Reagan, Ronald
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His foreign policy was heavily affected by his opposition to communism; for example, he sent troops to the Caribbean island of Grenada to help put down a revolution in 1983 and aided the opponents of the Marxist government of Nicaragua. The Strategic Defense Initiative, or “Star Wars,” was his favored approach to the problem of nuclear weapons. A scandal arose in his administration in the late 1980s, when it was learned that Reagan's subordinates had arranged a secret sale of weapons to Iran and an illegal transfer of the profits to rebels in Nicaragua, but investigators did not charge that Reagan himself was part of the arrangement (see Iran-Contra Affair). He met with the premier of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, in 1985, 1986, and 1987, and reached agreements on reduction of nuclear weapons. Reagan survived an attempted assassination in 1981.
Reagan, a highly popular president, was called the “Great Communicator” for his efforts to explain government problems and projects on a level that could be widely understood.
In 1984, at age seventy-three, Reagan became the oldest person ever to be elected president.
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
You could say they’re a lot more like Reagan, Ronald than Regan, Brent.
From Washington Times
More traditional Republicans would prefer to see the party functioning at least remotely like it was done by Reagan, Ronald - the “big tent” of a party that welcomed different views so long as society as a whole benefited.
From Washington Times
Nancy Reagan, Ronald Reagan’s biggest fan, wrote in her memoir, “My Turn”: “I’d like to come back as Ronald Reagan. If he worries, you’d never know it. If he’s anxious, he keeps it to himself. Depressed? He doesn’t know the meaning of the word. He’s really as relaxed and hopeful as he appears.”
From New York Times
"I ran the political office in the White House for Ronald Reagan. Ronald Reagan compromised on everything, because the Democrats had a majority in the House the whole time," Barbour said.
From US News
Move on from Ronald Reagan Ronald Reagan last stood for election in 1984, 11 years before the birth of the youngest voters in the upcoming November poll Republican strategist Ford O'Connell notes the party cites popular two-term US President Ronald Reagan, in office 1981-89, on an array of issues.
From BBC
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