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Reagan and carries
The station is located across Smith Boulevard from the B and C terminals from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport ( DCA ); the airport shuttle bus carries people to and from Terminal A.
In Freedman's scenario, Sadler carries out the agenda pursued by Ronald Reagan of promoting pro-business policies and personnel into federal posts.
A military honor guard carries the casket of former president Ronald Reagan from his presidential library.

Reagan and 49
As Reagan visited Germany as part of the G6 conference in Bonn, the pair visited Bergen-Belsen concentration camp on 5 May, and more controversially the German military cemetery in Bitburg, discovered to hold 49 members of the Waffen-SS buried there.
1980 Jimmy Carter 68, 627 ( 49. 2 %) Ronald Reagan 63, 140 ( 45. 6 %)
Reagan won a landslide victory with 489 votes in the electoral college to Carter's 49.
' 49 served as U. S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under Ronald Reagan.
Deaver was usually very skillful in carrying out his role as public relations maestro for Reagan, but this time he and his team failed to discover that 49 members of the Waffen-SS were buried at Kolmeshöhe.
In 1984 Reagan confirmed his support by winning nearly 60 % of the popular vote and carried 49 of the 50 states.
In the 1984 presidential election, President Ronald Reagan won 49 of 50 states, with Massachusetts being his worst performance ( excluding Mondale's home-state of Minnesota.

Reagan and states
Both authors are staunch conservatives: on his website, Groseclose cites Barry Goldwater, Ronald Reagan, Jack Kemp, Bob Dole, Chris Christie, Newt Gingrich, Phil Gramm, Dick Armey, and Dick Cheney as his political heroes, and states that he usually sides with conservatives on controversial issues.
As early as July 1985, President Reagan had asserted that " we are not going to tolerate … attacks from outlaw states by the strangest collection of misfits, loony tunes, and squalid criminals since the advent of the Third Reich ," but it fell to the Clinton administration to elaborate this concept.
Paul Wolfowitz, the military analyst for the United States Department of Defense under Ronald Reagan, had formulated a new foreign policy with regard to Iraq and other " potential aggressor states ", dismissing " containment " in favor of " preemption ", with the goal of striking first to eliminate threats.
During the Cold War, under Ronald Reagan's Reagan Doctrine, the term freedom fighter was used by the United States and other Western Bloc countries to describe rebels in countries controlled by communist states or otherwise under the influence of the Soviet Union, including rebels in Hungary, the anti-communist Contras in Nicaragua, UNITA in Angola and the multi-factional mujahideen in Afghanistan.
One perceived benefit of the Reagan Doctrine was the relatively low cost of supporting guerilla forces compared to the Soviet Union's expenses in propping up client states.
President Ronald Reagan launched his 1980 presidential campaign from the Neshoba County Fair, delivering a speech about economic policy that drew attention for the use of the phrase " states ' rights " in an area associated with the 1964 murders.
Scholars Diane Blair and Jay L. Barth continue: “ As long as Rockefeller led the Arkansas Republicans, the party had a progressive, reformist cast, and those whom Rockefeller had brought into the party continued to dominate party offices and shape presidential preferences until 1980 ,” when the nomination and election of Ronald W. Reagan of California as president and Frank D. White as governor moved power within the state GOP “ sharply to the right .” Ultimately the growth of the Republican Party was slower in Arkansas than in the other southern states in the post-segregation era.
The hosts are Amber ( played by Amanda Bynes ), an egotistical girl who always makes sure to remind the audience that she is popular ( although this just may be in her own mind, as in one skit, a girl was asked what made Amber so popular, the girl responded that she did not know who Amber was ; in another skit, Amber was not invited to the prom nor voted prom queen ), Sheila ( played by Raquel Lee in season 1, Reagan Gomez-Preston in Season 2 and 3 ), an aggressive girl who disposes of unwelcome guests by giving them swirlies ( usually executing them in the middle stall ) at Amber's command, Tammy ( played by Jamie Snow ), an " exchange student " from Tennessee with an extremely thick Southern accent, and Debbie ( played by Jenna Morrison ), an unintelligent girl who constantly states that she likes eggs in a dopey voice, and constantly annoys the others, especially Sheila.
The Reagan Doctrine was an important Cold War strategy by the United States to oppose the influence of the Soviet Union by backing anti-communist guerrillas against the communist governments of Soviet-backed client states.
** In this election, Ronald Reagan won a sweeping victory over Democrat Jimmy Carter, who won only six states ( plus the District of Columbia ), which accounted for just 10 % of the electoral vote.
Both liberals, such as Nobel laureate Paul Krugman, and conservatives, such as MSNBC political pundit, Nixon administration political advisor and Reagan administration Communications Director Pat Buchanan, would also argue that Nixon ’ s victory in 1968 set the stage for Reagan ’ s victory, and the fact that Reagan did so well in Southern states, traditionally a Democratic stronghold, as well as the fact that some of Reagan ’ s rhetoric involving law and order and states ’ rights seemed to mirror Nixon ’ s Southern Strategy seem to bear this fact out.
" Two-hundred years after Washington circulated his vision to the states President Ronald Reagan signed the United States Institute of Peace Act in 1984.
Modern unisex names may derive from nature ( Lake, Rain, Willow ), colors ( Blue, Grey, Indigo ), countries or states ( Dakota, India, Montana ), surnames ( Jackson, Mackenzie, Murphy ), and politicians ( Kennedy, Madison, Reagan ).
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, a series of court orders invalidated the Reagan regulations and forced the FWS and NMFS to designate several hundred critical habitats, especially in Hawaii, California and other western states.
During the rebuilding process of the Filene Center between 1982 and 1984, Wolf Trap received $ 29 million in contributions and pledges from over 16, 000 donors in 47 states and five foreign countries, including a $ 9 million grant from Congress and support from then-President Ronald Reagan and former Presidents Richard Nixon and Jimmy Carter.
The pro-Reagan Texas delegates worked hard to persuade delegates from other states to support Reagan.
This alliance found its greatest expression when Tom Adams was the leading proponent in the grouping of Eastern Caribbean states that asked Reagan to intervene in overthrowing the Cuban-backed communist regime of Bernard Coard, who had toppled Maurice Bishop, who was later murdered, in Grenada.

Reagan and electoral
Roosevelt also won the largest number of electoral votes ever recorded at that time, so far only surpassed by Ronald Reagan in the 1984 election, when 7 more electoral votes were available.
Ronald Reagan received an electoral vote from a " faithless elector " in Washington.
In the election, Mondale was defeated in a landslide by President Reagan, gaining electoral votes from only his home state of Minnesota and the District of Columbia.
Baker managed Reagan's 1984 re-election campaign in which Reagan polled a record 525 electoral votes total ( of 538 possible ), and received 58. 8 percent of the popular vote to Walter Mondale's 40. 6 percent.
He subsequently lost the presidential election against Ronald Reagan by the largest electoral college margin since the 1936 presidential election victory by Franklin Delano Roosevelt over Alf Landon.
( John Hospers in 1972, Ronald Reagan in 1976, Lloyd Bentsen in 1988, and John Edwards in 2004 all received one electoral vote from faithless electors, but none won these votes in a general election.
Reagan declared spending cuts for the Social Security budget, which accounted for almost half of government spending, off limits due to fears over an electoral backlash, but the administration was hard pressed to explain how his program of sweeping tax cuts and large defense spending would not increase the deficit.
Impressed by the electoral success of New Right conservatives led by Ronald Reagan in the United States of America and by Margaret Thatcher in the United Kingdom, it gradually abandoned the Gaullist doctrine, claiming a less control of the state in economy.
The second New Right formed a policy approach and electoral apparatus that brought Ronald Reagan into the White House in the 1980 presidential election.
After the landslide electoral losses to Ronald Reagan in the 1980s, a group of prominent Democrats began to believe their party was out of touch and in need of a radical shift in economic policy and ideas of governance.
While the Reagan administration and many mainstream United States media outlets alleged the election would be neither free nor fair, numerous electoral watchers affiliated with Western European governments, as well as United States non-governmental organizations, declared the results legitimate.

Reagan and college
" White voters without college education — economically anxious and culturally conservative — were called " Reagan Democrats " when they were considered only seasonal Republicans because of Ronald Reagan.
Reagan spoke at the college in 1977 prior to his presidency, stating, " Hillsdale deserves the appreciation of all who labor for freedom.
Governor Ronald Reagan said the library would "... serve as a lasting memorial to the man who led the college through its growing pains ... to one of the finest state colleges in California.
Its peak of influence was during the Reagan Administration, when it was under the leadership of Daniel Pipes, Since the end of the Cold War it has refocused on other projects: notably, it has identified a special focus on education in international affairs, sponsoring various programs in Philadelphia area schools as well as conferences and seminars for high school and junior college teachers and lectures for the general public.
Future U. S. president Ronald Reagan graduated from Eureka College in 1932 with a degree in economics and sociology, and the college has continued to be closely associated with his legacy.
Eureka College alumni include forty-two college and university presidents, seven Governors and members of U. S. Congress, and the 40th President of the United States of America, Ronald Wilson Reagan, class of 1932.
Since the rise of the actor turned politician Ronald Reagan, the college has increasingly been committed to its role as a symbol of his Midwestern upbringing, his education, and for his development as leader.
* In 1994, Eureka College established a museum named after Reagan to hold and interpret many items which he donated to the college during his lifetime, under the leadership of founding curator Dr. Brian Sajko.
* In 2008, Eureka College launched the Ronald W. Reagan Society to raise support for the college as a living legacy of Ronald Reagan and a national monument to American opportunity his story represents ; more than 1, 000 donations had been received in 2011.
* An additional $ 5 million to the Reagan Presidential Foundation to launch and support the GE-Reagan Scholars Program, an effort that will begin in 2011 and that will provide 200 four-year college scholarships over the next decade to " students who embody the vision and values personified by President Reagan.
Thomas Kunkel, dean of the University of Maryland, College Park's journalism college, wrote in A magazine that the coverage " would have you believe that Reagan was a cross between Abe Lincoln and Mother Teresa, with an overlay of Mister Rogers.
* United States First Lady Nancy Reagan visited RCSI in 1984 and liked one of the carpets used by the college.

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