Ronald Reagan started a tradition as he prepared to leave office after two terms as president: Write a note congratulating your successor and leave it in the Oval Office desk drawer.
America made its history as the first Black person, Barack Obama, was sworn in as the 44th president of the country. In front of record-breaking crowds, the young senator became the commander-in-chief of the United States,
Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, and one by Democrat Barack Obama — is the latest blow for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, whose beneficiaries have lived in legal limbo for ...
In 1981, Ronald Reagan took the oath of office to ... entered the race for the 2008 Democratic nomination. In 2009, Barack Obama was sworn in as the United States' 44th president and the nation's ...
The worst weather for an inaugural came in March 1909, when 10 inches of snow forced William H. Taft to move indoors to be sworn in.
Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, and one by Democrat Barack Obama - is the latest blow for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, whose beneficiaries have lived in legal limbo for ...
This page lists the candidates for office endorsed by Barack Obama. According to Politico, Obama had not traditionally endorsed candidates prior to the 2016 election, when he prepared a list of 150 candidates in state and federal elections he would endorse.
The government approved a Mutual Credit Guarantee Scheme to enhance credit availability for micro, small, and medium manufacturing sectors, under the
President Reagan in a staff briefing with Paul Nitze, Donald Regan, George Shultz, Ken Adelman, John Poindexter, Richard Perle (hand in pocket) and Max Kampelman in Hofdi House during the Reykjavik Summit in Iceland. CTBTO Photostream / flickr.
Op-ed by Summer Lane California is truly a beautiful place. The biodiversity and geography are breathtaking, the agricultural output is astonishing, and the state itself is so large that its economy ranks fifth in the world.
Here are some of the excerpts from letters left from former presidents of the United States that have been left since Ronald Reagan ... George W Bush wrote to Barack Obama in 2009.
The letter — which Biden wouldn’t describe for reporters — marks the continuation of a modern tradition started (perhaps inadvertently) by President Ronald Reagan in 1989. In 1989, Ronald Reagan scribbled a note to his successor and former vice president George H.