagan. Each of your sentences must use at least two words from the terms that are provided.
(1)
(2)
ES:5 Lincoln, Grant & Reagan
For each of the following questions, you must tell which president is being described. You may use an encyclopedia to find information about Presidents Lincoln, Grant and Reagan.
_______________ (1) He was a general during the Civil War.
_______________ (2) He was born in Illinois.
_______________ (3) He worked as a lawyer in Springfield.
_______________ (4) He became an actor.
_______________ (5) He was nicknamed “The Rail Splitter.”
_______________ (6) He lived for a while in Galena.
_______________ (7) He was assassinated and died the following day.
_______________ (8) Robert E. Lee surrendered to him.
_______________ (9) He survived an assassination attempt.
_______________ (10) Of these three presidents, he did not have a beard.
_______________ (11) Of these three presidents, he did not serve for eight years.
_______________ (12) He was born in Kentucky.
_______________ (13) He was born in Ohio.
_______________ (14) He was nicknamed “Dutch.”
_______________ (15) He was nicknamed “Uncle Sam.”
ES:6 Find the Words
|N |I |C |H |O |T |Z |N |
| | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | |
Unscramble the tiles to reveal a message.
ES:15 Presidents Day Art Activity
Materials needed:
Outline map of Illinois
Crayons or colored pencils
Old newspapers and magazines
Scissors
Paste
Each year the United States celebrates a national holiday called Presidents Day on the third Monday in February. This holiday was established to honor all of the people who have served as President of the United States throughout the nation’s history.
Three presidents – Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant and Ronald Reagan – lived in Illinois at some point in their lives. Use the outline map of Illinois that is provided to draw a picture of these three presidents.
After you draw your pictures, look through the old newspapers and magazines that are provided and to find words that are related to the president of the United States (for example, the word “leader”). Each of you should try to find at least ten words that you can cut out of the newspapers and magazines to use in your art project. You should paste the words that you have selected in the space around the Illinois outline where you have drawn the pictures of Presidents Lincoln, Grant and Reagan.
Once everyone has completed their art projects the work will be posted on the wall of the classroom. Each student will be able to tell a story about how the words that they have selected and pasted tell us something about the work that the President of the United States does.
[pic]
ES:16 Which Word Does Not Belong?
For each set of words, circle the word that is not associated with the other three:
|PRESIDENT | |ILLINOIS | |FILMS |
|LEADER | |CALIFORNIA | |ACTOR |
|CASTLE | |IOWA | |MOVIES |
|RULER | |CHICAGO | |BOOKS |
| | | | | |
|BUSH | |DIXON | |ELECTION |
|CLINTON | |EUREKA | |VOTER |
|REAGAN | |GALENA | |VACATION |
|SMITH | |TAMPICO | |CANDIDATE |
| | | | | |
|CAPITOL | |RADIO | |MOON |
|WHITE HOUSE | |LAWS | |OCEAN |
|SUPREME COURT | |RULES | |STARS |
|STOCK MARKET | |POLICIES | |PLANETS |
ES:17 Asking Questions and Finding Answers
Procedure
(1) Students should work individually and then in groups of five to six for this exercise.
(2) Each student should come up with at least three questions that he would like to ask President Reagan if he had the opportunity to do so. The questions should be related to what life was like in the United States during the 1980s.
(3) Once all of the students in the class have prepared their questions, they should gather in small groups to share the questions that they have written with one another. Each group must determine what single question seems to be the best, or the most interesting, to the members of the group.
(4) Each group will write a letter to one of the locations listed below in order to find out additional information about the question that they have selected.
(5) Once the responses begin to arrive, the information should be shared with the class and the letters can be posted on the wall of the classroom.
Contact Information:
| |
|The National Archives |
|8601 Adelphi Road |
|College Park, Maryland 20740-6001 |
| |
|The Library of Congress |
|101 Independence Avenue, S.E. |
|Washington, D.C. 20540 |
| |
|The Reagan Presidential Library |
|40 Presidential Drive |
|Simi Valley, California 93065-0600 |
ES:18 Always on the Move
Ronald Reagan was born in Tampico, Illinois, on February 6, 1911. His family moved from place to place when he was a young boy because his father needed to find a steady job. The Reagan family lived for a time in Tampico, Chicago, Galesburg, Monmouth, and Dixon. When the family moved to Dixon in 1921, Ronald Reagan was nine years old. He would always consider Dixon to be his “home” even though his family had lived in many different communities. It was in Dixon that Ronald Reagan completed his high school education before moving on to Eureka where he attended Eureka College from 1928 to 1932.
Consider the following questions and provide your opinion for each:
(1) How do you think that Ronald Reagan felt about having to move so often when he was a child?
(2) Why do you believe that he considered Dixon to be “home.”
(3) What problems might Ronald Reagan have faced because of moving from place to place.
(4) What valuable lessons might he have learned from this experience?
ES:19 Find the Spelling Errors
In each of the following sets of words, one of the words is spelled incorrectly. Circle the word that is spelled incorrectly, and spell it correctly on the lines that are found near the bottom of this page.
|PRESIDENT | |ELECTION | |AMERICA |
|CONGRES | |CANDIDATE | |NATION |
|SENATE | |PRYMARY | |COUNTREY |
| | | | | |
|TAMPIKO | |DEFENSE | |LIBERTY |
|DIXON | |TREASUREY | |FREEDOM |
|EUREKA | |INTERIOR | |JUSTISE |
| | | | | |
|MOVIES | |GOVERNER | |TALENT |
|RADIO | |CALIFORNIA | |ABILITY |
|TELYVISION | |REELECTED | |COURRAGE |
Spell the misspelled words correctly in the spaces provided below:
|_________________ | |________________ | |________________ |
| | | | | |
|_________________ | |________________ | |________________ |
| | | | | |
|_________________ | |________________ | |________________ |
ES:20 “Unearthing” a 1980s Time Capsule
The teacher should prepare in advance of the class a representative “time capsule” of the 1980s that students will be able to examine and try to explain. The class should pretend that this time capsule was recently unearthed in the schoolyard after having been buried there by a previous class. It will be the job of the students to try to find meaning in the items that this earlier “class” had decided to bury.
Though this is not an exhaustive list, it might suggest some of the possible items that could be included in this time capsule:
political campaign buttons from 1980 or 1984
a cassette tape with representative music from the period
a news magazine from the period
a newspaper from the period
a 5.25 inch floppy disk
an article about the Cold War
a movie poster from the era, or movie-related action figures
a videotape containing a 1980s television sitcom
images of (or actual) early video games [e.g., Pac Man]
a map of Central America
school pictures of individuals that show period clothing and/or hair styles
Once the students have tried to explain the significance of the representative items from the 1980s you should ask them what they would include if they were to produce a representative time capsule of their own era.
If time and circumstances permit, you may want to consider putting together such a time capsule and burying it so that some future class might later discover it.
MIDDLE SCHOOL RESOURCES
MS:1 Reading a Chart: Counties along the Reagan Trail
MS:2 Illinois History Quiz
MS:3 Reagan Nicknames
MS:4 Planning a Journey on the Reagan Trail
MS:5 Library Skills Exercise
MS:6 Space Adventure
MS:7 All in the Family
MS:8 Now Where Was That Located?
MS:9 Reading Charts
MS:10 Interpreting Election Results I
MS:11 Interpreting Election Results II
MS:12 Unscramble the Quotation
MS:13 Facts about Illinois
MS:14 Story Problems
MS:15 Facts about Washington, D.C.
MS:16 Build Your Own City
MS:17 Municipalities Along the Reagan Trail
MS:18 Oral History: The Cold War
MS:19 Library Research Projects
MS:20 Definitions
MS:1 Reading a Chart: Counties along the Reagan Trail
| | | | | | | |
| |AREA |1920 |1930 |1940 |1950 |1960 |
| | | | | | | |
|ILLINOIS |- - - - - |6,485,280 |7,630,654 |7,897,241 |8,712,176 |10,081,158 |
| | | | | | | |
|Bureau |869 sq. mi. |42,648 |38,885 |37,600 |37,711 |37,594 |
| | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | |
| |716 sq. |46,727 |51,336 |52,250 |54,366 |61,280 |
|Knox | | | | | | |
| |mi | | | | | |
| | | | | | | |
|Lee |725 sq. mi. |28,004 |32,329 |34,604 |36,451 |38,749 |
| | | | | | | |
|Marshall |386 sq. mi. |14,760 |13,023 |13,179 |13,025 |13,334 |
| | | | | | | |
|Peoria |620 sq. mi |111,710 |141,344 |153,374 |174,347 |189,044 |
| | | | | | | |
|Putnam |160 sq. mi. |7,579 |5,235 |5,289 |4,746 |4,570 |
| | | | | | | |
|Tazewell |649 sq. mi. |38,540 |46,082 |58,362 |76,165 |99,789 |
| | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | |
|Warren |543 sq. |21,488 |21,745 |21,286 |21,981 |21,587 |
| | | | | | | |
| |mi. | | | | | |
| | | | | | | |
|Whiteside |685 sq. mi. |36,174 |39,019 |43,338 |49,336 |59,887 |
| | | | | | | |
|Woodford |528 sq. mi. |19,340 |18,792 |19,124 |21,335 |24,579 |
(1) Which county experienced the highest growth rate from 1920 to 1960?
(2) What factors might help to explain this growth rate?
(3) Which county had a growth rate that was most similar to that of the state of Illinois from 1920 to 1960?
(4) What county experienced the most stagnant (or negative) growth rate from 1920 to 1960?
(5) What factors might help to explain this condition?
(6) Which of these counties has the highest population density?
(7) Which of these counties has the lowest population density?
MS:2 Illinois History Quiz
__________________(1) The National Road ended in this Illinois town that once served
as the state capital.
__________________(2) In 1860 Ulysses S. Grant moved to this Illinois town where he
worked as a clerk in a dry goods store.
__________________(3) This Illinois governor pardoned several of the anarchists who
had been convicted of the Haymarket Riot bombing.
__________________(4) 111 miners died near this Illinois town on March 27, 1947,
when a gas explosion caused a coal mining disaster.
__________________(5) In 1790 this African American frontiersman established the
first Permanent settlement that eventually became Chicago.
__________________(6) This Illinois educator was the longtime president of the
Women’s Christian Temperance Union.
__________________(7) This individual was the only President of the United States who
was born in the state of Illinois.
__________________(8) This town is situated where the Illinois and Ohio rivers meet.
__________________(9) On December 3, of this year, Illinois entered the Union as the
twenty-first state.
__________________(10) These two French Canadian explorers visited Illinois in 1763.
__________________(11) Jane Addams was a social worker from Illinois. She helped
create _?_, a famous settlement house in Chicago.
__________________(12) This poet and Lincoln biographer was an Illinois native.
__________________(13) _?_ was the name of the military skirmish that took place in
western Illinois in 1832.
__________________(14) This Illinois Senator debated Abraham Lincoln in 1858.
__________________(15) This Illinois political figure became the first African
American woman to be elected to the United States Senate.
__________________(16) Home to the Owen Lovejoy homestead, this Illinois town was
actively involved in the Underground Railroad.
MS:3 Reagan Nicknames
There were four nicknames that were used to describe Ronald W. Reagan at various points in his life. These nicknames are listed below.
For each of these nicknames, trace the origin or meaning of the name. How was it used, and generally by whom. Does the nickname reflect a particular characteristic or trait of Ronald W. Reagan?
(1) “Dutch”
(2) “The Gipper”
(3) “The Great Communicator”
(4) “The Teflon President”
MS:4 Planning a Journey on the Reagan Trail
Assume that you must plan a trip for a family of four that will take a two-day trip to visit the main historic and cultural sites along the Ronald W. Reagan Trail in Central Illinois. You may refer to the map of the Reagan Trail that appears on page 17. Answer the following questions to help you plan the excursion.
1. Identify four locations (specific sites) that you would visit on the first day of your trip:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
2. In which community along the Reagan Trail would your family most likely spend the night?
3. Identify four locations (specific sites) that you would visit on the second day of your trip:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
4. Remembering that you are planning a two-day trip for a family of four, draw up an estimated budget for the excursion by considering the following possible expenses:
__________ Food
__________ Lodging
__________ Transportation
__________ Entrance Fees
__________ TOTAL COST
MS:5 Library Skills Exercise
1. Provide complete bibliographic citations for three biographies of Ronald W. Reagan:
(a)
(b)
(c)
2. Provide the Dewey Decimal System call number for Where’s the Rest of Me? The Ronald Reagan Story (1965).
3. Provide a bibliographic citation for a journal article about Ronald W. Reagan that was written after he left the presidency:
4. Pick a significant issue of the 1980s and find two sources that would give you different perspectives on the issue. Identify the issue and provide bibliographic citations below:
Issue:
(a)
(b)
MS:6 Space Adventure
“Remember this: When we come to the edge of our known world, we’re standing on the shores of the infinite. Dip your hand in that limitless sea; you’re touching the mystery of God’s universe. Set sail across its waters and you embark on the boldest, most noble adventure of all. Out beyond our present horizons lie whole new continents of possibility, new worlds of hope waiting to be discovered. We’ve traveled far, but we’ve only begun our journey. There are hungry to feed, sicknesses to cure, and new worlds to explore. And this is no time for small plans or shrinking ambitions. We stand on the threshold of an epic age, an age of technological splendor and an explosion of human potential, an age for heroes. And I think I’m seeing many of them right here in this room.”
~ President Ronald Reagan
Remarks to participants in the Young Astronauts Program, June 11, 1986
Procedures
1. Read this quote to your students and have them really think about what it means. Tell them to think beyond all of the pictures they have seen in the movies or the tabloids and really imagine what space looks like to them.
2. Their assignment is to imagine they are some of the first astronauts to explore the first livable planet in outer space. They land their spaceship and really do some heavy exploring to make sure it would be livable for the human race. When they find that it would be, they must convince humans to “come aboard” and make it their new home.
3. They must come up with a catchy phrase to use and a brochure to sell their reality. Students need to use their imagination to create the “perfect environment” in which people would choose to live. They could use a known planet or create one of their own. Pictures, descriptions, and quotes from other astronauts that went to the planet are all options to be considered when completing this project.
“Today vistas beyond imagination are being opened for humanity in space. A new future of freedom, both peaceful and bountiful, is being created. And America is telling the world: Follow us. We’ll lead you there. This is the mission for which our nation itself was created, and we ask for God’s guidance. America’s as large as the universe, as infinite as space, as limitless as the vision and courage of her people.”
~ President Ronald Reagan
Remarks congratulating the crew of the Space Shuttle Discovery, October 14, 1988
MS:7 All in the Family
Use either a biography of Ronald Reagan or an encyclopedia article to answer the following questions about the Reagan family.
_______________ (1) The name of Ronald Reagan’s father.
_______________ (2) The name of Ronald Reagan’s mother.
_______________ (3) The nickname that Ronald Reagan’s father gave him as a child.
_______________ (4) The name of Ronald Reagan’s brother
_______________ (5) The nickname of Ronald Reagan’s brother.
_______________ (6) The name of Ronald Reagan’s first wife.
_______________ (7) The name of Ronald Reagan’s second wife.
_______________ (8) The names of Ronald Reagan’s four children.
_______________ (9) “ ”
_______________ (10) “ ”
_______________ (11) “ ”
_______________ (12) Ronald Reagan was born in ___, Illinois, in 1911.
_______________ (13) The Ronald Reagan Boyhood Home is located in ___, Illinois.
_______________ (14) Both of the Reagan brothers attended college at ___ in Illinois.
_______________ (15) Reagan family ancestors came to America from ___ (what
country).
MS:8 Now Where Was That Located?
After viewing the short video that describes the Illinois communities connected by the Reagan Trail, see if you can answer the following questions.
___ (1) Ronald Reagan was born in (A) Dixon. (B) Tampico. (C) Walnut. (D) Eureka.
___ (2) Ronald Reagan went to high school in (A) East Peoria. (B) Henry. (C) Dixon.
(D) Ohio.
___ (3) Ronald Reagan went to college in (A) Eureka. (B) Peoria. (C) Dixon.
(D) Princeton.
___ (4) The “Wings of Peace and Freedom” Memorial is located in (A) Eureka.
(B) Tampico. (C) Chillicothe. (D) Dixon.
___ (5) The largest community located along the Reagan Trail is (A) East Peoria.
(B) Eureka. (C) Peoria. (D) Dixon.
___ (6) The Owen Lovejoy Homestead is located in (A) Tampico. (B) Henry. (C) Dixon.
(D) Princeton.
___ (7) An actual portion of the Berlin Wall can be found in (A) Princeton. (B) Henry.
(C) Peoria. (D) Eureka.
___ (8) The Ronald Reagan Boyhood Home is located in (A) Tampico. (B) Eureka.
(C) Dixon. (D) Washington.
___ (9) The Reagan Peace Garden is located in (A) Dixon. (B) Walnut. (C) Eureka.
(D) Ohio.
___ (10) Lowell Park is located along the Rock River in (A) Tampico. (B) Dixon.
(C) Eureka. (D) Henry.
MS:9 Reading Charts
Election of 1980
|Name of Candidate |Popular Votes |Percentage |Electoral Votes |Number of States Carried |
| | |Popular Vote | | |
|John Anderson (I) |5,720,060 |6.61% |0 |0 |
|Jimmy Carter (D) |35,483,883 |41.01% |49 |6 |
|Ronald Reagan (R) |43,904,153 |50.75% |489 |44 |
Election of 1984
|Name of Candidate |Popular Votes |Percentage |Electoral Votes |Number of States Carried |
| | |Popular Vote | | |
|Walter Mondale (D) |37,577,185 |41.03% |13 |1 |
|Ronald Reagan (R) |54,455,075 |58.77% |525 |49 |
Using the two charts that are located above, answer the following questions:
(1) The elections of 1980 and 1984 are often described as “landslide” victories for Ronald Reagan. Is this an accurate statement? Upon what basis can they be viewed as landslide victories? Does any evidence in the charts indicate anything different?
(2) Was Walter Mondale’s candidacy in 1984 more or less successful than Jimmy Carter’s candidacy had been in 1980? What evidence from the charts can you cite to support your position?
(3) Do the charts produce any evidence of “crossover” voting patterns – for example, Republicans voting for a Democratic candidate, or Democrats voting for a Republican candidate?
MS:10 Interpreting Election Results I
Election of 1980
|COUNTY |John Anderson (I) |Jimmy Carter (D) |Ronald Reagan (R) |Total Votes |
|Bureau |1,093 |5,753 |11,484 | |
|County | | | | |
|Knox |2,069 |8,749 |14,907 | |
|County | | | | |
|Lee |781 |3,170 |11,373 | |
|County | | | | |
|Marshall |336 |1,903 |4,349 | |
|County | | | | |
|Peoria |6,169 |28,276 |47,815 | |
|County | | | | |
|Putnam |235 |1,158 |1,959 | |
|County | | | | |
|Tazewell |3,206 |16,924 |35,481 | |
|County | | | | |
|Warren |489 |2,756 |5,667 | |
|County | | | | |
|Whiteside |1,242 |7,191 |17,389 | |
|County | | | | |
|Woodford |711 |3,552 |10,791 | |
|County | | | | |
Using the chart that is presented here and a calculator, answer the following questions:
(1) In which of the Reagan Trail counties did Ronald Reagan capture the greatest percentage of the votes cast in 1980?
(2) In which of the Reagan Trail counties did Ronald Reagan capture the smallest percentage of the votes cast in 1980?
(3) In which of the Reagan Trail counties was the 1980 contest between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan the most competitive?
MS:11 Interpreting Election Results II
Election of 1984
|COUNTY |Walter Mondale (D) |Ronald Reagan (R) |Total Votes |
|Bureau |6,925 |11,741 | |
|County | | | |
|Knox |12,027 |14,974 | |
|County | | | |
|Lee |3,919 |11,178 | |
|County | | | |
|Marshall |2,386 |4,060 | |
|County | | | |
|Peoria |36,830 |45,607 | |
|County | | | |
|Putnam |1,487 |1,912 | |
|County | | | |
|Tazewell |23,095 |33,782 | |
|County | | | |
|Warren |3,318 |5,846 | |
|County | | | |
|Whiteside |11,226 |16,743 | |
|County | | | |
|Woodford |4,425 |10,758 | |
|County | | | |
Using the chart that is presented here and a calculator, answer the following questions:
(1) In which of the Reagan Trail counties did Ronald Reagan capture the greatest percentage of the votes cast in 1984?
(2) In which of the Reagan Trail counties did Ronald Reagan capture the smallest percentage of the votes cast in 1984?
(3) In which of the Reagan Trail counties was the 1984 contest between Walter Mondale and Ronald Reagan the most competitive?
MS:12 Unscramble the Quotation
Ronald Reagan on Government
|A |B |C |D |E |
|Bureau |Bureau |Village |368 |Timothy Shipp |
|Chillicothe |Peoria |City |5,996 | |
|Dixon |Lee |City |15,941 |Jim Burke |
|East Peoria |Tazewell |City |22,638 |Charles Dobbelaire |
|Eureka |Woodford |City |4,871 |Laura Siscoe |
|Henry |Marshall |City |2,540 |Daryl Fountain |
|Ohio |Bureau |Village |540 |Charles L. Thomas |
|Peoria |Peoria |City |112,936 |David P. Ransburg |
|Peoria Heights |Peoria |Village |6,636 |Earl Carter |
|Princeton |Bureau |City |7,501 |Keith Cain |
|Sparland-Lacon |Marshall |Village & City |584 + 1,979 |Michael Hiell |
|Tampico |Whiteside |Village |772 |Larry Specht |
|Walnut |Bureau |Village |1,461 |Don Steele |
|Washington |Tazewell |City |10,841 |Gary Manier |
MS:20 Definitions
1) Inauguration Day – January 20 following a presidential election in which the President of the United States is elected.
2) Electoral College – a body of electors; one that elects the president and vice president
3) Supreme Court – the highest judicial tribunal in a political unit (as a nation or state).
4) Congress – the supreme legislative body of a nation; our Senate and House of Representatives
5) Election Day – a day legally established for the election of public officials; the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in an even year designated for national elections.
6) Executive Branch – belonging to the branch of government that is charged with such posers as diplomatic representation, superintendence of the execution of the laws, and appointment of officials and that usually has some power over legislation.
7) Legislative Branch – the branch of government that is charged with such powers as making laws, levying and collecting taxes, and making financial appropriations.
8) Judicial Branch – the branch of government that is charged with trying all cases that involve the government and with the administration of justice within its jurisdiction.
9) Oval Office – the U.S. president’s office in the West Wing of the White House in Washington, D.C.
(10) Pentagon – the headquarters of the Department of Defense; located in Washington, D.C.
HS:1 Ronald Reagan: Movie Star
(1) Warner Brothers
(2) Love is on the Air
(3) Tugboat Annie Sails Again
(4) Brother Rat
(5) Bonzo
(6) Gipper
(7) Notre Dame
(8) Drake McHugh
(9) AWhere=s the Rest of Me?@
(10) Hellcats of the Navy
(11) Santa Fe Trail
(12) The Killers
HS:2 Iran-Contra Affair
(1) Nicaragua
(2) Sandinistas
(3) Iraq
(4) Ayatollah Khomeini
(5) Boland Amendment
(6) Oliver North
(7) Donald Regan
(8) Robert McFarlane
(9) John Poindexter
(10) Judge Lawrence E. Walsh
(11) Caspar W. Weinberger
(12) George P. Shultz
(13) Edwin Meese
(14) William J. Casey
(15) John Tower
HS:3 President Reagan’s Cabinet Members
(1) M
(2) B
(3) D
(4) D
(5) A
(6) F
(7) M
(8) J
(9) L
(10) C
(11) D
(12) H
(13) L
(14) J
(15) E
(16) K
(17) F
(18) E
(19) E/H
(20) L
(21) A
(22) J
(23) I
(24) G
(25) M
(26) F
(27) K
(28) I
(29) I
(30) B
(31) H
(32) C
HS:6 A Visit to Eureka College
1) Burgoo - the pioneer settlers of Walnut Grove [later Eureka] brought this tradition with them from Kentucky. A burgoo is a stew that is made up of components that are contributed by community members. The cooking of the stew was a social event that brought the early community together.
2) Recruiting Elm – when the Civil War began in April 1861 Eureka College students and faculty gathered under this tree and gave speeches and sang patriotic songs. They eventually decided to form a company of soldiers (Company G of the 17th Illinois Infantry) who went off to war. A wooden bowl made from the Recruiting Elm sat on President Reagan’s desk in the Oval Office.
3) Abolitionists - many of the early settlers who moved to Walnut Grove [later Eureka] were abolitionists who came from Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana. They were opposed to the institution of slavery.
4) Women’s History – When Eureka College was established it was the first college in Illinois, and only the third in the nation, to admit women on an equal basis with men. Many of the early graduates of the college became leaders in the movement for women’s rights in America.
5) Berlin Wall – a portion of the Berlin Wall stands today in the Reagan Peace Garden at Eureka College. In June 1987, President Reagan challenged the moral legitimacy of the wall when he stated “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.”
HS:7 President Reagan’s Views on Peace
“PEACE IS NOT THE ABSENCE OF CONFLICT, BUT THE ABILITY TO COPE WITH CONFLICT BY PEACEFUL MEANS.”
Clues: FORTIETH; LOWELL; TAMPICO; BUSH; EUREKA; DUTCH; DIXON; POLAND; LIBYA.
HS:9 The Reagan Peace Garden at Eureka College
(1) circle for earth/globe; bell shape for liberty; mushroom cloud for atomic menace; patriotic plantings
(2) answers will vary
(3) symbolic of the divide between East and West for twenty-eight years
(4) Western side has signature graffiti; Eastern side is stark grey
(5) the speech led to a real reduction in nuclear arsenals of the U.S. and the Soviet Union
HS:10 Tough Reagan Trivia Items
(1) Ralph McKinzie
(2) Richard S. Schweiker
(3) Wilson
(4) Iowa
(5) 69
(6) Washington, D.C.
(7) Galesburg
(8) 1962
(9) Edmund G. “Pat” Brown
(10) Jesse Unruh
(11) Minnesota
(12) John B. Anderson
(13) Star Wars
(14) Yuri Andropov
(15) Konstantin Chernenko
HS:11 1911 Trivia
(1) William Howard Taft
(2) forty-six
(3) Philadelphia Athletics (AL)
(4) no
(5) Monday
(6) Tobias M.C. Asser (Holland) & Alfred H. Fried (Austria)
(7) London (1908)
(8)
(9) Charles S. Deneen
(10) Tampico, Illinois
(11) Ray Harroun
(12) South Sea Tales
(13) Irving Berlin
(14) Standard Oil Company
(15) Andrew Carnegie
(16) Triangle Shirtwaist Company
(17) fifteen
(18) China
(19) Amundsen
(20) Meridian
HS:12 1921 Trivia
(1) Woodrow Wilson; Warren G. Harding (took office on March 4)
(2) forty-eight
(3) New York Giants
(4) no
(5) Sunday
(6) Karl H. Branting (Sweden) & Christian L. Lange (Norway)
(7) Antwerp, Belgium
(8)
(9) Len Small
(10) Dixon, Illinois
(11) Armistice Day
(12) Jack Dempsey
(13) Rudolph Valentino
(14) William ABilly@ Mitchell
(15) The Age of Innocence
(16) nineteen
(17) Massachusetts
(18) Germany
(19) Ottawa Senators
(20) Behave Yourself
HS:13 1928 Trivia
(1) Calvin Coolidge
(2) forty-eight
(3) New York Yankees
(4) yes
(5) Monday
(6) No one was awarded the Peace Prize in 1928.
(7) Amsterdam, The Netherlands
(8)
(9) Len Small
(10) Dixon, Illinois; in fall 1928 moved to Eureka, Illinois, to attend Eureka College
(11) Kellogg-Briand Peace Pact
(12) Mickey Mouse
(13) The Bridge of San Luis Rey
(14) AWings@
(15) Amelia Earhart
(16) nineteen
(17) penicillin
(18) Richard E. Byrd
(19) New York Rangers
(20) Reigh Count
HS:15 Reagan and Eureka College
(1) 1932
(2) Tau Kappa Epsilon
(3) Lida’s Wood
(4) swimming
(5) a student strike
(6) President of the Student Senate
(7) 1992
(8) “Dutch”
(9) Economics & Sociology
(10) Margaret “Mugs” Cleaver
(11) Maureen Reagan
(12) [John] Neil “Moon” Reagan
(13) Ralph McKinzie
(14) 1957
(15) May 9, 1982
(16) Melick Library
(17) Aria da Capo
(18) three
(19) Reagan Physical Education Center
HS:19 1980s Popular Culture
(1) Jodie Foster
(2) Family Ties
(3) Madonna
(4) hockey
(5) “Where’s the beef?”
(6) Michael Jackson
(7) “Video Killed the Radio Star”
(8) Bill Cosby
(9) Miami Vice
(10) Brandon Tartikoff
(11) Cheers
(12) Geraldine Ferraro
(13) Moral Majority
(14) Gary Hart
(15) Jim Bakker
APPENDIX
RONALD W. REAGAN
CLASS OF 1932
PRESIDENT OF
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1981-1989
“PEACE IS NOT THE ABSENCE OF CONFLICT,
BUT THE ABILITY TO COPE WITH CONFLICT
BY PEACEFUL MEANS.”
ON MAY 9, 1982, PRESIDENT REAGAN DELIVERED A MAJOR FOREIGN
POLICY ADDRESS ON THE EUREKA COLLEGE CAMPUS ON THE
FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF HIS GRADUATION. KNOWN AS THE EUREKA
SPEECH, IT CHALLENGED THE SOVIET UNION TO A NEW ERA OF
NEGOTIATIONS TO REDUCE NUCLEAR ARMS, AND WAS HERALDED AS
“THE BEGINNING OF THE END OF THE COLD WAR.”
- - - - -
“MY DUTY AS PRESIDENT IS TO ENSURE
THAT THE ULTIMATE NIGHTMARE
NEVER OCCURS, THAT THE PRAIRIES
AND THE CITIES AND THE PEOPLE
WHO INHABIT THEM REMAIN FREE
AND UNTOUCHED BY NUCLEAR CONFLICT.”
- - - - -
“I BELIEVE THAT IT WILL BE POSSIBLE
TO REDUCE THE RISKS OF WAR BY REMOVING
THE INSTABILITIES THAT NOW EXIST AND
BY DISMANTLING THE NUCLEAR MENACE.”
- - - - -
“I HOPE THE COMMENCEMENT TODAY
WILL ALSO MARK THE COMMENCEMENT OF
A NEW ERA . . . A NEW START TOWARD
A MORE PEACEFUL AND SECURE WORLD.”
“Let us build cathedrals of peace, where the people can be free.”
- - Ronald W. Reagan - -
The Reagan Peace Garden was dedicated on May 9, 2000, the eighteenth anniversary of the May 9, 1982 foreign policy address in which President Reagan first proposed the START Initiative. The garden was made possible through the generous donation of David and Anne Vaughn of Peoria, Illinois, loyal friends and supporters of Eureka College.
The Reagan Peace Garden affords visitors an opportunity for pause and reflection:
The Garden itself is designed in the shape of a bell. In the history of the United States the bell has long symbolized the virtue of liberty that is a birthright of American citizenship. The Cold War created insecurity and omnipresent fear for many that threatened the blessings of liberty both here and abroad. Only by ending the Cold War and defeating the forces of tyranny could liberty ring throughout the land.
The interior bluestone of the Garden is shaped as a circle–symbolic of the earth. The Cold War was not merely a rivalry between nations, but it was an ever-present conflict that threatened the peace and security of the entire world. The Garden celebrates the unity of peoples who are less threatened today by the specter of nuclear war.
The entrance into the garden and the circular bluestone together offer a silent reminder of what is at stake in the quest for peace. The shape of the mushroom cloud is an image that haunted the mental landscape of many who lived through the Cold War era. Peace offers us true freedom.
About the Reagan Monument:
The bronze bust of President Reagan was created by Peoria, Illinois, artist Lonnie Stewart. Stewart tried to capture the optimism of President Reagan by reproducing the smile that was his most characteristic feature.
The pedestal that supports the bust is made of Dakota Mahogany granite. The use of stone from America’s heartland characterizes both President Reagan and the 1982 address that he gave from the middle of America to the world. Many of America’s nuclear missile silos are encased in Dakota granite.
Notice the word “start” that is found in the quotation on the eastern side of the pedestal. It was clear that President Reagan chose the ideal location and the perfect time for announcing the START Initiative to the world.
About the Berlin Wall:
The Federal Republic of Germany provided this 2200 lb. artifact for inclusion in the Reagan Peace Garden. The wall existed in Berlin from its construction in August 1961 to its fall on November 9, 1989.
Notice the “Torch of Liberty” graffiti found on the upper right side of the wall. Freedom was a birthright of those who lived in the West, a silent longing for those who lived beyond the wall.
Visitors are invited to view the Reagan Museum in the Donald B. Cerf College Center located immediately south of the Reagan Peace Garden site.
REAGAN CHRONOLOGY
|February 6, 1911 |Ronald Wilson Reagan was born in Tampico, Illinois. His parents were John Edward “Jack” Reagan and |
| |Nelle Clyde Wilson Reagan. An older brother, [John] Neil Reagan had been born in July1908. |
|January 1915 |The Reagan family moved to south-side Chicago where Jack Reagan had found a job in retail with Fair |
| |Store. The family resided in the Hyde Park neighborhood at 832 East 57th Street. |
|August 1915 |The Reagan family moved to Galesburg, Illinois. The family would reside at 1219 North Kellogg Street |
| |for about three years. |
|1917 |Ronald Reagan attended first grade at Silas Willard School in Galesburg, Illinois. |
|1918 |The Reagan family moved to Monmouth, Illinois. The family would reside at 218 South Seventh Street. |
|1918 |Ronald Reagan completed second and third grades during the same year at Central School in Monmouth, |
| |Illinois. |
|Fall 1918 |The Reagan family returned to Tampico where they resided in an apartment located above the Pitney |
| |General Store where Jack Reagan worked. Ronald Reagan completed his fourth grade and a part of his |
| |fifth grade education in Tampico. |
|December 6, 1920 |The Reagan family moved to Dixon, Illinois, and resided at 816 South Hennepin Avenue. |
|January 1921 |Ronald Reagan attends the E.C. Smith School and later the South Side School [later renamed South |
| |Central] where he completed his middle school education (grades five through seven).. |
|September 22, 1922 |Rev. David Franklin Seyster baptized Ronald Wilson Reagan at the First Christian Church, the Christian |
| |Church (Disciples of Christ) church in Dixon, Illinois, which Nelle Reagan regularly attended. |
|1924 |Remaining in Dixon, the Reagan family moved into a home on the north side of town at 338 West Everett |
| |Street. |
|1924 |Ronald Reagan begins to attend North Side High School in Dixon, Illinois. He will graduate from high |
| |school in June 1928. |
|Summer 1926 |Ronald Reagan began to work a seasonal job as a lifeguard at Lowell Park in Dixon, Illinois, earning |
| |$200 per summer. He would hold this job for seven consecutive summers. During his time as a lifeguard,|
| |Reagan is reported to have saved seventy-seven individuals from drowning in the Rock River. |
|June 1928 |Ronald Reagan graduates from high school. During his high school years he was actively involved in |
| |basketball, drama, football and track. He was elected president of the student body during his senior |
| |year. |
|August 3, 1928 |Headline of The Dixon Daily Telegraph reads “Ronald Reagan Saves Drowning Man.” |
|September 20, 1928 |Ronald Reagan enrolls as a freshman at Eureka College in Eureka, Illinois. His primary interest in |
| |attending Eureka College was that Margaret “Mugs” Cleaver, his high school sweetheart, had decided to |
| |attend college there. Ronald Reagan would become actively involved in football, track, swimming, drama,|
| |and student government during his college years. |
|November 1928 |Ronald Reagan spoke publicly and became a leader in a student strike movement on the Eureka College |
| |campus. After successfully staging a five-day strike, the student demands were met and Bert Wilson, the|
| |president of the college, was forced to resign. |
|October 29, 1929 |The Stock Market Crash signals the start of the Great Depression. |
|1931 |Ronald Reagan won an award for his dramatic performance in Edna St. Vincent Millay’s play “Aria da |
| |Capo.” The judges of the theatre competition at Northwestern University suggest that Ronald Reagan |
| |consider a possible career in drama. |
|June 7, 1932 |Ronald Reagan graduates from Eureka College earning a Batchelor’s Degree in Economics & Sociology. |
|November 1932 |Ronald Reagan voted for the first time. He, along with his father, supported the candidacy of New York |
| |Governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt. |
|December 1932 |After he was unable to find work in Chicago, Ronald Reagan takes a job as a temporary staff announcer at|
| |radio station WOC in Davenport, Iowa. |
|April 1933 |Ronald Reagan moved to Des Moines, Iowa, when radio stations WOC and WHO merged. At the new and larger |
| |radio station, Reagan became the chief sports announcer. He was the “voice” of Big Ten football and |
| |Chicago Cubs baseball for many in the Midwest. |
|February 27, 1935 |Ronald Reagan enlisted in the U.S. Army Reserve as a private. |
|March 15, 1937 |As a sports announcer, Ronald Reagan attended spring training with the Chicago Cubs on Catalina Island |
| |in California. While he was in California he met with people from Warner Brothers and made a screen |
| |test. Shortly thereafter, Warner Brothers offered him a seven-year studio contract for making films. |
|April 20, 1937 |Ronald Reagan signs a contract with Warner Brothers. |
|April 27, 1937 |Ronald Reagan achieved the rank of 2nd Lieutenant in the Army Officers Reserve Corps of the Cavalry. |
|June 7, 1937 |Ronald Reagan arrives in Hollywood, California, to begin working on his first film, Love is on the Air. |
|January 26, 1940 |Ronald Reagan marries actress Jane Wyman. The two had met while filming the movie Brother Rat. |
|September 1940 |Ronald Reagan plays the role of George Gipp in the film “Knute Rockne – All American.” He earns the |
| |nickname “The Gipper” from this role. |
|January 1941 |John Edward “Jack” Reagan, Ronald Reagan’s father, dies. |
|January 4, 1941 |Birth of daughter Maureen Elizabeth Reagan. |
|July 1941 |Ronald Reagan was appointed to the board of the Screen Actor’s Guild. |
|December 7, 1941 |Pearl Harbor is attacked by the Japanese. This action prompts the U.S. to enter the Second World War. |
|April 19, 1942 |Ronald Reagan is drafted into the army. Because of his poor eyesight, he is assigned to the 1st Motion |
| |Picture Army Unit in Culver City, California. His primary wartime role will be making training films |
| |for the army and propaganda films. |
|1942 |Ronald Reagan plays the role of Drake McHugh in the movie “King’s Row.” Many would credit this as being|
| |the high point of his career in film. His film line, “Where’s the rest of me?” would later become the |
| |title of his autobiography. |
|March 1945 |A son, Michael Edward Reagan, was adopted. |
|August 21, 1945 |Ronald Reagan signs a million dollar contract with Warner Brothers. |
|March 10, 1947 |Ronald Reagan was elected president of the Screen Actor’s Guild. He would serve five one-year terms in |
| |this position. |
|June 26, 1947 |A second daughter was born, but died the following day. |
|October 25, 1947 |As president of the Screen Actors Guild, Ronald Reagan testified before the House Un-American Activities|
| |Committee. |
|June 6, 1948 |Ronald Reagan and Jane Wyman divorced. |
|September 23, 1948 |Ronald Reagan introduced President Harry Truman at a campaign rally in Los Angeles. |
|Fall 1950 |Ronald Reagan campaigned in behalf of California Democrat Helen Gahagan Douglas when she faced Richard |
| |Nixon in the race for a U.S. Senate seat. |
|December 7, 1950 |Ronald Reagan made his network television debut appearing in Nash Airflyte Theatre. |
|1951 |Ronald Reagan appears in the Universal Pictures film Bedtime for Bonzo. |
|March 4, 1952 |Ronald Reagan married actress Nancy Davis. |
|June 1952 |Ronald Reagan delivered the commencement address “America the Beautiful” at William Woods College. |
|October 22, 1952 |Daughter Patricia Ann (Patti) was born. |
|Fall 1952 |Ronald Reagan began to organize a movement of Democrats for Eisenhower during the 1952 presidential |
| |campaign. He would do the same thing in 1956 when Eisenhower sought a second term. |
|May 2, 1953 |Ronald Reagan was named the honorary mayor of Malibu Lake, California. |
|September 26, 1954 |Ronald Reagan made his first appearance on GE Theatre. He eventually became the host of the television |
| |series and the spokesman for General Electric. In this capacity he traveled the country and gave many |
| |speeches. |
|1956 |Unable to land major roles in films, and facing the financial burdens of a growing family, Ronald Reagan|
| |finds work as an emcee in Las Vegas, Nevada. |
|1957 |Ronald Reagan and Nancy Davis Reagan both appear in the movie Hellcats of the Navy, the only film in |
| |which they ever appeared together. |
|June 7, 1957 |Ronald Reagan speaks at commencement exercises at Eureka College on the twenty-fifth anniversary of his |
| |graduation from the College. He receives an honorary degree from the College on this occasion. |
|May 28, 1958 |Son Ronald Prescott (Ron Jr.) was born. |
|1959 |While serving in his last term as the president of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG), Ronald Reagan |
| |successfully negotiates for increased benefits and better working conditions for actors. |
|Fall 1960 |Ronald Reagan delivered more than 200 speeches in behalf of Richard Nixon’s presidential campaign. |
|March 1962 |General Electric decides to discontinue GE Theatre because of low ratings. |
|1962 |After noting a decade-long change in his political ideology, Ronald Reagan officially changed his |
| |political affiliation from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party. |
|1962 |Nelle Clyde Wilson Reagan, Ronald Reagan’s mother, died. |
|1964 |Ronald Reagan appears in the film The Killers. It will be his final movie. |
|1964 |Ronald Reagan became the host of Death Valley Days. He appeared on twenty-one episodes broadcast from |
| |1965-1966. |
|October 27, 1964 |Ronald Reagan delivers the speech “A Time for Choosing” in behalf of the presidential campaign of |
| |Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater. |
|1965 |Ronald Reagan published his autobiography, Where’s the Rest of Me? |
|January 4, 1966 |Ronald Reagan announces that he will be a Republican candidate in the campaign for governor of |
| |California. |
|November 8, 1966 |Ronald Reagan defeats incumbent governor Edmund G. “Pat” Brown by a margin of one million votes. |
|May 2, 1968 |A “Draft Reagan” movement begins within the Republican Party as supporters try to encourage the |
| |California Governor to seek the Republican Party’s presidential nomination in 1968. |
|August 5, 1968 |At the Republican Party’s Nominating Convention in Miami, Florida, Ronald Reagan announces that he is a |
| |candidate for the party’s nomination. |
|May 15, 1969 |In response to student unrest, Governor Reagan sent the California National Guard onto the University of|
| |California Campus in Berkeley. |
|November 1970 |Ronald Reagan is elected to a second term as governor of California. He defeats Jesse Unruh, the |
| |Speaker of the State Assembly. |
|1971 |Governor Reagan signs the California Welfare Reform Act which was designed to reduce the numbers of |
| |welfare recipients. |
|Fall 1974 |Reagan friends Michael Deaver and Peter Hannaford establish a consulting and public relations firm that |
| |will promote Ronald Reagan. Opportunities to deliver speeches, write newspaper columns, and deliver |
| |radio commentaries begin to take shape. |
|Fall 1974 |Governor Reagan declines offers to accept a position in the Ford Administration. He had been offered |
| |the posts of Ambassador to the Court of St. James, Secretary of Transportation, and Secretary of |
| |Commerce. |
|November 20, 1975 |Ronald Reagan begins his campaign for the Republican Party’s presidential nomination. He challenges |
| |incumbent president Gerald Ford for the party nomination. |
|March 1976 |The National Republican Conference of Mayors asks that Reagan consider withdrawing from the presidential|
| |primaries in order to increase the likelihood that President Ford can win the 1976 contest. |
|August 19, 1976 |After failing to win the presidential nomination, Ronald Reagan addresses the Republican Party National |
| |Convention in Kansas City. |
|November 1976 |In a very close election, Democrat Jimmy Carter defeats incumbent president Gerald Ford. |
|November 13, 1979 |Ronald Reagan announces his candidacy for the Republican Party’s presidential nomination. He is one in |
| |a crowded field of ten candidates who are seeking the nomination. |
|February 26, 1980 |Ronald Reagan wins the New Hampshire primary. |
|July 17, 1980 |Ronald Reagan accepts the Republican Party nomination for President at the nominating convention in |
| |Detroit. |
|October 28, 1980 |President Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan take part in a nationally televised debate broadcast from |
| |Cleveland, Ohio. The following day polls indicate that viewers judged Reagan to win the debate. |
|November 4, 1980 |Ronald Reagan is elected President of the U.S. when he defeats incumbent president Jimmy Carter. |
|January 20, 1981 |Ronald Reagan is sworn in as the fortieth president of the United States. |
|January 20, 1981 |The Iranian hostage crisis ends as Iran releases the 52 Americans that it had held for 444 days after |
| |Iranian students took control of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. |
|February 20, 1981 |In his first State of the Union Message, President Reagan calls for cuts of $41 billion from the budget |
| |that President Carter had proposed. He further calls for a reduction in income tax rates over the next |
| |three years and requests an additional five billion dollars in defense spending. |
|March 30, 1981 |Ronald Reagan is shot by John Hincikley, Jr., in an assassination attempt outside the Washington Hilton.|
|April 12, 1981 |NASA successfully launches the first mission of the space shuttle Columbia. The reusable craft returned|
| |to earth on April 14 after a three day mission. |
|April 21, 1981 |The U.S. announces a significant sale of arms to Saudi Arabia. The Saudis will purchase one billion |
| |dollars worth of U.S. military equipment including five AWACS electronic surveillance aircraft. The |
| |Israeli government protests the agreement. |
|April 24, 1981 |The U.S. lifts the fifteen-month embargo on grain sales to the Soviet Union that had been put in place |
| |after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. |
|July 29, 1981 |Congress passes President Reagan’s tax plan. |
|September 1981 |President Reagan appoints Sandra Day O’Conner as the first female justice to serve on the U.S. Supreme |
| |Court. |
|March 10, 1982 |The U.S. imposed economic sanctions on Libya because of that country’s alleged involvement in support of|
| |international terrorist organizations. |
|May 9, 1982 |President Reagan delivers a major foreign policy address at Eureka College. The President proposed the |
| |START Initiative which outlined a new approach to nuclear arms control that he believed the U.S. and the|
| |U.S.S.R. should follow. |
|June 30, 1982 |The Equal Rights Amendment dies when it fails to win ratification by three-fourths of the states. |
|August 20, 1982 |About 800 U.S. Marines arrive in Beirut, Lebanon. They are there to oversee the withdrawal of PLO |
| |fighters from the city. |
|November 22, 1982 |President Reagan calls upon Congress to support construction of the MX missile system at an estimated |
| |cost of $26 billion. |
|April 18, 1983 |A car bomb explosion destroys the U.S. Embassy in Beirut. Sixty-three people are killed, including |
| |seventeen Americans. |
|October 23, 1983 |241 American military personnel are killed when a truck bomb explodes at the U.S. Marine Headquarters in|
| |Beirut, Lebanon. |
|October 25, 1983 |U.S. forces launch an invasion of the Caribbean island nation of Grenada. They restore order and remove|
| |a pro-Cuban Marxist government that had come to power in a bloody coup. |
|November 11, 1983 |The first U.S. cruise missiles begin to arrive in Europe. 572 of these will eventually be deployed in |
| |NATO countries. |
|November 23, 1983 |The Soviet Union withdrew from arms limitation talks in response to the deployment of U.S. cruise |
| |missiles in Europe. |
|December 1983 |Time magazine selects U.S President Ronald Reagan and Soviet Leader Yuri Andropov as its “Men of the |
| |Year.” |
|January 29, 1984 |Ronald Reagan officially declared his candidacy for reelection as President of the United States. |
|June 6, 1984 |President Reagan takes part in ceremonies at Normandy recognizing the fortieth anniversary of the D-Day |
| |Invasion. |
|November 4, 1984 |Ronald Reagan wins reelection by defeating Walter Mondale. |
|January 20, 1985 |Ronald Reagan is sworn in to office for a second term as president. |
|July 13, 1985 |President Reagan undergoes surgery on his large intestine to remove cancerous tissue. |
|November 1985 |President Reagan meets with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev at a summit meeting in Geneva. |
|September 9, 1985 |The U.S. imposes sanctions on South Africa to protest that nation’s policy of apartheid. |
|December 11, 1985 |Congress passes the Gramm-Rudman bill which is designed to eliminate the federal deficit by 1991. |
|January 15, 1986 |President Reagan signs legislation making Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday a national |
| |holiday. |
|January 17, 1986 |President Reagan underwent surgery to remove polyps from his colon. |
|January 28, 1986 |The space shuttle Challenger exploded seventy-four seconds after liftoff from Cape Canaveral, Florida, |
| |killing the seven astronauts aboard. Included among those killed was Christa McAuliffe, a New Hampshire|
| |schoolteacher, who had been selected to be the first teacher in space. |
|March 20, 1986 |The House of Representatives defeated a controversial measure that would have provided $100 million in |
| |aid to the contra rebels who were fighting in Nicaragua. |
|April 14, 1986 |The U.S. conducted an air strike against Libya for its involvement in supporting international terrorist|
| |activities. |
|November 3, 1986 |A Lebanese magazine revealed the first details of what would eventually become known as the Iran-Contra |
| |Affair. |
|February 26, 1987 |The Tower Commission released its report on the Iran-Contra Affair. The report was critical of |
| |President Reagan’s failure to understand or control the covert attempt to funnel profits from Middle |
| |Eastern arms sales to aid the contra rebels in Nicaragua. |
|June 2, 1987 |President Reagan appointed economist Alan Greenspan as the new chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. |
|June 12, 1987 |Speaking in Berlin, President Reagan said “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.” |
|October 11, 1987 |Reagan and Gorbachev meet for a summit conference in Reykjavik, Iceland, but the meeting turns out to be|
| |a failure. |
|October 19, 1987 |The worst stock crash in the history of the New York Stock Exchange took place as the Dow Jones average |
| |fell by 508 points to close at 1738.74 – a loss of 22.6% of its valuation. This was twice as large as |
| |the 1929 stock crash that triggered the Great Depression. |
|October 23, 1987 |The Senate rejected the nomination of Robert H. Bork to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court. |
|1987 |President Reagan underwent prostate surgery. |
|December 8, 1987 |Gorbachev arrives in the United States to attend the Washington Summit. Reagan and Gorbachev sign the |
| |ICBM Treaty. |
|April 14, 1988 |The Soviet Union began to remove its forces from Afghanistan. |
|May 29, 1988 |President Reagan travels to Moscow to attend a summit meeting with Gorbachev. |
|January 20, 1989 |Ronald Reagan leaves office as former Reagan Vice President, George Bush, is inaugurated as the nation’s|
| |forty-first president. |
|November 9, 1989 |The Berlin Wall is opened. This signals the end of the Cold War. |
|January 8, 1990 |Ronald Reagan was awarded the Theodore Roosevelt Award by the National Collegiate Athletic Association |
| |(NCAA). |
|July 31, 1991 |Leaders of the U.S. and Russia sign the START I Treaty |
|November 4, 1991 |The Reagan Library and Museum is dedicated in Simi Valley, California. |
|May 9, 1992 |President Reagan delivered the commencement address to the graduates of Eureka College. It was the |
| |sixtieth anniversary of his graduation from the College. |
|January 3, 1993 |Leaders of the U.S. and Russia sign the START II Treaty. |
|January 13, 1993 |President George Bush awards Ronald Reagan the Presidential Medal of Freedom. |
|November 5, 1994 |Former president Reagan writes a letter to the American people in which he discloses that he was |
| |suffering from Alzheimer’s Disease. |
|December 11, 1996 |Death of [John] Neil “Moon” Reagan, the older brother of Ronald Reagan. |
|September 30, 1999 |Release of Edmund Morris’ controversial biography Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald W. Reagan. |
|May 9, 2000 |The Reagan Peace Garden was dedicated at Eureka College. |
|August 25, 2000 |Ceremonies held in central Illinois to dedicate the Reagan Trail. |
|January 13, 2001 |Ronald Reagan undergoes hip surgery after sustaining an injury in a fall at home. |
|August 8, 2001 |Maureen Elizabeth Reagan, the eldest child of President Ronald Reagan, dies after battling complications|
| |of skin cancer. |
Ronald Reagan Bibliography
A Collection of Books and Documents
'80 Presidential Debates: As Sponsored by the League of Women Voters, Education Fund. Washington, DC: League of Women Voters, Education Fund, 1980.
100 Questions: What Americans Want to Ask Their Next President. Washington, DC: The Center, 1984.
500 Days: ADA Assesses the Reagan Administration. Washington, DC: Americans for Democratic Action, 1982.
The 1980 Campaign Promises of Ronald Reagan: Update '84. Washington, DC (400 N. Capitol St., N.W., Suite 319, Washington 20001): Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, 1984.
The 1984 Campaign Promises of Ronald Reagan. Washington, DC: Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, 1985.
ABC News Reagan Speech Poll, March 1987. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, 1988.
ABC News Reagan Speech Poll, December 1987. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, 1988.
ABC News Reagan Press Conference Poll, January 1986. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, 1988.
ABC News Reagan Press Conference Poll, March 1987. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, 1988.
Abrams, Herbert L. The President Has Been Shot: Confusion, Disability, and the 25th Amendment in the Aftermath of the Attempted Assassination of Ronald Reagan. New York: W.W. Norton, 1992.
Adelstein, Eric D. Reagan and the New Possibilities of Presidential Power. 1987.
Adler, Bill; Huffaker, Sandy. Kid's Letters to President Reagan. New York: M. Evans, 1982.
Alexandre, Laurien. Selling the State: Public Diplomacy, Government Media and Ronald Reagan. 1988.
Allen, Yvonne. The War on Drugs in the U.S. and Latin America and the Rise and Fall of Manuel Noriega. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1997.
Al-Sohaibani, Abdolrahman Saleh. President Reagan's Role as Chief Legislator: Explaining Variations in Congressional Support for Presidential Legislation, 1981-1988. 1991.
America, Our Treasure and Our Trust: The Legacy of President Ronald Reagan, 1981-1988. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior, 1988.
American Legends: Our Nation's Most Fascinating Heroes, Icons and Leaders, Selected from the Time 100. New York: Time Inc. Home Entertainment, 2001.
Anderson, De'Andre M. The Use of Political Rhetoric in Electoral Politics: A Study of Ronald Reagan and Dr. Alan Keyes. Virginia Beach, VA: Regent University, 1999 1997.
Anderson, Janice. Ronald Reagan. Optimum Books, 1982.
Anderson, Martin. The Ten Causes of the Reagan Boom, 1982-1997. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace, Stanford University, 1997.
Anderson, Martin. Revolution: The Reagan Legacy. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University, 1990.
Andrew, Christopher M. For the President's Eyes Only: Secret Intelligence and the American Presidency from Washington to Bush. New York: HarperPerennial, 1996 1995.
Appelbaum, Henry. Studies in Intelligence: A Collection of Articles on the Historical, Operational, Doctrinal, and Theoretical Aspects of Intelligence. Washington, DC: Center for the Study of Intelligence, 1999.
Arak-Zeman, Jill L. An Analysis of the Similarities and Differences of United States Human Rights Policies under the Carter and Reagan Administrations: The Cases of Guatemala and Chile. 1991.
Archer, J. Clark; Taylor, Peter J. Section and Party: A Political Geography of American Presidential Elections, from Andrew Jackson to Ronald Reagan. Chichester; New York: Research Studies Press, 1981.
Arenson, David; Werden, Marilyn. Rambo Reagan: Over 1,400 Mind-Bending Trivia Questions about the '80s. Chicago, IL: Contemporary Books, 1996.
Arneson, D. J. There He Goes Again!: What He Said Was-- What He Meant Was--. Carlstadt, NJ: Andor, 1984.
Arneson, Patricia Ann. Political Perspectives on Revolution: A Mythic Analysis of the Public Discourse of Presidents Ronald Reagan and Daniel Ortega. 1987.
Aruri, Naseer Hasan; Moughrabi, Fouad; Stork, Joe. Reagan and the Middle East. Belmont, MA: Association of Arab-American University Graduates, 1983.
Audit of Reagan Presidential Transition Expenditures (GGD-81-50). Washington, DC: Comptroller General of the United States, 1981.
Auth, Tony. Lost in Space: The Reagan Years. Kansas City, MO: Andrews and McMeel, 1988.
Autry, Billy Edward. De Tocqueville and Reagan: Similarities in Power. 1983.
Baird, John William. A Time for Choosing by Ronald Reagan: A Rhetorical Analysis. 1967.
Baker, Gregory Edward. The Effect of Reagan Administration Policies on the Broadcast Regulatory Process. 1989.
Baker, Howard H.; Thompson, Kenneth W. Leadership in the Reagan Presidency. Part II, Eleven Intimate Perspectives. Lanham, MD: University Press of America,1993.
Balz, Daniel J. Ronald Reagan: A Trusty Script. Washington, DC Capitol Hill News Service, 1976.
Banker, Stephen R. He Who Gaffes Last: A Rhetorical Analysis of the Gaffes of Reagan and Carter in the 1980 General Election Campaign. 1987 1984.
Barilleaux, Ryan J. The Post-Modern Presidency: The Office after Ronald Reagan. New York: Praeger, 1988.
Barnekov, Timothy K.; Rich, Daniel. The Reagan Legacy and the Politics of Urban Disinvestment. Glasgow: University of Strathclyde, Centre for Planning, 1988.
Barrett, Laurence I. Gambling with History: Ronald Reagan in the White House. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1983.
Bauer, Alfred W.; Reagan, Ronald. Dear Mr. President: An Open Letter to Ronald Reagan about War and Peace and Our Chances for Survival in a World Gone Nuclear-Mad. Kirkland, WA: A.W. Bauer.
Baumann, Lawra J. Institutional Immortality: The Reality of Cabinet Level Abolition Attempts: Ronald Reagan and the Departments of Energy and Education. 1995.
Be It Resolved--: Oppose Candidacy of Reagan. United Republicans of California. San Gabriel, CA: UROC, 1975.
Behm, Gary F. The Reagan Administration's Impact on the Judicial System of the United States. 1989.
Behrens, June. Ronald Reagan, An All-American. Chicago: Children’s Press, 1981.
Bell, Coral. The Reagan Paradox: American Foreign Policy in the 1980s. Aldershot [England]: E. Elgar, 1989.
Benenson, Robert. Federalism under Reagan. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly, Inc, 1988.
Bennington, Tobi L. The White House Counsel: A Study of Its Creation and Development, from Franklin D. Roosevelt through Ronald Reagan. 2001.
Berman, Larry. Looking Back on the Reagan Presidency. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990.
Beshenich, George Michael. From Carter to Reagan: Formulation of American Policy During a Time of Transition: An Explanation of Foreign Policy Decisions Based on the Initial Presidential Transition Period. Carlisle Barracks, PA: U.S. Army War College, 1999.
Bickel, Beverly; Brenner, Philip; LeoGrande, William M. Challenging the Reagan Doctrine: A Summation of the April 25th Mobilization. Washington, DC: Foreign Policy Education Fund, 1987.
Biggart, Nicole Woolsey. The Magic Circle: A Study of Personal Staffs in the Administrations of Governors Ronald Reagan and Jerry Brown. 1981.
Biggart, Nicole Woolsey; Hamilton, Gary G. The Policy Effects of Management Style: A Comparison of Governors Ronald Reagan and Jerry Brown. 1983.
Blanton, Thomas S. White House E-Mail: The Top Secret Computer Messages the Reagan/Bush White House Tried to Destroy. New York: New Press, 1995.
Blassingame, Wyatt. The Look-it-up Book of Presidents. New York: Random House, 1988 1984.
Blumenthal, Sidney. Our Long National Daydream: A Political Pageant of the Reagan Era. New York: HarperCollins, 1990.
Blumenthal, Sidney; Edsall, Thomas Byrne. The Reagan Legacy. New York: Pantheon Books, 1988.
Boaz, David. Assessing the Reagan Years. Washington, DC: Cato Institute, 1988.
Boggs, Luther M. From Hollywood to Reykjavik: Ronald Reagan and Nuclear Abolition. 1997.
Bolger, Dermot. After the War is Over. Dublin: Raven Arts Press, 1984.
Bonafede, Dom. Spoiled Legacy: [Survey Shows Reagan Record Spoiled by Iran-Contra Scandal]. 1987 In: National Journal. Vol. 19, no. 10 (Mar. 7, 1987).
Borchers, Timothy A. The Rhetorical Construction of Allegations of Political Corruption in Case Studies of Nixon, Carter, Reagan, and Clinton. 1996.
Borland, Jay; Vance, Malcolm. The Ronald Reagan Hollywood Quiz Book. New York: Exeter Books: Distributed by Bookthrift, 1981.
Borland, Jay; Vance, Malcolm. Ronald Reagan Political Quiz Book. New York: Exeter Books: Distributed by Bookthrift, 1981.
Bosch, Adriana. Reagan: An American Story. New York: TV Books, 1998.
Boskin, Michael J. Reagan and the U.S. Economy: The Successes, Failures, and Unfinished Agenda. San Francisco: International Center for Economy Growth, 1988.
Bostick, James Preston. The Universal Audience and Political Narration Embodied in Reagan Administration Public Discourse Regarding Central America, 1981-1984. 1987.
Bourrie, Michelle A. Candidate Style and Election Issues: Ronald Reagan in 1984, A Case Study. 1987.
Boyarsky, Bill. The Rise of Ronald Reagan. New York: Random House, 1968.
Boyarsky, Bill. Ronald Reagan, His Life and Rise to the Presidency. New York: Random House, 1981 1968.
Boyer, Paul S. Reagan as President: Contemporary Views of the Man, His Politics, and His Policies. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 1990.
Bradley, Melvin; Habecker, Jackie; Magyar, Roger; and others. The Governor's Office: Access and Outreach, 1967-1974: Interviews. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, 1987.
Brian, Earl W.; Lage, Ann; and others. Governor Reagan's Cabinet and Agency Administration: Interviews. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, 1986.
Brophy-Baermann, Bryan Edwin. International Terrorism: Rationality, Retaliation, and the Reagan Shift. 1993.
Brown, Edmund G. Reagan and Reality; The Two Californias. New York, Praeger Publishers 1970.
Brown, Edmund G.; Brown, Bill. Reagan: The Political Chameleon. New York: Praeger, 1976.
Brownstein, Ronald; Easton, Nina. Reagan's Ruling Class: Portraits of the President's Top 100 Officials. Washington, DC: Presidential Accountability Group, 1982.
Bruce-Briggs, B. The Political Milieu of the Reagan Administration. Croton-on-Hudson, NY: Hudson Institute, 1980.
Buitron, Richard A. An Analysis of the Advocacy Role of President Ronald Reagan in American Church-State Relations. 1991.
The Bully Pulpit and the Reagan Presidency. 1995 In: Presidential Studies Quarterly. Vol. XXV, no. 1 (Winter 1995).
Burch, Philip H. Reagan, Bush, and Right-Wing Politics: Elites, Think Tanks, Power, and Policy. Greenwich, CT: Jai Press, 1997.
Busby, Robert. Reagan and the Iran-Contra Affair: The Politics of Presidential Recovery. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: New York: Macmillan Press; St. Martin's Press, 1999.
Busch, Andrew. Ronald Reagan and the Politics of Freedom. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2001.
Byrne, Iain. Compromising Morality: American Human Rights Reporting under Carter and Reagan. 1994.
Calabrese, Michael. Reagan on Reagan: The Rewriting of History. Washington, DC: Center for the Study of Responsive Law, 1980.
Campagna, Anthony S. The Economy in the Reagan Years: The Economic Consequences of the Reagan Administrations. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1994.
Campbell, Colin. In Search of Executive Harmony: Cabinet Government and the U.S. Presidency --The Experience of Carter and Reagan. 1983.
Cannon, Lou. Ronnie and Jesse: A Political Odyssey. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1969.
Cannon, Lou. Ronald Reagan: The Presidential Portfolio: A History Illustrated from the Collection of the Ronald Reagan Library and Museum. New York: Public Affairs, 2001.
Cannon, Lou. President Reagan: The Role of a Lifetime. New York: Public Affairs, 2000 1991.
Cannon, Terence. 101 Reasons to Vote Against Ronald Reagan. Chicago, IL: National Center for Trade Union Action and Democracy, 1984.
Carbone, Ralph E. Carter and Reagan on the Panama Canal: An Analysis of Issues and Arguments. 1988.
Cardigan, J. H. Ronald Reagan: A Remarkable Life. Kansas City, MO: Andrews and McMeel, 1995.
Carlson, Nancy Lynn. Resignation Rhetoric: An Inquiry into the Reagan Cabinet Resignations. 1995.
Carter, Hodding. The Reagan Years. New York: G. Braziller, 1988.
Casey, Joan A. Federalism: A Balancing Act. Washington, DC: U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, 1988.
Casey, Michael J. Ronald Reagan's Epideictic Rhetoric within the Context of the State of the Union Addresses during the Cold War, 1945-1985. 1986.
Chilcoat, Charles Mark. Televised Presidential Debates: Paralinguistic Factors of Source Credibility and Status in the 1980 Carter-Reagan Debate. 1989 1985.
Chilton, Michael J. Ronald Reagan and the Legacy of the 1980s. 1994.
Christina, Vernon J.; McDowell, Jack S; and others. Republican Campaigns and Party Issues, 1964-1976. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Governmental History Documentation Project, Ronald Regan Gubernatorial Era, 1986.
Churba, Joseph. The American Retreat: The Reagan Foreign and Defense Policy. Chicago: Regnery Gateway, 1984.
CIS Index to Presidential Executive Orders and Proclamations, 1789-1983. Washington, DC: Congressional Information Service, 1986.
CIS Presidential Executive Orders and Proclamations Part II: Mar. 4, 1921 to Dec. 31, 1983: Warren Harding to Ronald Reagan.. Washington, DC: Congressional Information Service, Inc., 1986.
CIS Presidential Executive Orders and Proclamations, 1789-1983. Washington, DC: Congressional Information Service, Inc., 1986.
The Citizen's Guide to the 1976 Presidential Candidates. Washington: Capitol Hill News Service, 1976.
Clark, John Frank. Realism and the Reagan Doctrine. 1988.
Clarkson, Stephen. Canada and the Reagan Challenge: Crisis in the Canadian-American Relationship. Toronto: J. Lorimer in association with the Canadian Institute for Economic Policy, 1982.
Cohen, Allen. The Reagan Poems. San Francisco: Aquarius Publishing Company, 1981.
Cohn, Elizabeth. Idealpolitik in U.S. Foreign Policy: The Reagan Administration and the U.S. Promotion of Democracy. 1995.
Colbert, William. Ronald Reagan, A Personal Story. New York: Manor Books, 1980.
Collective Remembering. London; Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1990.
Combs, James E. The Reagan Range: The Nostalgic Myth in American Politics. Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green State University Popular Press, 1993.
Contra Aid and the Reagan Doctrine: A Major Issue Forum. Washington: Congressional Research Service Review, 1987.
Cosgriff, John. Modern Economics. Elk Grove, IL: J. Cosgriff, 1981.
Courtney, Geromina Ferrara. The Reagan Response to Terrorism: A Modern Revenge Tragedy. Toledo: University of Toledo, 1987.
Craig, Mickey G. Defending the Reagan Legacy: Rejecting Revisionist History. Ashland, OH: John M. Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs, 1993.
Cribb, T. Kenneth. The Reagan Legacy. Springfield, VA: Conservative Republican Committee, 1992.
Critchlow, Donald T.; Hawley, Ellis Wayne. Poverty and Public Policy in Modern America. Chicago, IL: Dorsey Press, 1989.
Crothers, Lane; Lind, Nancy S. Presidents from Reagan through Clinton, 1981-2001: Debating the Issues in Pro and Con Primary Documents. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2001.
Cuba's Answer: Reagan before the OAS Council. La Habana: Editora Politica, 1982.
Culligan, Matthew J. Ronald Reagan and the Isle of Destiny: A Fascinating Journey into a Proud Irish History. New York, NY: M. J. Culligan-Hogan: Dalcassian Publishing, 1982.
The Cumulated Indexes to the Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, Ronald Reagan, 1981-1989. Lanham, MD: Bernan Press, 1995.
Curry, Richard Orr. An Uncertain Future: Thought Control and Repression during the Reagan-Bush Era. Los Angeles, CA: First Amendment Foundation, 1992.
Dalal, B. P. Glimpses of American History: George Washington to Ronald Reagan. Bombay: Vora, 1990.
Dale, Stephen. Lost in the Suburbs: A Political Travelogue. Toronto; New York: Buffalo, NY: Stoddart; Distributed in the U.S. by General Distribution Services, 1999.
Dallek, Matthew. A Time for Choosing: Ronald Reagan, Pat Brown, and the Political Contest That Shaped a Decade. 1999.
Dallek, Matthew. The Right Moment: Ronald Reagan's First Victory and the Decisive Turning Point in American Politics. New York: Free Press, 2000.
Dallek, Robert. Ronald Reagan: The Politics of Symbolism: With a New Preface. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999 1984.
Darshan Singh. Ronald Reagan: Crusader of Peace. New Delhi: A. Singh, 1989.
Davis, Abraham L. Blacks in the Federal Judiciary: Neutral Arbiters or Judicial Activists?. Bristol, IN: Wyndham Hall Press, 1989.
Davis, Barbara Marie. A Content Analysis of the Coverage Given the 1985, 1986, and 1987 Summits Between President Ronald Reagan and General Secretary Mikhail S. Gorbachev. 1988.
Davis, Kathy Randall. But What's He Really Like?. Menlo Park, CA: Pacific Coast Publishers 1970.
Davis, William Eric. The Impact of the Reagan Presidency on the U.S. Federal System. 1992.
De Waal, Ronald Burt. Ronald Reagan: A Bibliography. 1981.
Deaver, Michael K. A Different Drummer: My Thirty Years with Ronald Reagan. New York: HarperCollins, 2001.
The Decision Makers: Reagan's Team, Where They Come from, Where They're Going. Washington: Government Research Corporation, 1981.
DeGrasse, Robert. The Costs and Consequences of Reagan's Military Buildup. New York: The Council on Economic Priorities, 1982.
DeMuth, Christopher C. The Reagan Doctrine and Beyond. Washington, DC: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 1987.
Denk, Jürgen. Perspectives on Superpower Summitry: A Content Analytic Study of U.S. and Western European Newspaper Accounts of the October, 1986 Reykjavik Meeting Between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachëv. 1987.
Denton, Robert E., Jr. The Primetime Presidency of Ronald Reagan: The Era of the Television Presidency. New York: Praeger, 1988.
Derbyshire, Ian. Politics in the United States: From Carter to Reagan. Edinburgh: Chambers, 1987.
Designation of Ronald Reagan Federal Building and Courthouse Report (To Accompany H.R. 4281). United States. Congress. House. Committee on Public Works and Transportation.
Detlefsen, Robert R. Civil Rights under Reagan. San Francisco, CA: ICS Press, 1991.
Devaney, John. Ronald Reagan, President. New York: Walker, 1990.
Devine, Donald John. Reagan Electionomics: How Reagan Ambushed the Pollsters. Ottawa, IL: Green Hill Publishers, 1983.
Dewar, John. Nuclear Weapons, The Peace Movement and the Law. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1986.
Dewey, Joseph. Novels from Reagan's America: A New Realism. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1999.
Dimasi-Miskiel, Deena. Political Belief Systems: The Case of Ronald Reagan and Anti-Sovietism. 1989.
Dinnerstein, Victor David. The Fascist Gun in the West. People's Productions, 1971.
Dixon, Marlene. On Trial: Reagan's War against Nicaragua: Testimony of the Permanent People's Tribunal. Permanent Peoples' Tribunal.
Dolan, John T. Reagan: The Revolution Continues. Alexandria, VA: Paid for by the National Conservative Political Action Committee, 1987.
Dolan, John T.; Fossedal, Gregory A. Reagan: A President Succeeds. Falls Church, VA: Conservative Press Inc., 1983.
Dolan, John T.; Fossedal, Gregory A. Reagan: A Record of Achievement. Falls Church, VA: Conservative Press Inc., 1983.
Donnelly, Jane Ladonna. Ronald Reagan's America: An Anecdotal Approach to Rhetoric. 1986.
Dorn, Sharon. Ronald Reagan: Before the White House. 1998.
Dorsey, Leroy G. The Presidency and Rhetorical Leadership. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, 2002.
Downey, Thomas J. Rating Reagan: Trend Lines and Fault Lines: November, 1981. New York, NY. (145 E. 49th St., Suite 9D, New York 10017): Democracy Project, 1981.
Doyle, William. Inside the Oval Office: The White House Tapes from FDR to Clinton. New York: Kodansha International, 1999.
Drucker, Mort; Laikin, Paul. The Ronald Reagan Coloring Book. Kansas City, MO: Andrews and McMeel, 1988.
D'Souza, Dinesh. Ronald Reagan: How an Ordinary Man Became an Extraordinary Leader. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1999 1997.
D'Souza, Dinesh. Ronald Reagan: An Extraordinary Leader. London: Touchstone, 1999.
Ducat, Stephen. Taken In: American Gullibility and the Reagan Mythos. Tacoma, WA: Life Sciences Press, 1988.
Dugger, Ronnie. On Reagan: The Man and His Presidency. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1983.
Duke, Paul; Corddry, Charles. Beyond Reagan: The Politics of Upheaval. New York, NY: Warner Books, 1986.
Dunckel, Earl B. Ronald Reagan and the General Electric Theater, 1954-1955. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, the Bancroft Library, University of California, 1982.
Dunham, Montrew; Henderson, Meryl. Ronald Reagan, Young Leader. New York: Aladdin Paperbacks, 1999.
Durant, Robert F. The Administrative Presidency Revisited: Public Lands, The BLM, and the Reagan Revolution. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1992.
Dyer, Samuel Coad. Evaluating Reagan as a Conservative Speaker: Utilizing Richard M. Weaver's Critical Methodology as a Rhetorical Tool in a Content Analysis of a Set of Randomly Selected Speeches by Ronald Wilson Reagan. 1986.
Edel, Wilbur. The Reagan Presidency: An Actor's Finest Performance. New York: Hippocrene Books, 1992.
Edelmayer, Kathleen M. The Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty: A Cluster Analysis of Ronald Reagan's Addresses to the Nation. 1993.
Edgar, Tracey. Operational Code Beliefs of Ronald Reagan: The Nature of the International Environment and Image of the Soviet Union. Vancouver, BC: University of British Columbia, 1993.
Edgington, Steven D.; De Graaf, Lawrence Brooks. The "Kitchen Cabinet": Four California Citizen Advisers of Ronald Reagan: Interviews. Fullerton, CA: Oral History Program, California State University, Fullerton, 1983.
Edgington, Steven D.; Grody, Harvey Peyton. Legislative-Governor Relations in the Reagan Years: Five Views: Interviews. Fullerton, CA: Oral History Program, California State University, Fullerton, 1983.
Edwards, Anne. Early Reagan: The Rise of an American Hero. Sevenoaks: Coronet, 1988 1987.
Edwards, Donald Clark. A Symbolic Analysis of Decision Making: Ronald Regan and the News Media. 1989.
Edwards, Lee. Ronald Reagan: A Political Biography. Houston, TX: Nordland Publishing International, 1981.
Egger, Terrance C. Z. The Rhetoric of Presidential Tax Reduction: Kennedy, 1963, and Reagan, 1981. 1981.
Erickson, Paul D. The Making of an American Myth. New York: New York University Press, 1985.
Evans, Medford Stanton. The Reason for Reagan. La Jolla, CA: La Jolla Rancho Press, 1968.
Evans, Rowland; Novak, Robert D. The Reagan Revolution. New York: Dutton, 1981.
Falcione, Raymond L. A Rhetorical Analysis of Ronald Reagan. 1967.
Executive Privilege: Legal Opinions Regarding Claim of President Ronald Reagan in Response to a Subpoena Issued to James G. Watt, Secretary of the Interior. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1981.
Falling Behind: A Report on How Blacks Have Fared Under the Reagan Policies. Washington, DC: The Center, 1984.
Faux, Geoffrey P.; Kahler, Miles; Carnoy, Martin. The U.S. Economy after Reagan. Bonn: Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, 1989.
Federal Credit Activities: An Analysis of President Reagan's Credit Budget for 1982. Washington, DC: The Office, 1981.
Fett, Patrick Joseph. Presidential Influence and Legislators' Voting Decisions on the President's Legislative Agenda: The First Year of the Carter and Reagan Presidencies. 1989.
Fischer, Beth A. The Reagan Reversal: Foreign Policy and the End of the Cold War. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 1997.
Fitch, Nancy Elizabeth. The Management Style of Ronald Reagan, Chairman of the Board of the United States of America: An Annotated Bibliography. Monticello, IL: Vance Bibliographies, 1982.
FitzGerald, Frances. Way Out There in the Blue: Reagan, Star Wars, and the End of the Cold War. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001.
Fitzwater, Marlin. Call the Briefing!: Bush and Reagan, Sam and Helen: A Decade with Presidents and the Press. Holbrook, MA: Adams Media Corp., 1996 1995.
Flamenco, J. Roberto. A Presidential Portfolio: Ronald W. Reagan, 1981-1982. Boston: Professionals and Entrepreneurs of America, Inc. 1982.
Flores, Juan Carlos. Cultural Value Differences in Arguments Between Presidents Ronald Reagan and Oscar Arias. 1989.
Flournoy, Houston I.; Priest, Ivy Baker, and others. Official Program of the Inaugural Ceremonies: The Capitol, January 4-5, 1967, Sacramento, California. Sacramento, CA:1967.
Flum, Neal Howard. Ronald Reagan, "Manifest Destiny," the Caribbean, and Central America: A Question of Motive. 1988.
Fox, Mary Virginia. Mister President: The Story of Ronald Reagan. Hillside, N.J: Enslow Publishers, 1986.
Freedman, Lawrence. President Reagan and American Foreign Policy. London: Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1981.
Freiling, Tom. Reagan's God and Country: A President's Moral Compass: His Beliefs on God, Religious Freedom, the Sanctity of Life, and More. Ann Arbor, MI: Vine Books, 2000.
Fried, Charles. Order and Law: Arguing the Reagan Revolution: A Firsthand Account. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1991.
Friedman, Stanley P. Ronald Reagan, His Life Story in Pictures. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1986.
Fry, Susan Elaine. Ronald Reagan: A Rhetorical Analysis of Common Ground Strategies. 1983.
Gallick, Sarah. Ronald Reagan: The Pictorial Biography. Philadelphia: Courage Books, 1999.
Gardner, Gerald C. The Actor, A Photographic Interview with Ronald Reagan. New York: Pocket Books, 1981.
Gartner, Alan; Greer, Colin. What Reagan is Doing to Us. New York: Harper & Row, 1982.
Gattuso, James; Moore, Stephen. Reagan's Trump Card: The Veto. Washington, DC: Heritage Foundation, 1985.
Gauert, Mark William. Ronald Reagan and the Washington Press: How the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal Covered Reagan's First 100 Days in Office. 1982.
Gerberg, Mort. Your Official Guide to Reaganworld: The Amusement Park for All the Right People. New York: Perigee Books, 1982.
Gilens, Martin. Gender and Support for Reagan: A Comprehensive Model of Presidential Approval. 1988 In: American Journal of Political Science. Vol. 32, no. 1 (Feb. 1988).
Glen, Maxwell. Marketing Reagan. 1987 In: National Journal. Vol. 19, no. 35 (Aug. 29, 1987).
Goldstein, Walter. Reagan's Leadership and the Atlantic Alliance: Views from Europe and America. Washington: Pergamon-Brassey, 1986.
Gorbachev, Mikhail Sergeevich. The Results and Lessons of Reykjavik: Summit Meeting in the Icelandic Capital October 11-12, 1986. Moscow: Novosti Press Agency Publishing House, 1986.
Gore, Ellen Josephine. Reagan at Reykjavik: A Psychopolitical Study. 1990.
Government History Documentation Project: Ronald Reagan Gubernatorial Era. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, 1982.
Grantham, Dewey W. Recent America: The United States Since 1945. Arlington Heights, IL: H. Davidson, 1987.
A Great New Beginning: The 1981 Inaugural Story: A Chronicle of the Inauguration of the 40th President of the United States and an Historic Picture of Past Celebrations, from 1789 to the Present. Washington, DC: 1981 Presidential Inaugural Committee, 1981.
Green, Mark J.; Dancis, Bruce. To Err is Reagan: Lies and Deceptions from the President. San Francisco, CA: Mother Jones Magazine, 1987 417.
Greenhaw, Wayne. Elephants in the Cottonfields: Ronald Reagan and the New Republican South. New York: London: Macmillan Publishing Co.; Collier Macmillan, 1982.
Greenstein, Fred I. Ronald Reagan -- Another Hidden-Hand Ike? 1990 In: PS. Vol. 23, no. 1 (Mar. 1990).
Greenstein, Fred I.; Wohlforth, William Curti. Retrospective on the End of the Cold War: Report of a Conference Sponsored by the John Foster Dulles Program for the Study of Leadership in International Affairs. Princeton, NJ: Center of International Studies, Princeton University, 1994.
Griffiths, Ann L. Canadian and American Foreign Policy Towards Nicaragua under Pierre Trudeau and Ronald Reagan. Ottawa: National Library of Canada, 1986.
Gronner, Curt J. The Family of Ronald W. Reagan. Morrison, IL: C. Gronner, 2001.
Grover, William F. The President as Prisoner: A Structural Critique of the Carter and Reagan Years. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1989.
Guthrie, K. Kendall. Three Faces of Ronald Reagan: An Analysis of His Coverage in the New York Times, the Durham Morning Herald and CBS Evening News. 1985.
Habecker, Jackie; Magyar, Roger; and others. The Governor's Office, Access and Outreach, 1967-1974: 1987. Oral History Transcript. 1987.
Hackett, James T. The State Department vs. Ronald Reagan: Four Ambassadors Speak Out. Washington, DC. (214 Mass. Ave. N.E., Washington 20002: Heritage.
Hadar, Leon. The Great Tele-Diplomat and the Game of "Spin Patrol": Reagan, the Media and the Hijacking of TWA Flight 847. 1991.
Haftendorn, Helga; Schissler, Jakob. The Reagan Administration: A Reconstruction of American Strength? Berlin; New York: W. de Gruyter, 1988.
Hagstrom, Jerry. Beyond Reagan: The New Landscape of American Politics. New York: Penguin Books, 1989 1988.
Haig, Alexander Meigs; Luce, Clare Boothe. Caveat: Realism, Reagan, and Foreign Policy. New York: Macmillan, 1984.
Halford, Steve; Citrin, Jack. The Brown-Reagan Years in California Politics: Lessons for 1980. Berkeley, CA: University of California, State Data Program, 1980 1984.
Hall, David Locke. The Reagan Wars: A Constitutional Perspective on War Powers and the Presidency. Boulder: Westview Press, 1991.
Hall, Gus. 1981-- Mandate for Fightback. New York, NY: New Outlook Publishers, 1981.
Hall, James M.; Biggart, Nicole Woolsey; Morris, Gabrielle S. Supporting Reagan: From Banks to Prisons: Interviews. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, 1986.
Halmari, Sirkka Helena. On Dichotomous Political Rhetoric: With Special Reference to Ronald Reagan's Language. 1990.
Hamilton, Gary G.; Biggart, Nicole Woolsey. Governor Reagan, Governor Brown: A Sociology of Executive Power. New York: Columbia University Press, 1984.
Hannaford, Peter. Recollections of Reagan: A Portrait of Ronald Reagan. New York: William Morrow, 1997.
Hannaford, Peter. The Reagans, A Political Portrait. New York: Coward-McCann, 1983.
Hannaford, Peter; Hannaford, Peter; Hobbs, Charles D. Remembering Reagan. Washington, DC: Lanham, MD: Regnery Pub.; Distributed to the trade by National Book Network, 1994.
Hartman, Geoffrey H. Bitburg in Moral and Political Perspective. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1986.
Hayes, James Todd. Ronald Reagan as a "Thoughtful" Speaker: The Sources of Evidence for Selected Assertions from His Campaign Speech of October 27, 1964. 1965.
Haynes, Lincoln; Malone, Michael; Roberts, Myron. The Begatting of Ronald Reagan. Lomita, CA: Palos Verdes Book Company, 1982.
Hayward, Steven F. The Age of Reagan: The Fall of the Old Liberal Order, 1964-1980. Roseville, CA: Forum/Prima, 2001.
Health Reorganization Message of Ronald Reagan: Transmitted to the California Legislature, March 4, 1970. California. Governor (1967-1975: Reagan). Sacramento, CA: 1970.
Helms, Jesse. The Lasting Leadership of Ronald Reagan. Washington, DC: Heritage Foundation, 2001.
Helser, Tracy. The Reagan Record. Oakland, CA: Data Center, 1984.
Henggeler, Paul R. The Kennedy Persuasion: The Politics of Style Since JFK. Chicago: I.R. Dee, 1995.
Henry, Paul Douglas. The Environmental Influence of Norman B. Livermore upon Governor Ronald Reagan of California, 1967-1975: Based on the Environmental Issues of Mineral King and Dos Rios Dam. 1994.
Herman, Mark A. A Historical-Rhetorical Analysis of the 1980/1984 Campaign Rhetoric of Ronald Reagan. 1990.
Heron, Ashley Suzanne. United States Government Intervention in Guatemala during Carter and Reagan's Administrations. 1994.
Hertsgaard, Mark. On Bended Knee: The Press and the Reagan Presidency. New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1988.
Hess, Stephen; Broder, David S. The Republican Establishment; The Present and Future of the G.O.P. New York, Harper & Row 1967.
Hiebsch, Gary C. A Fantasy Theme Analysis of Ronald Reagan's Address to the Graduating Class at the United States Military Academy. 1989.
Hill, Dilys M.; Moore, Raymond A. The Reagan Presidency: An Incomplete Revolution?. New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 1990.
Himmelfarb, Milton. Roper Report on Opinion about Bitburg. New York: American Jewish Committee, 1985.
Hinck, Edward A. Enacting the Presidency: Political Argument, Presidential Debates, and Presidential Character. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1993.
Hinckley, Jack; Hinckley, Jo Ann; Sherrill, Elizabeth. Breaking Points. Grand Rapids, MI: Chosen Books, 1985.
Hogan, Joseph. The Reagan Years: The Record in Presidential Leadership. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Holian, David B. The Press, The Presidency, and the Public: Agenda Setting, Issue Ownership, and Presidential Approval from Reagan to Clinton. 2000.
Hollenback, James Barry. A Descriptive Profile of the Emotional Proofs Used in Selected Speeches of Ronald Reagan's Gubernatorial Campaign. 1967.
Horgan, James J.; Cernik, Joseph A. The Reagan Years: Perspectives and Assessments. Saint Leo, FL: Saint Leo College Press, 1988.
How Great was Ronald Reagan?: Our 40th President's Place in History: A Symposium. 1988 In: Policy Review. No. 46 (fall 1988).
Hubbell, Larry. Ronald Reagan as Presidential Symbol Maker: The Federal Bureaucrat as Loafer, Incompetent Buffoon, Good Ole Boy, and Tyrant. 1991 In: American Review of Public Administration. Vol. 21, no. 3 (Sept. 1991).
Hubert, David A. Public Opinion and the Reagan Doctrine: Issue Structure and the Domestic Setting of Foreign Policy. 1995.
Human Services in the 1980s: President Reagan's 1982 Proposals. Arlington, VA (1408 N. Fillmore St., Suite 7, Arlington 22201): Human Services Information Center, 1982.
Hunter, Kerry L. The Reign of Fantasy: A Better Explanation for the Reagan Strategic Defense Initiative. 1995 1989.
Hyland, Pat. Presidential Libraries and Museums: An Illustrated Guide. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly, Inc., 1995.
Hyland, William. The Reagan Foreign Policy. New York: New American Library, 1987.
IAkovlev, A. N. On the Edge of an Abyss: From Truman to Reagan: The Doctrines and Realities of the Nuclear Age. Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1985.
Ide, Arthur Frederick. Reagan and Woman. Dallas: Texas Independent Press, 1984.
Ide, Arthur Frederick. The Reagan Legacy. Irving, TX: Scholars Books, 1989.
In the First Place: 20 Years of the Most Consequential Ideas from Hillsdale College's Monthly Journal Imprimis. Hillsdale, MI: Hillsdale College, 1992.
Inaugural Addresses of the Presidents of the United States from George Washington, 1789, to Ronald Reagan, 1985. United States. President. Taipei: Li Ming Cultural Enterprise, 1985.
Inaugural Message of Ronald Reagan, Governor, California. Governor (1967-1975: Reagan). Sacramento, CA: 1967.
Indictment: The Case Against the Reagan Environmental Record. San Francisco, CA: Friends of the Earth, 1982.
Jackson, Ronald Vern; Polson, Altha; Jackson, Shirley Pearl. Ronald Wilson Reagan and Nancy Davis Ancestry. Bountiful, UT: Accelerated Indexing Systems, 1981.
Jasper, William F. Ronald Reagan: Should This Man be So Popular? Belmont, MA: Order from the New American, 1986.
Jeffords, Susan. Hard Bodies: Hollywood Masculinity in the Reagan Era. New Brunswick, N.J: Rutgers University Press, 1994.
Jenkins, Ava W. The Role of Neo-Aristotelian Invention in Selected Speeches of Ronald Reagan. 1987.
Jentleson, Bruce W. With Friends Like These: Reagan, Bush, and Saddam, 1982-1990. New York; London: Norton, 1995.
Jinks, Harold. Ronald Reagan--Smile, Style, and Guile. New York: Vantage Press, 1986.
Johar, Marzuki. A Rhetorical Criticism and Analysis of President Ronald Reagan's Inaugural Address: Applying the Burkeian Dramatistic Pentad Approach. 1996.
Johnson, Darv. The Reagan Years. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books, 2000.
Johnson, Garey A. U.S. Arms Shipments to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia during the Ronald Reagan Presidency: In Search of a Policy Paradigm. 1992.
Johnson, Haynes Bonner. Sleepwalking through History: America in the Reagan Years. New York: Anchor Books, 1992 1991.
Jones, John M. How Reagan Became Reagan: The Education and Development of the Great Communicator. 1999.
Joseph, James W. Between Realism and Reality: The Reagan Administration and International Debt. 1990.
Joseph, Paul. Ronald Reagan. Minneapolis: Abdo & Daughters, 1999.
Judson, Karen. Ronald Reagan. Springfield, NJ: Enslow, 1997.
Kampelman, Max M.; Sussman, Leonard R. Three Years at the East-West Divide: The Words of U.S. Ambassador Max M. Kampelman at the Madrid Conference on Security and Human Rights; with Introductions by Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter; Edited by Leonard R. Sussman. New York: Freedom House, 1983.
Karaagac, John. Between Promise and Policy: Ronald Reagan and Conservative Reformism. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2000.
Karam, Sergio. The Military Secret That Cost J.F. Kennedy His Life, Could Cost Ronald Reagan the Presidency and the People of the United States Their Freedom. Miami, FL: Abraham Lincoln Anti-Soviet Publishing Company, 1987.
Kent, Zachary; Abele, Charles. Ronald Reagan: Fortieth President of the United States. Chicago: Childrens Press, 1989.
Kenworthy, Eldon. America/Americas: Myth in the Making of U.S. Policy toward Latin America. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1995.
Kernek, Sterling J.; Thompson, Kenneth W. Foreign Policy in the Reagan Presidency: Nine Intimate Perspectives. Lanham, MD: [Charlottesville]: University Press of America; Miller Center, University of Virginia, 1993.
Keyworth, George A. President Reagan's New Defense Initiative: A Road to Stability. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution, Stanford University, 1984.
Khanna, Manuka. Indo-U.S. Relations during the Presidency of Ronald Reagan. New Delhi: Classical Publishing Company, 1996.
Kilcoyne, Paula. Dysfunctional Families and Presidential Personality: Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan. Waltham, MA: Bentley College, Institute for Research and Faculty Development, 1991.
Kirk, Robert S. U.S. Issues in International Trade Editorial Commentary Including President Reagan's Speech of September 23, 1985 and Responses. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 1985.
Kirkpatrick, Jeane J.; Cline, Ray S. The Reagan Doctrine and U.S. Foreign Policy. Washington, DC: Heritage Foundation: Fund for an American Renaissance, 1985.
Klingel, Cynthia Fitterer; Noyed, Robert B. Ronald Reagan: Our Fortieth President. Chanhassen, MN: Child's World, 2002.
Knelman, Fred H. America, God and the Bomb: The Legacy of Ronald Reagan. Vancouver: New Star Books, 1987 1985.
Knight, Kathryn M. A Comparison of Variance in Coverage of President Reagan by Newsweek, Time and U.S. News & World Report during Two Time Periods. 1989.
Köchler, Hans. Meeting Name: International Tribunal on the Reagan Administration's Foreign Policy (1984: Brussels, Belgium). The Reagan Administration's Foreign Policy: Facts and Judgement of the International Tribunal. London: Third World Centre, 1984.
Kornegay, Francis A. Washington and Africa: Reagan, Congress, and an African Affairs Constituency in Transition. Washington, DC. (1346 Connecticut Ave., N.W., Washington, DC.
Kosminsky, Jay. SDI Report, A Review of Developments in the Strategic Defense Initiative Program. Washington, DC: Heritage Foundation, 1992.
Kozhimannil, Varghese T. Awake America!: Are You Better Off? New York: Cimothas Publishing, 1989.
Krieger, Joel. Reagan, Thatcher, and the Politics of Decline. Cambridge [Eng.]: Polity Press, 1986.
Krieger, Teri L. Ronald Wilson Reagan: The Assumption of the Hollywood Cowboy Image. 1996.
Kymlicka, B. B.; Matthews, Jean V. The Reagan Revolution? Chicago, IL: Dorsey Press, 1988.
Kyvig, David E. Reagan and the World. New York: Praeger, 1990.
Labor Policy in the Age of Reagan. Oakland, CA: Center for Third World Organizing, 1986.
Lach-Smith, Barbara. A View of U.S.-Soviet Relations during Reagan-Gorbachev Summits: A Content Analysis of the New York Times, Pravda and Trybuna Ludu. 1990.
Lagon, Mark P. The Reagan Doctrine: Sources of American Conduct in the Cold War's Last Chapter. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1994.
Laham, Nicholas. The Reagan Presidency and the Politics of Race: In Pursuit of Colorblind Justice and Limited Government. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1998.
Laham, Nicholas. Ronald Reagan and the Politics of Immigration Reform. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2000.
Lake, Anthony. Third World Radical Regimes: U.S. Policy under Carter and Reagan. New York, NY: Foreign Policy Association, 1985.
Langston, Thomas S. Ideologues and Presidents: From the New Deal to the Reagan Revolution. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
Langston, Thomas Samuel. The Influence of People of Ideas in Presidential Politics: Case Studies in the Franklin Roosevelt, Johnson and Reagan Administrations. 1989.
Larsen, Rebecca. Ronald Reagan. New York: F. Watts, 1994.
Lawson, Don. The Picture Life of Ronald Reagan. New York: F. Watts, 1985.
Laxalt, Paul. The Nominating of a President: The Three Nominations of Ronald Reagan as Republican Candidate for the Presidency. Reno, NV: Native Nevadan Publications, 1985.
Leamer, Laurence. Make-Believe: The Story of Nancy and Ronald Reagan. New York: Harper & Row, 1983.
Lee, Eugene C. The Reagan Presidency after Seven Years. Berkeley, CA: Institute of Governmental Studies, University of California, Berkeley, 1988.
Lefevre, Kent A. Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. 1989.
Leipold, L. Edmond. Ronald Reagan, Governor and Statesman. Minneapolis, T. S. Denison 1968.
Lejon, Kjell O. U. Reagan, Religion and Politics: The Revitalization of "A Nation Under God" during the 80s. Lund: Bromley, Kent, England: Lund University Press; Chartwell-Bratt, 1988.
Lejon, Kjell Olof Urban. One Nation Under God?: President Ronald Reagan and the Religo-Political Neo-Conservative Movement in Contemporary America. 1988 1987.
Lekachman, Robert. Visions and Nightmares: America after Reagan. New York: Collier Books, 1988 1987.
Letofsky, Irv; Zoccola, Brian. Ronald Reagan in Hollywood: A Catalogue of Lobby Cards and Posters from Ronald Reagan Movies, 1937 to 1964. Los Angeles, CA: [s.n.], 1989.
Letofsky, Irv; Zoccola, Brian. The Ronald Reagan Movie Poster Collection: From the Collection of Irv Letofsky and Brian Ann Zoccola. [Los Angeles, CA: s.n., 1990.
Leuchtenburg, William Edward. In the Shadow of FDR: From Harry Truman to Ronald Reagan. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985.
Levkov, Ilya. Bitburg and Beyond: Encounters in American, German, and Jewish History. New York: Shapolsky Publishers, 1987.
Levy, Peter B. Encyclopedia of the Reagan-Bush Years. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996.
Lewis, David A. Can Reagan Beat the Zero Curse? Harrison, AR: New Leaf Press, 1984.
Lewis, Joseph. What Makes Reagan Run?: A Political Profile. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1980 1968.
Liebert, Larry. Reagan, The Conservative. 1987 In: California Journal. Vol. 18, no. 10 (Oct. 1987).
Light, Paul Charles. The President's Agenda: Domestic Policy Choice from Kennedy to Carter (With Notes on Ronald Reagan). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982.
Lindop, Edmund. Richard M. Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan. New York: Twenty-First Century Books, 1996.
Little, Graham. Strong Leadership: Thatcher, Reagan, and an Eminent Person. Melbourne; New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.
Livingston, Donald Glenn, 1938-; Morris, Gabrielle S. Program and Policy Development in Consumer Affairs and the Governor's Office: Interview. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, 1986.
Lorentzen, Thomas Edwin. Foreign Policy Development and Presidential Transitions: Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan as Case Studies. 1986 1983.
Lott, David Newton. United States. President. The Presidents Speak: The Inaugural Addresses of the American Presidents from Washington to Clinton. New York: H. Holt and Company, 1994.
Lowenthal, Mark M. Verification: Soviet Compliance with Arms Control Agreements. Washington, DC: Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, Major Issues System, 1985.
Lucas, Eileen. Reagan, Bush and Clinton. Vero Beach, FL: Rourke Corp., 1997.
Luce, Gordon; Orr, George Vernon, and others. Governor Reagan and His Cabinet: An Introduction: Interviews. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Government History Documentation Project, 1986.
MacAdam, Stephanie Elizabeth. Unholy Alliance: Ronald Reagan and the New Right. 1990.
MacKinnon, Kenneth. The Politics of Popular Representation: Reagan, Thatcher, AIDS, and the Movies. Rutherford: London; Cranbury, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press; Associated University Presses, 1992.
Madar, Daniel R. Reagan's Foreign Policy: Emerging Organization and Themes. Toronto: Canadian Institute of International Affairs, 1981.
Maloney, William Edward. President Ronnie: Dramatic, Action-Packed Scenes of President Ronnie's First Year in the White House. New York, NY: Perigee Books, 1981.
Mandelbaum, Michael; Talbott, Strobe. Reagan and Gorbachev. New York: Vintage Books, 1987.
Marcus, Gail H. Federal Energy R & D: President Reagan's First Four Years. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 1985.
Marks, Stanley J. A Year in the Lives of the Damned!: Reagan-Reaganism-1986. San Marino, CA: Bureau of International Affairs, 1988.
Mathisen, Robert R. The Role of Religion in American Life: An Interpretive Historical Anthology. Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, 1994.
Mauro, Frank J. Taxing The Big Guys: States Might Look at Following in the Footsteps of Ronald Reagan if They Want to Close Some of Their Biggest Tax Loopholes. 1994 In: State Government News. Vol. 37, no. 8 (Aug. 1994).
Mayer, Jane; McManus, Doyle. Landslide: The Unmaking of the President, 1984-1988. London: Fontana, 1989 1988.
McAuliffe, Amy. From Peace-Through-Strength to Peace-Through-Denuclearization: A Cognitive Analysis of Ronald Reagan's Soviet Policy. 1993.
McClelland, Doug. Hollywood on Ronald Reagan: Friends and Enemies Discuss Our President, the Actor. Winchester, MA: Faber and Faber, 1983.
McClure, Arthur F.; Rice, C. David; Stewart, William T. Ronald Reagan, His First Career: A Bibliography of the Movie Years. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 1988.
McIntyre, Angus. Aging and Political Leadership. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1988.
McMahan, Jeff. Reagan and the World: Imperial Policy in the New Cold War. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1985.
Meese, Edwin. With Reagan: The Inside Story. Washington, DC: Lanham, MD: Regnery Gateway; Distributed to the trade by National Book Network, 1992.
Meeting on the Economic Policy Of President Reagan, One Year Later (1982: Florence, Italy). Florence, Italy: Banca Toscana, 1982.
Mervin, David. Ronald Reagan and the American Presidency. London; New York: Longman, 1990.
Merzbach, Scott F. The Right-Wing Agenda: How the Communications Staff Impacted the Successes and Failures of the Reagan Administration. 1997.
Message (Modified Budget): by Ronald Reagan, Governor of California, 1967-68 Budget Transmitted to the California Legislature, Tuesday, March 28, 1967. California. Governor. Sacramento, CA: 1967.
Metcalf, Robert L. A Critical Analysis of Ronald Reagan's Address to the Nation on the Challenger Disaster. 1994.
Metzger, Robert P. Reagan: American Icon. Lewisburg, PA: Philadelphia, Pa: Bucknell University; Distributed by University of Pennsylvania Press, 1989.
Meyerson, Adam. The Great Rejuvenator, The Best of Ronald Reagan's Speeches. 1988 In: Policy Review. No. 46 (fall 1988).
Miers, Earl Schenck; Dersh, Stanley; Granger, Paul. America and Its Presidents. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1982.
Milkis, Sidney M.; Nelson, Michael. The American Presidency: Origins and Development, 1776-1998. Washington, DC: CQ Press, 1999.
Miller, Terry J. Ronald Reagan: A Coloring Biography of Our Fortieth President. Hanover, IL: Miller Publications, 1981.
Milton, Arthur. A Nation Saved: Thank You, President Reagan. Secaucus, N.J: Citadel Press, 1983.
Milton, Raleigh E. Meeting Name: Republican National Convention (32nd: 1980 July 14-17: Detroit, Mich.). Official Report of the Proceedings of the Thirty-Second Republican National Convention, Held in Detroit, Michigan, July 14, 15, 16, 17, 1980, Resulting in the Nomination of Ronald W. Reagan, of California, for President, and the Nomination of George H.W. Bush, of Texas, for Vice President. Washington, DC: Republican National Committee, 1980 1989.
Milton, Raleigh E. Meeting Name: Republican National Convention (33rd: 1984: Dallas, Tex.). Official Report of the Proceedings of the Thirty-Third Republican National Convention, Held in Dallas, Texas, August 20, 21, 22, 23, 1984: Resulting in the Nomination of Ronald W. Reagan, of California, for President, and the Nomination of George H.W. Bush, of Texas, for Vice President. Washington, DC: Republican National Committee, 1987.
Miner, Michael. The Great Pacifier: [Ronald Reagan]. 1986 In: Express. Vol. 8, no. 19 [i.e., 20] (Feb. 21, 1986).
Minor, Robert S. The Rebirth of a Nation: With a Bill of Rights for America's Third Century. Annandale, VA: Third Century Fund, 1978.
Mintz, Morton; Mintz, Anita F. President Ron's Appointment Book. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1988.
Moldea, Dan E. Dark Victory: Ronald Reagan, MCA, and the Mob. New York: Penguin, 1987.
Morley, Morris H. Crisis and Confrontation: Ronald Reagan's Foreign Policy. Totowa, N.J: Rowman & Littlefield, 1988.
Morris, Edmund. Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald Reagan. New York: Modern Library, 1999.
Morris, Gabrielle S.; Beach, Edwin W.; and others. California State Department of Finance and Governor Ronald Reagan. Berkeley: Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Government History Documentation Project, 1986.
Morris, Gabrielle S.; Sharp, Sarah Lee. Appointments, Cabinet Management, and Policy Research for Governor Ronald Reagan, 1967-1974. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, the Bancroft Library, University of California, 1983.
Morris, Gabrielle; Sharp, Sarah Lee. Services for Californians: Executive Department Issues in the Reagan Administration, 1967-1974. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, the Bancroft Library, University of California, 1986.
Morris, Jeffrey Brandon. The Reagan Way. Minneapolis: Lerner.
Moss, Ambler H. Reflections On U.S. Policy toward Central America: The Transition from Carter to Reagan. Coral Gables, FL: Institute of Interamerican Studies, Center for Advanced International Studies, University of Miami, 1983.
Muir, William Ker. The Bully Pulpit: The Presidential Leadership of Ronald Reagan. San Francisco: ICS Press, 1992.
Mumford, Catherine M.; Reagan, Ronald; Mumford, Donald W. A Visitor for Commencement: President Ronald Reagan's Address to the Graduating Class of 1986 at Glassboro High School, June 19, 1986. Glassboro, N.J: Mumford?, 1988.
Murray, Robert K.; Blessing, Tim H. Greatness in the White House: Rating the Presidents. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994.
Nakjavani, Kirsten Greta. Reagan and Radio Marti: Old Questions, New Answers? 1989.
A New Beginning: Ronald Reagan: The First Four Years. Charlottesville, VA: The Committee, 1985.
Nickel, Steven Karl. Ronald Reagan's Uses of Lanuage, A Study of Rhetorical Style. Chico, CA: 1974.
Niskanen, William A.; Moore, Stephen. Supply-Side Tax Cuts and the Truth about the Reagan Economic Record. Washington, DC: Cato Institute, 1996.
Noonan, Peggy. When Character was King: A Story of Ronald Reagan. New York: Random House Large Print, 2001 2001.
Noonan, Peggy. What I Saw at the Revolution: A Political Life in the Reagan Era. New York: Ballantine Books, 1997 1990.
Norman-Major, Kristen A. Beyond the Reagan Doctrine: Frameworks, Legitimacy and Leadership in Inter-American Relations in the Post-Cold War Era. 1996.
O'Donoghue, Dan. Had Ronald Reagan Not Come! 1997.
Oksenberg, Michel. President Reagan's China Trip: A Background Paper. New York, NY: China Council of the Asia Society, 1984.
O'Leary, Jeremiah. Ronald Reagan: Biography. Washington, DC. (209 C St., NE, Washington 20002): Political Profiles, 1984.
O'Neill, Dan; Flynn, Raymond L. Farewell to the Gipper. Forestville, CA: Eclipse Books, 1988.
Orman, John M. Comparing Presidential Behavior: Carter, Reagan, and the Macho Presidential Style. New York: Greenwood Press, 1987.
Ornstein, Norman J. President and Congress: Assessing Reagan's First Year. Washington, DC: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 1982.
Overby, Peter. The Politics of Mine-ing: Ronald Reagan and Ed Meese Left Behind a Movement That Could Threaten Environmental, Health and Safety Regulations: [The Regulatory Takings Issue Involving Private Property Rights, Unfunded Federal Mandates and Risk Assessment]. 1994 In: Common Cause. Vol. 20, no. 2 (summer 1994).
Oye, Kenneth A.; Lieber, Robert J. Eagle Resurgent?: The Reagan Era in American Foreign Policy. Boston: Little, Brown, 1987.
Palecek, Joan E. Ronald W. Reagan: Strategies of Humor. 1988.
Palmer, John Logan; Sawhill, Isabel V. Perspectives on the Reagan Experiment. Washington, DC: Urban Institute, 1982.
Palmer, John Logan; Sawhill, Isabel V. The Reagan Record: An Overview. 1984 In: Policy and Research Report. Vol. 14, no. 1 (Aug. 1984).
Papritz, Carew; Tremayne, Russ. Reagancomics: A Cornucopia of Cartoons on Ronald Reagan. Seattle: Emeryville, CA: Khyber Press; Distributor, Publishers Group West, 1984.
Parish, James Robert; Stanke, Don E.; Pitts, Michael R. The All-Americans. New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House, 1977.
Parker, Richard. The Reagan Doctrine and Central America, 1980-1988. 1990.
Parr, Nancy; McGrew, Ruth. The Real Ronald Reagan. San Francisco, CA: Reagan Book, Box B, Diamond Heights Station, 1968.
Parry, Robert. The October Surprise X-Files: The Hidden Origins of the Reagan-Bush Era. Arlington, VA: Media Consortium, 1996.
Peich, Brent; Peich, Michael. The Blind Leader. West Chester, PA: Capuchine Press, 1985.
Pemberton, William E. Exit with Honor: The Life and Presidency of Ronald Reagan. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1998.
The People, the Press and Politics: A Times Mirror Study of the American Electorate. Los Angeles, CA: Times Mirror Company, 1987 1988.
Perspectives on the Reagan Presidency: An Analysis of a Times Mirror Survey Conducted by the Gallup Organization. Los Angeles, CA: Times Mirror, 1988.
Pester, Suzanne Rae. Ronald Reagan and Civil Rights: A Rhetorical Study of Omission. 1993.
Peterson, Christian P. Ronald Reagan and Public Antinuclear Sentiment: Hopes, Dreams, and Nuclear Bombs. 2001.
Petris, Nicholas; Huff, Martin; Manolis, Paul; and others. Dean of the California Legislature, 1958-1996: 1996. Oral History Transcript. 1996.
Pettenger, Mary Elizabeth. The Challenge of the Reagan Doctrine. 1988.
Peyer, Tom; Seely, Hart. Ronald Reagan's Contradictionary of the American Language. Boston: Quinlan Press, 1988.
Pierce, Peter W. The Presidential Journey of Ronald Wilson Reagan. Ontario, CA: Scholl, 1980.
Pines, Burton Yale. The Ten Legacies of Ronald Reagan. Washington, DC: Heritage Foundation, 1988.
Plog, Stanley C.; Stern, Stephen. More Than Just an Actor: The Early Campaigns of Ronald Reagan. Los Angeles, CA: Oral History Program, Powell Library, University of California, 1981.
Podhoretz, Norman; Maynes, Charles William; Valenta, Jiri. Terrorism -- Reagan's Response. Coral Gables, FL: North-South Center, University of Miami, 1986.
Pollack, Stephanie; Coling, George; Grozuczak, JoAnn. Reagan, Toxics and Minorities: A Policy Report by the Urban Environment Conference, Inc. Washington, DC: The Conference, 1984.
Post, A. Alan; King, Warren; and others. Organizational and Fiscal Views of the Reagan Administration. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, 1984.
Potts, Kimberly. All the Media's a Stage: Ronald Reagan's Relationship to the Press. 1994.
Powell, Dwane; Adams, Steve. The Reagan Chronicles: A Cartoon Carnival. Chapel Hill, N.C: Dallas, TX: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill; Taylor Publishing Company, 1987.
President Reagan. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly, 1981.
President Reagan and American Foreign Policy. London: Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1981.
A Presidential Visit to the Park. Charlotte, NC: The Companies, 1985.
The Presidents and Their Wives: From George Washington to Ronald Wilson Reagan. Bethesda, MD: C.M. Uberman Enterprises, 1987.
Presidents of the United States: George Washington through Ronald Reagan. Los Angeles, CA: Cameron McKay Production, 1982.
The Press and the Presidency; The Press and Congress; The Press in Peril. Meeting Name: Times Mirror Forum (1986: Washington, DC). Los Angeles: Times Mirror, 1986.
Preston, C. Thomas. A Rhetorical Analysis of Ronald Reagan's November 18, 1981, Address on Strategic Arms Reduction. 1986.
Principal Officials of the Executive Branch of the Administration of Ronald Reagan, Appointed January 20-April 30, 1981: Supplement 4, U.S. Government Manual, 1980/81. Washington, DC: Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration: for sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office 1981.
Principal Officials of the Executive Branch of the Administration of Ronald Reagan Appointed January 20--February 20, 1981. United States. Office of the Federal Register.
Principal Officials of the Executive Branch of the Administration of Ronald Reagan: Appointed January 20-April 3, 1981. United States. Office of the Federal Register. Washington, DC: Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration: For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1981
A Profile of Judicial Appointments in the Reagan Administration: A Breakdown by Gender and Minority Group. Washington, DC: Common Cause, 1987.
Providing for the Consideration of S. 1575, The Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Report (To Accompany H. Res. 349). United States. Congress. House. Committee on Rules. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1998.
Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Ronald Reagan, 1984. Reagan, Ronald. United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1986.
Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, Ronald Reagan: 1986 (In Two Books). United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1988 1989.
Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, Ronald Reagan: 1987 (In Two Books). United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1989.
Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Ronald Reagan, 1988. Reagan, Ronald. United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Washington, DC: Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration: For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Govt. Print. Office, 1990.
Pumpianskii, Aleksandr. On the Way to the Summit: Did Reykjavik Bring a Summit in Washington and Nuclear Disarmament Any Closer?. Moscow: Novosti Press Agency Publishing House, 1987.
Purdy, Michael W. The Political Image of Ronald Reagan in the 1966 California Gubernatorial Campaign. 1968.
Rademacher, Thea Renee. A Critical Analysis of Ronald Reagan's Environmental Rhetoric. 1986.
Ranney, Austin. The American Elections of 1980. Washington, DC: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 1981.
Ranney, Austin. The American Elections of 1984. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1985.
Raphael, Tim. The King is a Thing: Bodies of Memory in the Age of Reagan. 1999 In: Drama Review. Cambridge, MA: v. 43, no. 1, T161 (spring 1999), p. 46-58. ill.
Raphael, Timothy. Becoming Pictures, Identifying Sounds, Remembering Bodies: Ronald Reagan and the Political Economy of Performance. 2001.
Rasmussen, Della Mae; Colonna, Phyllis; Krause, Stephen P. The Power of Determination: Featuring the Story of Ronald Reagan. Antioch, CA: Eagle Systems International, 1981.
Ray, Cynthia. Gorbachev and Reagan: A Burkean Analysis of Post-Reykjavik Rhetoric. 1991.
Rayack, Elton. Not So Free to Choose: The Political Economy of Milton Friedman and Ronald Reagan. New York: Praeger, 1987.
The Reagan Administration and Israel: Key Statements. Washington, DC: American Israel Public Affairs Committee, 1987.
The Reagan Administration and the News Media. Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. Washington, DC: The Committee, 1987.
The Reagan File: A Data Center Press Profile. Oakland, CA: Data Center, 1980.
Reagan, the Man, the President. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1981 1980.
Reagan and Public Discourse in America. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press, 1992.
Reagan, Maureen. First Father, First Daughter: A Memoir. Boston: Little, Brown, 1989.
Reagan, Michael; Denney, James D. Making Waves. Nashville, TN: T. Nelson Publishers, 1996.
Reagan, Michael; Denney, James D. The City on a Hill: Fulfilling Ronald Reagan's Vision for America. Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1997.
Reagan, Michael; Hyams, Joe. On the Outside Looking in. New York, NY: Zebra Books, 1988.
Reagan, Neil; Stern, Stephen. Private Dimensions and Public Images: The Early Political Campaigns of Ronald Reagan. Los Angeles, CA: Oral History Program, Powell Library, University of California, 1981.
Reagan, Ronald. Ronald Reagan, Honorary Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Speaks on United States Foreign Policy and World Realities to the Foreign Policy Association, New York City, June 9, 1977. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution, Standford University, 1977.
Reagan, Ronald; Skinner, Kiron K.; Anderson, Annelise; and others. Reagan, in His Own Hand: The Writings of Ronald Reagan That Reveal His Revolutionary Vision for America. London: Simon & Schuster, 2001.
Reagan, Ronald; Skinner, Kiron K.; Anderson, Annelise Graebner; and others. Stories in His Own Hand: The Everyday Wisdom of Ronald Reagan; Edited with an Introduction and Commentary by Kiron K. Skinner, Annelise Anderson, Martin Anderson; Foreword by George P. Shultz. New York: Free Press, 2001.
Reagan, Ronald. An American Life. Norwalk, CT: Easton Press, 1992 1990.
Reagan, Ronald. I Goofed: The Wise and Curious Sayings of Ronald Reagan, 33rd Governor of California. Berkeley, CA: Diablo Press 1968.
Reagan, Ronald. My Story. London: Hutchinson, 1990.
Reagan, Ronald. Promises: A Progress Report on President Reagan's First Year. Washington, DC: Communications Division, Republican National Committee, 1982.
Reagan, Ronald. Reagan on Cuba: Selected Statements. Washington, DC. (1000 Thomas Jefferson St., N.W., Suite 601, Washington 20007): Cuban-American National Foundation, 1986.
Reagan, Ronald. Rendezvous with Destiny. Salt Lake City: Osmond Publishing Company, 1981.
Reagan, Ronald. Ronald Reagan Talks to America. Old Greenwich, CT: Devin Adair Company, 1983.
Reagan, Ronald. Ronald Reagan Tells His Own Story. New York: Dell, 1965.
Reagan, Ronald. Ronald Reagan, 1986: In Two Books. Washington: Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration: For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1988.
Reagan, Ronald. Ronald Reagan: File of Clippings and Miscellanea. 1970 9999.
Reagan, Ronald. Speaking My Mind: Selected Speeches. London: Hutchinson, 1990.
Reagan, Ronald. The 1980 Campaign Promises of Ronald Reagan. Washington, DC. (400 North Capitol St., N.W., Suite 319, Washington.
Reagan, Ronald. The Official Ronald Wilson Reagan Quote Book. [St. Louis Park, Minn.]: Chain-Pinkham Books, 1980.
Reagan, Ronald. The Quotable Ronald Reagan: The Common Sense and Straight Talk of Former California Governor, Ronald Reagan. San Diego: JRH & Associates, 1975.
Reagan, Ronald. United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Ronald Reagan; 1985 (In Two Books). GPO, 1988.
Reagan, Ronald. United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, Ronald Reagan, 1982. Washington: GPO, 1983.
Reagan, Ronald. United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, Ronald Reagan, 1983. Washington: GPO, 1985.
Reagan, Ronald. United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, Ronald Reagan, 1984. Washington: GPO, 1986.
Reagan, Ronald. United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, Ronald Reagan, 1987. Washington,: GPO, 1989.
Reagan, Ronald. United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, Ronald Reagan, 1988. Washington,: GPO, 1990.
Reagan, Ronald. United States. President (1981-1989: Reagan). Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, Ronald Reagan: 1981-1988-89. Washington.
Reagan, Ronald; Adler, Bill. The Uncommon Wisdom of Ronald Reagan: A Portrait in His Own Words. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1996.
Reagan, Ronald; Adler, Bill; Adler, Bill. The Reagan Wit: The Humor of the American President. New York: William Morrow, 1998.
Reagan, Ronald; Brady, James S.; Hickey, Michael P. Ronald Reagan, A Man True to His Word. Washington, DC: National Federation of Republican Women, 1984.
Reagan, Ronald; Cassell, Clark. The President's Point of View: Ronald Reagan Speaks. Washington, DC: Braddock Publications, 1984.
Reagan, Ronald; De Pauw, Gommar A. Dicta on Faith and Morality by Ronald W. Reagan: Keep The Faith! Westbury, NY: Catholic Traditionalist Movement, 1993.
Reagan, Ronald; Denton, James S.; Schweizer, Peter. Grinning with the Gipper: A Celebration of the Wit, Wisdom, and Wisecracks of Ronald Reagan. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1988.
Reagan, Ronald; Eubanks, Steve. Quotable Reagan: Words of Wit, Wisdom & Statesmanship by and about Ronald Reagan, America's Great Communicator. Nashville, Tenn: Lanham, MD: TowleHouse Pub.; Distributed by National Book Network, 2001.
Reagan, Ronald; Felten, D. Erik. A Shining City: The Legacy of Ronald Reagan: [Speeches by and Tributes to]. Norwalk, CT: Easton Press, 1998.
Reagan, Ronald; Hannaford, Peter. The Quotable Ronald Reagan. Washington, DC: Lanham, MD: Regnery Pub.; Distributed to the trade by National Book Network 1998.
Reagan, Ronald; Hobbs, Charles D. Ronald Reagan's Call to Action. New York: Warner, 1976.
Reagan, Ronald; Houck, Davis W.; Kiewe, Amos. Actor, Ideologue, Politician: The Public Speeches of Ronald Reagan. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1993.
Reagan, Ronald; Hubler, Richard G. My Early Life, or, Where's the Rest of Me?. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1984 1965.
Reagan, Ronald; Hubler, Richard Gibson. Where's the Rest of Me?:T he Autobiography of Ronald Reagan. New York: Karz Publishers, 1981.
Reagan, Ronald; Mintz, Morton; Mintz, Margaret. Quotations from President Ron. London: Futura, 1987.
Reagan, Ronald; Reagan, Michael; Denney, James D. The Common Sense of an Uncommon Man: The Wit, Wisdom, and Eternal Optimism of Ronald Reagan. Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1998.
Reagan, Ronald; Ryan, Frederick J. Ronald Reagan: The Great Communicator. New York: Perennial, 2001.
Reagan, Ronald; Shepherd, David R. Ronald Reagan: In God I Trust. Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 1984.
Reagan, Ronald; Troxler, L. William. Along Wit's Trail: The Humor and Wisdom of Ronald Reagan. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1984 1983.
Reagan's First Year. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Inc., 1982.
Reagan, The Next Four Years. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Inc., 1985.
Reagan Record and the Task Ahead. Washington, DC: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 1988.
Reagan's Foreign Policy. Data Center. Oakland, CA: Data Center, 1981.
Reeves, Richard. Old Faces of 1976: A Few Thousand Fairly Well-Chosen Words on Jerry Ford, Nelson Rockefeller, Teddy Kennedy, George Wallace, Hubert Humphrey, Ronald Reagan, Ed Muskie, Scoop Jackson, George Mcgovern, Hugh Carey, Abe Beame, Jack Javits, Jerry Brown, and Some Other Men You Probably Wouldn't Want Your Daughter to Marry. New York: Harper & Row, 1976.
Reeves, Richard. The Reagan Detour. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1985.
Renstrom, Mary Frances. Prying Apart Ronald Reagan's Image: Depiction as Subversive Form. 1990.
Reynolds, Brad. The Visit: May 2, 1984: The Day the Pope and the President Came to Fairbanks. Fairbanks, AK: s.n., 1984.
Rice, Charles E. Reagan and the Courts: Prospects for Judicial Reform. Washington, DC. (1612 K St., N.W., Washington 20006): Washington Legal Foundation, 1980.
Richardson, Michael W. The War Over Star Wars: Ideology and the Strategic Defense Initiative. 2000.
Richman, Sheldon L. The Reagan Record on Trade: Rhetoric vs. Reality. Washington, DC: Cato Institute, 1988.
Ritter, Kurt W. The 1980 Presidential Debates. Lawrence, KS: Allen Press, 1981 1981.
Robbins, Neal E. Ronald W. Reagan, 40th President of fhe United States. Louisville, KY: American Printing House for the Blind, 1991.
Roberts, Steven Roger. The War Powers Act Through The Reagan Years: A Continuing Question of Validity. 1992.
Roberts, Steven V. Eureka. Earthquakes, Chicanos, Celebrities, Smog, Fads, Outdoor Living, Charles Manson's Legacy, Berkeley Rebels, San Francisco Scenes, Southern California Style, Ronald Reagan and Other Discoveries in the Golden State of California. New York: Quadrangle/New York Times Book Co. 1974.
The ROC and Reagan: A Collection of Editorials of the China News (January--August 1981). Taipei, Taiwan: China News, 1980 1983.
Ronald Reagan and the American Environment: An Indictment, Alternate Budget Proposal, and Citizen's Guide to Action. Andover, MA: Brick House Publishing Company, 1982.
Ronald Reagan: An American Hero: His Voice, His Values, His Vision. London; New York: DK, 2001.
Ronald Reagan: First Inaugural Address. U.S. Inaugural Addresses. Bartleby 2000.
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. Preliminary List of Presidential Records and Historical Materials in the Ronald Reagan Library. Simi Valley, CA: Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, 1994.
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. Preliminary List of Presidential Records and Historical Materials in the Ronald Reagan Library. Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. Simi Valley, CA: Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, 1996.
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Preliminary List of Presidential Records and Historical Materials in the Ronald Reagan Library. Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. Simi Valley, CA: Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, 1999.
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. Reagan Presidential Records and Historical Materials Currently Available for Research (As Of April 4, 1997). Simi Valley, CA: Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, 1997.
Roosevelt, Selwa. Keeper of the Gate. London: Quartet, 1992.
Rosati, Jerel A. Readings in the Politics of U.S. Foreign Policy. Fort Worth, TX: Harcourt Brace College Publishers, 1998.
Rosenthal, Paul Edward. From Eternity to Here: A Mythic Critique of Ronald Reagan's America. 1990.
Ross, John Wallace. Reaganizing the Government: Administrative Tactics under Reagan. 1983.
Round, Michael A. Grounded: Reagan and the PATCO Crash. New York: Garland Publishing, 1999.
Rowan, William W. Voice and Personality: A Descriptive Analysis of the Carter and Reagan Debate. 1986.
Rowse, Arthur E. One Sweet Guy, and What He is Doing to You. Washington, DC: Consumer News, 1981.
Rutkus, Denis Steven. President Reagan, The Opposition and Access to Network Airtime. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 1984.
Ryan, Frederick J. Ronald Reagan. New York: London: HarperCollins World; Hi Marketing, 2001.
Ryan, Halford Ross. U.S. Presidents as Orators: A Bio-Critical Sourcebook. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1995.
Ryan, Halford Ross. Oratorical Encounters: Selected Studies and Sources of Twentieth-Century Political Accusations and Apologies. New York: Greenwood Press, 1988.
Sandak, Cass R. The Reagans. New York: Toronto: New York: Crestwood House; Maxwell Macmillan Canada; Maxwell Macmillan International, 1993.
Sasala, Stephen Richard. A Case Study of Ronald Reagan's October 27, 1964 Address: "A Time for Choosing". 1967.
Savage, James D. Balanced Budgets and American Politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1990.
Savoie, Donald J. Thatcher, Reagan, Mulroney: In Search of a New Bureaucracy. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1994.
Schaller, Michael. Reckoning with Reagan: America and Its President in the 1980s. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992.
Schlesinger, Arthur Meier. Ronald Reagan: U.S. President. New York: Chelsea House, 1989.
Schmertz, Eric J.; Datlof, Natalie. President Reagan and the World. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1997.
Schmertz, Eric J.; Datlof, Natalie. Ronald Reagan's America. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1997.
Schneider, William. The Political Legacy of The Reagan Years. Berlin: John F. Kennedy-Institut für Nordamerikastudien der Freien Universität Berlin, 1988.
Schoenwald, Jonathan M. A Time for Choosing: The Rise of Modern American Conservatism. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001.
Schroyer-Portillo, Janet. Civil Rights in Crisis: The Reagan Administration's Reforms. Washington, DC. National Council of La Raza, Office of Research, Advocacy and Legislation, 1984.
Schwartzberg, Renée. Ronald Reagan. New York: Chelsea House, 1991.
Schweizer, Peter. The Fall of the Berlin Wall: Reassessing the Causes and Consequences of the End of the Cold War. Stanford, CA: Washington, DC: Hoover Institution Press; William J. Casey Institute of the Center for Security Policy, 2000.
Schwennesen, Bill. The 1980 Presidential Election: A Mandate for Reagan or a Rejection of Carter? 1982.
Scofield, Edward. Reagan, "B" Actor, "A" President? Hollywood, CA: American Progress Enterprises, 1983.
Scott, James M. American Foreign Policy-Making and the Reagan Doctrine. 1993.
Segall, J. Peter. Deduct This Book!: How Not to Pay Taxes While Ronald Reagan is President. Washington, DC: Involvement Group Press, 1982.
Seib, Kenneth. The Slow Death of Fresno State: A California Campus under Reagan and Brown. Palo Alto, CA: Ramparts Press, 1979.
Selecting a President: A Citizen Guide to the 1980 Election. Citizen Research Group. Washington, DC: Public Citizen: distributed by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1980.
Shanley, Robert A. Presidential Influence and Environmental Policy. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1992.
Shapiro, Peter Jon. A Content Analysis of Reporting Styles: U. S. National Network Television News and the Attempted Assassination of President Ronald Reagan. 1983.
Sharp, Sarah Lee. Legislative Issue Management and Advocacy, 1961-1974. Berkeley, CA: Regional Oral History Office, 1983.
Shepler, Michael; Shepler, Michael. Ronnie and Nancy. Lafayette, CA: Hit & Run Press, 1980 1997.
Shimko, Keith L. Images and Arms Control: Perceptions of the Soviet Union in the Reagan Administration. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1991.
Short, C. Brant. Ronald Reagan and the Public Lands: America's Conservation Debate, 1979-1984. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, 1989.
Shull, Steven A. American Civil Rights Policy from Truman to Clinton: The Role of Presidential Leadership. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1999.
Shull, Steven A. A Kinder, Gentler Racism?: The Reagan-Bush Civil Rights Legacy. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1993.
Shvedkov, IU. A. Reaganism, An All Out Challenge to the World: Words, Deeds, and Comments. Moscow: Novosti Press Agency Publishing House, 1984.
Sick, Gary. October Surprise: America's Hostages in Iran and the Election of Ronald Reagan. London; New York: I. B. Tauris, 1991.
Simons, Herbert W.; Aghazarian, Aram A. Form, Genre, and the Study of Political Discourse. Columbia, S.C: University of South Carolina Press, 1986.
Sklar, Holly. Reagan, Trilateralism, and the Neoliberals: Containment and Intervention in the 1980s. Boston, MA: South End Press, 1986.
Skoug, Kenneth N. The United States and Cuba under Reagan and Shultz: A Foreign Service Officer Reports. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1996.
Slansky, Paul. The Clothes Have No Emperor: A Chronicle of the American '80s. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1989.
Sloan, Irving J. Ronald W. Reagan, 1911-: Chronology, Documents, Bibliographical Aids. Dobbs Ferry, NY: Oceana Publications, 1990.
Sloan, John W. The Reagan Effect: Economics and Presidential Leadership. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1999.
Slosser, Bob. Reagan Inside Out. Waco, TX: Word Books, 1984.
Smaragdis, George. There You Go Again: An Analysis of Jimmy Carter's Debate Tactics in His Debate with Ronald Reagan. 1996.
Smith, David N.; Gebbie, Melinda. Reagan for Beginners. New York, NY: Writers and Readers; Distributed in the USA by W.W. Norton, 1984.
Smith, Geoffrey. Reagan and Thatcher. New York: W.W. Norton, 1991.
Smith, George H. Who is Ronald Reagan? New York, Pyramid Books 1968.
Smith, Sandra L. The Rhetorical Presidency of Ronald Reagan: A Narrative Analysis of Televised Addresses. 1992.
Smith, T. Burton; Henderson, Carter F. White House Doctor. Lanham, MD: Madison Books: Distributed by National Book Network, 1992.
Smith, William French; Morris, Gabrielle S. Evolution of the Kitchen Cabinet, 1965-1973. Berkeley: Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Government History Documentation Project, 1989.
Souza, Pete. Unguarded Moments: Behind-the-Scenes Photographs of President Ronald Reagan. Fort Worth, TX: Summit Group, 1992.
Spada, James. Ronald Reagan: His Life in Pictures. New York: Maidenhead: St. Martin's; Melia, 2001.
Speakes, Larry; Pack, Robert. Speaking Out: The Reagan Presidency from Inside the White House. New York: Avon Books, 1989 1988.
Spring, B. Removing The ABM Treaty Obstacle to U.S. and Soviet Defenses Against Missiles. Washington, DC: Heritage Foundation, 1991.
Sproesser, Louis. The Hinckley Conspiracy: The 1981 Plot to Assassinate President Ronald Reagan: A Special Report. Enfield, CT: Southern New England Assassination Research and Information Center, 1990 1999.
Statement of Governor Ronald Reagan to the Special Subcommittee on Education of the Committee on Education and Labor of the U.S. House of Representatives, Delivered on March 19, 1969. California. Governor (1967-1975: Reagan). Sacramento, CA: Office of the Governor, 1969.
Staten-Luyken, Joyce. President Ronald Reagan on Affirmative Action: A Metaphoric Analysis. 1995.
Steffgen, Kent H. Here's The Rest of Him. Reno, NV: Forsight Books, 1968.
Strober, Deborah H.; Strober, Gerald S. Reagan: The Man and His Presidency. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1998.
Strock, James M. Reagan on Leadership: Executive Lessons from the Great Communicator. Rocklin, CA: Forum, 1998.
Stuckey, Mary E. Getting into the Game: The Pre-Presidential Rhetoric of Ronald Reagan. New York: Praeger, 1989.
Stuckey, Mary E. Playing the Game: The Presidential Rhetoric of Ronald Reagan. New York: Praeger, 1990.
Sullivan, George. Ronald Reagan. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: J. Messner, 1991.
Sullivan, Robert. Ronald Reagan: A Life in Pictures. New York, NY: Life Books, 2000.
Sutherland, Roxane Yvonne. Defusing a Rhetorical Situation Through Apologia: Ronald Reagan and the Iran-Contra Affair. 1992.
Talbott, Strobe. The Russians and Reagan. New York: Vintage Books, 1984.
Talking Points on the Reagan Record on Domestic Issues: A Special Report. Washington, DC: Communications Division, Republican National Committee, 1983.
Task Force on Dismantling the Department of Energy: Photocopies from the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library: Cabinet Council on Natural Resources and the Environment, December 1981. Cabinet Council on Natural Resources and the Environment (U.S.). Task Force on Dismantling the Department of Energy. 1997 1981.
Taylor, Ellen North. The Threat and Reassurance of Ronald Reagan's Presidency. 1989.
Text of State-of-the-State Message to a Joint Session of the California State Legislature: By Governor Ronald Reagan, January 9, 1969. Sacramento, CA: 1968.
Thayer, Allen. Political Metaphors in President Ronald Reagan's State of the Union Addresses, 1982-1987. 1991.
Thomas, Cathy L. A Comparison of the Rhetorical Visions of Ronald Reagan: First Term Versus Second Term. 1993.
Thomas, Tony. The Films of Ronald Reagan. Secaucus, N.J: Citadel Press, 1980.
Thompson, Helen E. Politics, Lies and Videotapes: Ronald Reagan, Televisual Government and the Crisis of Legitimacy. 1989.
Thompson, Kenneth W. Foreign Policy in the Reagan Presidency: Nine Intimate Perspectives: Sterling Kernek, Caspar Weinberger, Max M. Kampelman, Dwight Ink, Paul H. Nitze, John C. Whitehead, Elliott Abrams,Paul H. Nitze, Don Oberdorfer. Lanham, MD; London: University Press of America, 1993.
Thompson, Kenneth W. The Reagan Presidency: Ten Intimate Perspectives of Ronald Reagan. Lanham, MD: Charlottesville, VA: University Press of America; Miller Center, University of Virginia, 1997.
Thompson, Kenneth W.; Cormier, Frank; and others. The White House Press on the Presidency: News Management and Co-Option. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1983.
Thomsen, Paul; Thompson, Brian. Operation Rawhide: The Dramatic Emergency Surgery on President Reagan. Santee, CA: Institute for Creation Research, 1997.
Tierney, Tom. Ronald Reagan Paper Dolls in Full Color. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 1984.
Tobin, James; Weidenbaum, Murray L. Two Revolutions in Economic Policy: The First Economic Reports of Presidents Kennedy and Reagan. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1988.
Toles, Tom. Mr. Gazoo: A Cartoon History of the Reagan Era. New York: Pantheon Books, 1987.
Torr, James D. Ronald Reagan. San Diego, CA: Greenhaven Press, 2001.
Torres, Alicia Maria. Presidential Television in the Reagan Era: Network Coverage of Cuba's Role in the Central American Conflict, 1981-1984. 1990.
Trimble, Vance H. Reagan, The Man from Main Street USA. Cincinnati (358 Oliver Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45215): Mosaic Press, 1980.
The Trip of President Reagan to Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, and Honduras: November 30-December 4, 1982, Press Information Packet. Washington, DC: 1982.
Tucker, Robert W.; Krauthammer, Charles; Thompson, Kenneth W. Intervention and the Reagan Doctrine. New York, NY: Council on Religion and International Affairs, 1985.
Two Revolutions in Economic Policy: The First Economic Reports of Presidents Kennedy and Reagan. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1988.
U.S. Foreign Policy: The Reagan Imprint. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly, 1986.
Valis, Wayne. The Future under President Reagan. Westport, CT: Arlington House Publishers, 1981.
Van der Linden, Frank. The Real Reagan: What He Believes, What He Has Accomplished, What We Can Expect from Him. New York: Morrow, 1981.
Vander Jagt, Guy. A Country Worth Saving. Ottawa, IL: Jameson Books, 1984.
Vaughn, Stephen. Ronald Reagan in Hollywood: Movies and Politics. Cambridge [England]; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994.
Vedung, Evert. The Scandinavian Reaction to Ronald Reagan and Reaganomics. Uppsala [Sweden]: Distribution, Uppsala University, Dept. of Government, 1982.
Voas, Jeanette. Statements by President Reagan Relating to Arms Control September 1, 1984 - February 1, 1985. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 1985.
Von Damm, Helene. At Reagan's Side. New York: Doubleday, 1989.
Von Damm, Helene, 1938-; Reagan, Ronald. Sincerely, Ronald Reagan. New York: Berkley Books, 1983 1980.
Walker, Thomas W. Reagan Versus the Sandinistas: The Undeclared War on Nicaragua. Boulder: Westview Press, 1987.
Wallace, Geoffrey Michael. Competition, Cooperation, Roles and Rules of Institutional Discourse in the Presidential News Conference. 1993.
Walsh, Kenneth T. Ronald Reagan. New York: Park Lane Press: A&E Books, 1997.
Weeks, Jennifer R. Containment Begins at Home: The Roots of the Reagan Doctrine. 1987.
Weidenbaum, Murray L.; Thompson, Kenneth W. Reagan and the Economy: Nine Intimate Perspectives. Lanham: Charlottesville, Va: University Press of America; Miller Center, 1994.
We The People: An American Celebration, 1985 Presidential Inauguration: Pictorial History of the 50th American Presidential Inaugural and Events Leading up to It. Washington, DC: 1985 Presidential Inaugural Committee, 1985.
Wheeler, Michael W. Look at the Reagan Years. Michael W. Wheeler.
Whelan, Joseph G. Andropov and Reagan as Negotiators Contexts and Styles in Contrast. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 1983.
Whelan, Joseph G. The Moscow Summit, 1988:Reagan and Gorbachev in Negotiation. Boulder: Westview Press, 1990.
Whelan, Joseph G. Soviet Diplomacy and Negotiating Behavior--1988-90: Gorbachev-Reagan-Bush Meetings at the Summit. Washington, DC: Committee on Foreign Affairs: For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1991.
Whelan, Joseph G. The Moscow Summit 1988: The Last Gorbachev-Reagan Negotiating Encounter. [Washington, DC.]: Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 1989.
Whelan, Joseph G. Soviet Diplomacy And Negotiating Behavior--1988-90: Gorbachev-Reagan-Bush Meetings at the Summit. Washington, DC: Committee on Foreign Affairs: For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1991.
White, F. Clifton; Gill, William J. Why Reagan Won: A Narrative History of the Conservative Movement, 1964-1981. Chicago, IL: Regnery Gateway, 1981.
White, John Kenneth. The New Politics of Old Values. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1998.
White, Patricia Meade. The Invincible Irish: Ronald Wilson Reagan--Irish Ancestry and Immigration to America. Santa Barbara, CA: Portola Press, 1981.
White, Peggy. Ronald Reagan and Neoconservatism, Preface to Presidency? Göttingen: Muster-Schmidt, 1980.
Wicks, Randy. Wicks Cartoon Collection. 1998.
Wilcox, William Clyde; Allsop, Dee. Economic and Foreign Policy as Sources of Reagan Support. 1991 In: The Western Political Quarterly. Vol. 44, no. 4 (Dec. 1991).
Wille, Brian Carter. Ronald Reagan: From Rhetoric to Responsibility. 1982.
Williams, Walter. Reagan and the Machinery of Government Issue: The First Six Months. Seattle, WA: Institute for Public Policy and Management, University of Washington, Graduate School of Public Affairs, 1981.
Wills, Garry. Reagan's America: Innocents at Home. New York: Penguin Books, 2000 1987.
Wilson, Robert A. Character Above All: Ten Presidents From FDR to George Bush. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995.
Winans, A. D. The Reagan Psalms. San Francisco, CA: Integrity Times Press: Distributor, Second Coming Press, 1984.
Winik, Jay. On the Brink: The Dramatic, Behind-the-Scenes Saga of the Reagan Era and the Men and Women Who Won the Cold War. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996.
Witt, Elder. A Different Justice: Reagan and the Supreme Court. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly, 1986.
Woll, Peter. Behind The Scenes in American Government: Personalities and Politics. Boston: Little, Brown, 1981.
Woodward, Bob. Shadow: Five Presidents and the Legacy of Watergate. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 1999.
Worth, Fred L.; Tamerius, Steve D. The Complete Ronald Reagan: From A to Z. New York: Stein and Day, 1988.
Wright, Donald R.; Grody, Harvey Peyton. Donald R. Wright: A View of Reagan and the California Courts: Interviews. Fullerton, CA: Oral History Program, California State University, Fullerton, 1984.
Wymbs, Norman E. Ronald Reagan's Crusade. Ft. Lauderdale, FL: VYTIS Publishing Company, 1996.
Wymbs, Norman E. A Place to Go Back to: Ronald Reagan in Dixon, Illinois. New York: Vantage Press, 1987.
Young, Dwight; Hanney, Suzanne. Reagan's Dixon. Dixon, IL: Official Dixon Press; Graphic, composition, & production by the Print Shop of Dixon, Illinois, Historical Division, 1980.
Zimmerman, Joseph Francis. Federalism Theory in the Post Reagan Era. Albany, NY: Joseph F. Zimmerman, 1989.
Zucker, Irwin; David, Mark Allen. Ronnie Runs Wild. Los Angeles: M. David, 1976.
................
................
In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.
To fulfill the demand for quickly locating and searching documents.
It is intelligent file search solution for home and business.
Related searches
- pete davidson and his girlfriend
- both yours and his grammar
- the narcissist and his woman
- mendel and his peas
- mendel and his peas answers
- mendel and his peas quizlet
- mendel and his peas quiz
- yours and his grammar
- russell westbrook and his girlfriend
- hitler and his top men
- hitler and his generals
- mendel and his peas ppt