| נשלח ב-6/6/2004 07:59 |
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פרעדיזענט רעיגן: - אויף עם / פון עם
אין די פריערדיגע ספרים טרעפט מען הספדים פון גדולים און רבנים אויפ'ן מושל המדינה, צוליב שלום מלכות און דרכי שלום.
לויט דעם איז פאסיג מיר זאלן אויך עפנען א אשכול ארום פרעזידענט רעיגן.
ווער געדענקט פאר די וואלן ווען רעיגן איז אריינגעקומען איז געוען אנגעקלעבט די היימישע געגענטן סטיקערס
מיט אידישע אותיות "רייגן-בוש"
א ו י ף - רעיגן
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH
"This is a sad hour in the life of America. A great American life has come to an end."
"Ronald Regan won America's respect with his greatness, and won its love with his goodness. He had the confidence that comes with conviction, the strength that comes with character, the grace that comes with humility, and the humor that comes with wisdom. He leaves behind a nation he restored and a world he helped save.
"During the years of President Reagan, America laid to rest an era of division and self-doubt. And because of his leadership, the world laid to rest an era of fear and tyranny."
BRITISH PRIME MINISTER TONY BLAIR
"At home his vision and leadership restored national self-confidence and brought some significant changes to U.S. politics while abroad the negotiation of arms control agreements in his second term and his statesman-like pursuit of more stable relations with the Soviet Union helped bring about the end of the Cold War."
FORMER PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON AND SENATOR HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON, who called Reagan "a true American original."
"Hillary and I will always remember President Ronald Reagan for the way he personified the indomitable optimism of the American people, and for keeping America at the forefront of the fight for freedom for people everywhere."
SENATE MAJORITY LEADER BILL FRIST
"Above all, he was a true patriot, whose endless optimism inspired America's continued ascent to greatness. Undoubtedly, Ronald Reagan has left an indelible mark on our country and our global community."
SENATE MINORITY LEADER TOM DASCHLE
"America has lost an icon. Ronald Reagan's leadership will inspire Americans for generations to come. His patriotism and devotion to our country will never be forgotten."
FORMER BRITISH PRIME MINISTER MARGARET THATCHER
"He will be missed not only by those who knew him and not only by the nation that he served so proudly and loved so deeply, but also by millions of men and women who live in freedom today because of the policies he pursued.
"Ronald Reagan had a higher claim than any other leader to have won the Cold War for liberty and he did it without a shot being fired."
FRENCH PRESIDENT JACQUES CHIRAC
"A great statesman who through the strength of his convictions and his commitment to democracy will leave a deep mark in history."
QUEEN ELIZABETH OF BRITAIN
"The Queen is saddened by the news," said a Buckingham Palace spokeswoman.
DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE JOHN KERRY
"Ronald Reagan's love of country was infectious. Even when he was breaking Democrats hearts, he did so with a smile and in the spirit of honest and open debate."
DEMOCRAT SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY OF MASSACHUSETTS
"We often disagreed on issues of the day, but I had immense respect and admiration for his leadership and his extraordinary ability to inspire the nation to live up to its high ideals."
LT. COL OLIVER NORTH, NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL OFFICIAL under Reagan
"Ronald Reagan was easily the greatest president of my lifetime -- and he will be regarded as one of the greatest leaders this country has ever had.
"...a man of extraordinary vision, great compassion and resolute leadership. He brought down the Evil Empire and made the world safer for my children and theirs."
MIGUEL D'ESCOTO, former foreign minister in Nicaragua's revolutionary Sandinista government of the 1980s when America was shipping money to the opposition, known as the Contras, called Reagan an "imperialist president."
"There is not the least doubt that President Reagan did Nicaragua much harm, caused many deaths.
"He may not have had much time or inclination to regret the damage he did, but regardless of that we ask God to take pity on his soul."
ADOLFO CALERO, former member of the U.S.-backed Contra rebel leadership
"After Vietnam, the United States was crestfallen, and he raised the spirits of the North Americans, he made them believe in their country, made them believe in themselves. For me his chief legacy is the tenacity with which he faced the world problem of communism, he beat it ... and freed a great number of countries from the communist yoke."
MICHAEL REAGAN, adopted son of actress Jane Wyman and Ronald Reagan
"I am the luckiest man in the world to have had him as father and to think that I was not born into this family but that I was chosen to be part of his family by Ronald Reagan."
U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE COLIN POWELL.
"President Reagan fueled the spirit of America. His smile, his optimism, his total belief in the ultimate triumph of democracy and freedom, and his willingness to act on that belief, helped end the Cold War and usher in a new and brighter phase of history."
FORMER CANADIAN PRIME MINISTER BRIAN MULRONEY
"He was... a delightful and loyal friend, a great joy to be with. He made clearly an unmistakable mark not only on history, but on the lives of everyone here today.
CANADIAN PRIME MINISTER PAUL MARTIN
"His wit, warmth and unique capacity to communicate helped to make him one of the most influential figures in the second half of the 20th century."
HOUSE MAJORITY LEADER TOM DELAY
"Like all heroes, Ronald Reagan's greatness was an extension of his goodness and billions of people around the world owe their freedom to both."
FORMER SECRETARY OF STATE GEORGE SHULTZ
"He taught us the importance of freedom and sticking with it in the political life and economic life. He taught us the importance of security and we learned that it is attainable."
JAMES BAKER, FORMER TREASURY SECRETARY
"President Reagan restored America's source of pride and confidence in itself ... His willingness to stick to his principles changed the world."
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| נשלח ב-6/6/2004 08:01 |
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פ ו ן - רעיגן
Some Quotations From Ronald Reagan
By The Associated Press
Some quotations from Ronald Reagan
"This is the issue of this election: whether we believe in our capacity for self-government or whether we abandon the American Revolution and confess that a little intellectual elite in a far-distant capital can plan our lives for us better than we can plan for ourselves." — Oct. 27, 1964, televised speech for GOP presidential candidate Barry Goldwater.
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"I am paying for this microphone, Mr. Breen." — When someone tried to turn off his microphone at a Reagan-sponsored debate during 1980 New Hampshire primaries.
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"We have to move ahead, but we are not going to leave anyone behind." — Republican National Convention, July 1980
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"There you go again." — Responding to criticism during debate with President Carter, October 1980.
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"Government is not the solution, it's the problem." — Inaugural address, Jan. 20, 1981
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"All of us need to be reminded that the federal government did not create the states, the states created the federal government. ... Steps will be taken aimed a restoring the balance between the various levels of government." — Inaugural address, Jan. 20, 1981.
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"Honey, I forgot to duck." — To Nancy Reagan in the emergency room after he was shot by a would-be assassin, March 30, 1981.
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"It's just plain common sense that there be a waiting period to allow local law enforcement officials to conduct background checks on those who wish to buy a handgun." — Endorsing the Brady handgun control bill, at a March 1991 event commemorating 10th anniversary of assassination attempt.
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"Some argue that we should encourage democratic change in right-wing dictatorships, but not in Communist regimes. Well, to accept this preposterous notion — as some well-meaning people have — is to invite the argument that once countries achieve a nuclear capability, they should be allowed an undisturbed reign of terror over their own citizens. We reject this course." — June 1982 speech to British Parliament.
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"I was pleased last year to proclaim 1983 the year of the Bible. But, you know, a group called the ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union (news - web sites)) severely criticized me for doing that. Well, I wear their indictment like a badge of honor." — January 1984.
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"I've always stated that the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth is a government program." — April 1986
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"A (nuclear weapons) freeze now would be a very dangerous fraud, for that is merely the illusion of peace. The reality is that we must find peace through strength. ...
"I urge you to beware the temptation of pride, the temptation of blithely declaring yourselves above it all and label both sides equally at fault, to ignore the facts of history and the aggressive impulses of an evil empire, to simply call the arms race a giant misunderstanding and thereby remove yourself from the struggle between right and wrong and good and evil. ...
"I believe that communism is another sad, bizarre chapter in human history whose last pages even now are being written." — Speech to the National Association of Evangelicals, March 1983. (He wrote six years later that "I could not in good conscience today call the Soviet Union an evil empire.")
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"If you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization, come here to this gate ... open this gate ... tear down this wall." — June 1987 speech at Brandenberg Gate in Berlin. Remarks addressed to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
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"By 1980, we knew it was time to renew our faith; to strive with all our strength toward the ultimate of individual freedom, consistent with an orderly society.
"We believed then and now: There are no limits to growth and human progress, when men and women are free to follow their dreams. And we were right to believe that. Tax rates have been reduced, inflation cut dramatically and more people are employed than ever before in our history.
"We are creating a nation once again vibrant, robust, and alive. There are many mountains yet to climb. We will not rest until every American enjoys the fullness of freedom, dignity, and opportunity as our birthright. It is our birthright as citizens of this great republic." — Second inaugural address, Jan. 21, 1985
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"The men of Normandy had faith that what they were doing was right, faith that they fought for all humanity, faith that a just God would grant them mercy on this beachhead or on the next. It was the deep knowledge — and pray God we have not lost it — that there is a profound moral difference between the use of force for liberation and the use of force for conquest." — On 40th anniversary of Normandy invasion, June 6, 1984.
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"Sending the Marines to Beirut was the source of my greatest regret and greatest sorrow." — About the Lebanon bombing that killed 241 servicemen in 1983, from his 1990 book, "An American Life"
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"The crew of the space shuttle Challenger honored us by the manner in which they lived their lives. We will never forget them, nor the last time we saw them, this morning, as they prepared for the journey and waved goodbye and 'slipped the surly bonds of earth' to 'touch the face of God.'" — After shuttle disaster, Jan. 28, 1986.
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"A few months ago I told the American people I did not trade arms for hostages. My heart and my best intentions still tell me that is true, but the facts and the evidence tell me it is not." — March 4, 1987, speech acknowledging dealings with Iran had deteriorated into an arms for hostages deal
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"You know, by the time you reach my age, you've made plenty of mistakes if you've lived your life properly. So you learn. You put things in perspective. You pull your energies together. You change. You go forward. My fellow Americans, I have a great deal that I want to accomplish with you and for you over the next two years. And, the Lord willing, that's exactly what I intend to do." — March 4, 1987, speech acknowledging dealings with Iran had deteriorated into an arms for hostages deal
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"I did not see it as trading arms for hostages because we were dealing with Iranian intermediaries, not the kidnappers themselves. I know it may be a fine line to most people, but it's what I believed then and what I still believe." — About the Iran-Contra affair, from his 1989 book, "Speaking My Mind"
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"My fellow Americans, I'm pleased to tell you today that I've signed legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in five minutes." — Joke while testing microphone, Aug. 11, 1984
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"So, you can see why, to me, the story of these last eight years and this presidency goes far beyond any personal concerns. It is a continuation, really, of a far larger story, a story of a people and a cause. A cause that, from our earliest beginnings, has defined us as a nation and given purpose to our national existence. The hope of human freedom, the quest for it, the achievement of it, is the American saga." — Last weekly radio address as president, Jan. 14, 1989.
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"If I ache, it's because we are apart and yet that can't be because you are inside and a part of me, so we really aren't apart at all. Yet I ache but wouldn't be without the ache, because that would mean being without you and that I can't be because I love you." — 1963 letter to his wife, Nancy, quoted in 2000 book "I Love You, Ronnie."
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"In closing let me thank you, the American people, for giving me the great honor of allowing me to serve as your president. When the Lord calls me home, whenever that may be, I will leave with the greatest love for this country of ours and eternal optimism for its future. I now begin the journey that will lead me into the sunset of my life. I know that for America there will always be a bright dawn ahead." — Nov. 5, 1994, announcing he had Alzheimer's disease (news - web sites).
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| נשלח ב-6/6/2004 08:05 |
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מצורף קובץ.S. President Ronald Reagan (news - web sites), left, and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev stand alone during their impromptu walk in Red Square in Moscow, USSR, Tuesday, May 31, 1988. In the background is St. Basil's Cathedral. Reagan, the cheerful crusader who devoted his presidency to winning the Cold War, trying to scale back government and making people believe it was ''morning again in America,'' died Saturday, June 5, 2004, after a long twilight struggle with Alzheimer's disease (news - web sites). He was 93. (AP Photo/Ira Schwartz)

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| נשלח ב-6/6/2004 21:44 |
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ער איז געווען פרעזידענט ווען וועלט איז נאך געווען וועלט
ווען היינטיגע סאטמערע רבי איז נאך געווען סאטמארער רבי נישט אהרן אדער זלמן לייב
ווען באבאווער רבי זצוק"ל איז געווען באבאווער רבי
ווען קלויזענבורגער רבי איז געווען קלויזענבורגער רבי
ווען וויזשניצער רבי איז געווען וויזשניצער רבי ווען תולדות אהרן רבי איז געווען תולדות אהרן רבי
נישט אלע מחלוקת ווי היינט וואס להבדיל זעהט מען די זעלבע שנאה ביי די אמעריקאנע פאליטיקאנטן
מ'זעהט קלאהר ווי דער דור איז פני הדור כו'
עקבתא
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| נשלח ב-6/6/2004 22:15 |
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גראדע איז דא א הערליך בילד פין הגה"צ אב"ד סאטמער וויליאמסבורג מיט פרעזידענט רעיגן אין ווייסען הויז
אין איז געווען געדריקט אין דער איד אויך איז די ברייוען צום סאטמערען רבין וועגען דעם שיינעם באזוךאין ער דריקט אויס א דאנק וואס זיין זוהן הגה"צ אב"ד סאטמער איז עם געקומען באזוכן אין וואשינגטאן
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| נשלח ב-6/6/2004 22:21 |
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נו עקשטיין, לאמיר דאס זען, אדרבה!
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| נשלח ב-7/6/2004 22:46 |
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Gyani Zail Singh went to the US & had a meeting with Reagan. Reagan said, "I want to show you the advancement in technology in USA. Come with me."
Reagan takes him in a deep forest and says. "Dig the ground."
Zail Singh digs.
Reagan says, "More, more, more..."
Zail Singh has now reached a 100 feet.
Reagan says, "So now, did you find anything?"
Zail Singh, "I got a wire!"
Reagan says, "You see, it shows that even 200 years ago we used to have telephones!"
Zail Singh was very frustrated and he invited Reagan to India.
In India GyaniJi says, "Now I want to show you the advancement in India!"
He takes Reagan to a forest and asks him to dig.
After some time GyaniJi says, "More. .. more... more!"
Reagan has now reached almost 400 feet.
Zail Singh says, "Find anything?"
Reagan tries but finds nothing, "Nothing here!"
GyaniJi says, "You see even 400 years ago we had gone WIRELESS!"
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| נשלח ב-10/6/2004 03:27 |
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************ קעגן רעיגן **************
Op/Ed - Ted Rall
REAGAN'S SHAMEFUL LEGACY
23 minutes ago Add Op/Ed - Ted Rall to My Yahoo!
By Ted Rall
Mourn for Us, Not the Proto-Bush
Ted Rall
Related Links
• Ted Rall's Editorial Cartoons
NEW YORK--For a few weeks, it became routine. I heard them dragging luggage down the hall. They paused in a little lounge near the dormitory elevator to bid farewell to people they'd met during their single semester. Those I knew knocked on my door. "What are you going to do?" I asked. "Where are you going to go?" A shrug. They were eighteen years old and their bright futures had evaporated. They had worked hard in junior and senior high school, harder than most, but none of that mattered now. President Reagan, explained the form letters from the Office of Financial Aid, had slashed the federal education budget. Which is why the same grim tableau of shattered hopes and dreams was playing itself out across the country. Colleges and universities were evicting their best and brightest, straight A students, stripping them of scholarships. Some transferred to less-expensive community colleges; others dropped into the low-wage workforce. Now, nearly a quarter century later, they are still less financially secure and less educated than they should have been. Our nation is poorer for having denied them their potential.
They were by no means the hardest-hit victims of Reaganism. Reagan's quack economists trashed scholarships and turned welfare recipients into homeless people and refused to do anything about the AIDS (news - web sites) epidemic, all so they could fund extravagant tax cuts for a tiny sliver of the ultra rich. Their supply-side sales pitch, that the rich would buy so much stuff from everybody else that the economy would boom and government coffers would fill up, never panned out. The Reagan boom lasted just three years and created only low-wage jobs. When the '80s were over, we were buried in the depths of recession and a trillion bucks in debt. Poverty grew, cities decayed, crime rose. It took over a decade to dig out.
Reagan's defenders, people who don't know the facts or choose to ignore them, claim that "everybody" admired Reagan's ebullient personality even if some disagreed with his politics. That, like the Gipper's tall tales about welfare queens and "homeless by choice" urban campers, is a lie. Millions of Americans cringed at Reagan's simplistic rhetoric, were terrified that his anti-Soviet "evil empire" posturing would provoke World War III, and thought that his appeal to selfishness and greed--a bastardized blend of Adam Smith and Ayn Rand--brought out the worst in us. We rolled our eyes when Reagan quipped "There you go again"; what the hell did that mean? Given that he made flying a living hell (by firing the air traffic controllers and regulating the airlines), I'm not the only one who refuses to call Washington National Airport by its new name. His clown-like dyed hair and rouged cheeks disgusted us. We hated him during the dark days he made so hideous, and, with all due respect, we hate him still.
Not everybody buys the myth that Reagan won the Cold War by demanding that Mikhail Gorbachev "tear down this [Berlin] wall" or bankrupting the Soviet Union via the arms race--Zbigniew Brezinski's plot to "draw the Russians into the Afghan trap" by funding the mujahedeen, Chernobyl and covert U.S. schemes to destabilize the ruble had more to do with the end of the USSR. Gangsterism replaced the ossified cult of the state, millions of Russians were reduced to paupers, revived radical Islamism in Central Asia and eliminated our sole major ideological and military rival. That increased our arrogance and insularity, left us in charge of the world and to blame for everything, paving the road to 9/11. (Reagan even armed the attacks' future perpetrators.) Anyway, the Cold War isn't over. In which direction do you think those old ICBMs point today?
The lionizers are correct about one thing: Reagan was one of our most influential presidents since FDR, whose New Deal safety net he carefully disassembled. He pioneered policies now being implemented by George W. Bush: trickle down economics, corporate deregulation, radicalizing the courts, slithering around inconvenient laws and international treaties. On the domestic front, he unraveled America's century-old social contract. What the poor needed was a kick in the ass, not a handout, said a president whose wealthy patrons bought him a house and put clothes on his wife Nancy. National parks were to be exploited for timber and oil, not protected. The federal tax code, originally conceived to redistribute wealth from top to bottom, was "reformed" to eradicate social justice.
Bush also models his approach to foreign policy on that of the original Teflon President. Reagan elevated unjustifiable military action to an art. In 1983, anxious to look tough after cutting and running from Lebanon, Reagan sent marines to topple the Marxist government of Grenada. His pretext for invading this Caribbean island was the urgent plight of 500 medical students supposedly besieged by rampaging mobs. But when they arrived at the airport in the United States, the quizzical young men and women told reporters they were confused, never having felt endangered or seen any unrest.
In a bizarre 1985 effort to free a few American hostages being held in Lebanon, Reagan authorized the sale of 107 tons of anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles to Iran, at the time one of our staunchest enemies, with the proceeds to be used to fund rightist death squads in Nicaragua--something Congress had expressly forbidden him to do. Evidence strongly suggests that Iran-Contra was at least his second dirty deal with Islamic Iran, the first being the October Surprise, which delayed the release of the Iranian embassy hostages until after the 1980 election was over. Ronald Reagan (news - web sites) eventually admitted to "trading arms for hostages," yet avoided prosecution for treason and the death penalty.
Reagan, like Bush 43, technically served in the military yet studiously avoided combat. Both men were physically robust, intellectually inadequate, poorly traveled former governors renowned for stabbing friends on the back--Reagan when he named names during McCarthyism. Both appointed former generals as secretaries of state and enemies of the environment to head the Department of the Interior. Both refused to read detailed briefings, worked short hours, behaved erratically in public appearances, ducked questions about sordid pasts, and relied on Christianist (the radical right equivalent of Islamist) depictions of foes as "evil" and America, invariably as embodied by himself and the Republicans, as "good." Based on intelligence as phony as that floated to justify the war against Iraq (news - web sites), Reagan bombed Muslim Libya.
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| נשלח ב-16/6/2004 03:45 |
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אין א באשרייבונג אויף דעם רעיגן ביבלאטיעק רעכענט מען אויס די סאמע אינטערסאנטסטע ארטיקלעך
צווישען די רשימה שטייט אויך אז עס אינהאלט א בעכער וואס סאטמארער רבי'ס זוהן האט איהם געשענקט
Reagan Library
: 4:00 PM EDT June 14, 2004
General Facts About The Library
Located in Simi Valley, Calif.
Situated on 100 acres on a hilltop overlooking the Pacific Ocean.
Building is 150,000 square feet.
Four stories: Two floors are above ground and house the museum, museum store and Foundation offices; two levels below ground are for storage of presidential documents and gifts.
22,000 square feet of exhibit area.
Paid for entirely by private donations.
Houses more than 55 million pages of government documents and personal papers.
Houses more than 1.5 million photographs.
The adjoining museum is home to more than 100,000 artifacts chronicling the life and legacy of America's 40th President.
What's Inside
Ronald Reagan's high school yearbook.
A nuclear missile deactivated when Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev signed the INF treaty.
Full section of the Berlin Wall, presented to President Reagan at the library on April 12, 1990.
A full-scale replica of the Oval Office furnished with reproductions and staged exactly as it was on the last day of Reagan's presidency.
A selection of more than 400 magazine covers featuring President and Mrs. Reagan, through their years in Hollywood, to the California governor's mansion, the White House, and finally, their return to Los Angeles.
Political campaign materials, banners, buttons and household items featuring mottos, images, or names of presidential hopefuls from the administrations of Andrew Jackson to William Jefferson Clinton.
Gold pitcher in the shape of an eagle with hinged head and feather-tipped amethysts, given to the Reagans by King Fahd of Saudi Arabia on occasion of a 1985 state visit
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A sterling silver Kiddush cup, presented to the Reagans by the son of Hasidic Grand Rabbi Teitelbaum of Satmar.
A silver belt buckle custom made by Cross Bow Indian Traders, given to the Reagans by an anonymous American citizen.
A Russian Army cap sent to the library by an anonymous donor in 1990.
Management
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library is maintained by the non-profit Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation.
The Foundation's mission is to complete Reagan's unfinished work and promote four principles associated with Reagan: individual liberty, economic opportunity, global democracy and national pride.
The Foundation also maintains The Center for Public Affairs, which organizes the Reagan Lectures, a platform for conservative politicians. Recent speakers include National security adviser Condoleezza Rice, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy. The Center also organizes Reagan Conferences at the library, for business leaders and public policy discussions.
The Foundation give out the Reagan Presidential Freedom Award to recognize individuals who have promoted freedom around the world. Past recipients include former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, The Reverend Billy Graham, former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, entertainer Bob Hope, King Hussein of Jordan and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Air Force One
On September 8, 2001, Nancy Reagan accepted a Boeing 707 "Air Force One" plane on the Library's behalf.
The plane was first used as "Air Force One" by President Nixon in February 1973. President Reagan made his first trip aboard the craft on February 22, 1981 from Andrews Air Force Base to Santa Barbara. It became a back-up plane in 1990 when George H.W. Bush replaced it with a 747.
Plans are under way for an Air Force One Pavilion, an exhibit detailing Reagan's 211 missions aboard Air Force One.
The pavilion will also showcase Marine One, President Reagan's 1982 Presidential Limousine, a Secret Service Motorcade and an F-15 Fighter Jet.
The pavilion is set to be completed in 2005.
Ongoing Projects
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library is collecting new item donations to send to recovering wounded U.S. soldiers. Anyone who brings a donation between Memorial Day and July 4th gets free admission to the Library on that day. Requested items include pre-paid telephone cards, new clothing, and DVDs, videotapes, CDs, magazines, paperback books, postage stamps, stationary and batteries. Items donated at the Reagan Library will be shipped to military hospitals with the greatest need.
The Moorpark Chamber Ensemble, composed of musicians from the Moorpark Symphony Orchestra, performs concerts in the Reagan Library courtyard on Saturday afternoons throughout the summer.
Museum Store
China and crystal in Reagan's official White House pattern.
USS Ronald Reagan visors, caps, apparel.
Reagan Stetson western hat with the words "Made by Stetson especially for President Reagan" stamped inside. Price tag: $175.
Apparel from the "Reagan Country" clothing line, including aprons, bathrobes, sweatshirts.
Children's clothing, including a Reagan aviator jacket.
Red, white and blue scarves, watches, umbrellas.
Commemorative portraits, luggage, key chains, holiday ornaments.
Jelly Belly jelly beans in jar with Reagan presidential seal.
"Gipper" souvenir license plate and holder.
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| נשלח ב-16/6/2004 05:32 |
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דא קען מען זעהן א בילד פינעם בעכער וואס איז געגעבען געווארען פין הרה"צ אב"ד סאטמער בשליחות פין זיין טאטן כ"ק מרן רבינו שליט"א
אויך איז דא א הערליך בילד פין הרה"צ אב"ד סאטמער ווי ער איז מיטן פרעזידענט אין ראשי הקהילה ר יעקב כהנא אין ר סענדער אין ר לייבוש אין אויך א עקסטערן בילד ווי דער פרעזידענט שמוסט מיט הרה"צ אב"ד סאטמער
http://www.reaganfoundation.com/pma/whats_new.asp?ItemID=3
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