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U.S. Postal Service Reissues President Ronald Reagan Stamp In 39-Cent Denomination

Presidential Libraries StampU.S. POSTAL SERVICE REISSUES PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN STAMP IN 39-CENT DENOMINATION

WASHINGTON, DC — Today, the U.S. Postal Service reissued the stamp honoring former President Ronald Reagan in Simi Valley, CA, at a First-Class postage rate of 39-cents. Reagan’s patriotism, charisma and optimistic confidence rallied the nation and made him one of the most popular Presidents of the 20th century. The Ronald Reagan 37-cent commemorative stamp was issued Feb. 9, 2005. The 39-cent stamp with the same design is available in Simi Valley, CA, today, and will be available nationwide Thurs., June 15.

“I am particularly honored to join you in celebrating the life of a remarkable world leader, a distinguished President and a great man,” said James C. Miller III, Chairman of the presidentially appointed U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors. “Ronald Reagan’s record is proof that one person, determined and dedicated, can shoulder the greatest of burdens and carry them through to victory, and in his case, even make it look easy,” added Miller, who served as Reagan’s Director of the Office of Management and Budget and later, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission.

Joining Chairman Miller in dedicating the stamp was Duke Blackwood, Executive Director, The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Kerry Wolny, District Manager, Van Nuys District, U.S. Postal Service.

“Re-issuing a commemorative U.S. Presidential stamp in a higher denomination is a very rare occurrence,” said Blackwood. “Mrs. Reagan is touched that the U.S. Postal Service is honoring her husband in this manner.”

Ronald Wilson Reagan was born in Tampico, IL, on Feb. 6, 1911, but he considered Dixon, IL, where the family settled when he was nine, to be his hometown. A natural athlete and budding thespian, Reagan lettered in several sports and acted in school plays throughout his high school and college years. Popular with his classmates, he was elected student body president in both high school and college.

In 1926, Reagan became a summer lifeguard in Lowell Park, IL, located on the Rock River near Dixon, and is credited with rescuing 77 people during the seven seasons he worked there. After graduating from Eureka College in 1932, he sought employment as a radio sports announcer. Just a few years later he was one of the leading announcers in the Midwest, broadcasting from an NBC affiliate station in Des Moines, IA.

In 1937, Reagan went to California to cover the Chicago Cubs during spring training and landed a movie contract with Warner Bros. During his years in Hollywood he appeared in more than 50 films, including the acclaimed All American (1940), in which he played Notre Dame football legend George “the Gipper” Gipp.

Reagan was called up for active duty during World War II, but poor eyesight kept him from serving overseas. Instead he was assigned to the army’s motion picture unit in Culver City, CA, where he narrated training films and appeared in patriotic military films. After being honorably discharged on Dec. 9, 1945, he resumed his Hollywood career. In 1957, Reagan costarred with his wife, actress Nancy Davis (whom he had married in 1952), in Hellcats of the Navy, their only film together.

Elected president of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) in 1947, an office he held through 1952, and again from 1959 – 1960, Reagan testified in that capacity before the House Committee on Un-American Activities.

On Oct. 27, 1964, Reagan gave a nationally televised address endorsing Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater. Although Goldwater lost the election to Lyndon B. Johnson, Reagan’s speech, a searing indictment of big government and Johnson’s “Great Society” programs, thrust him into the limelight as a leader of the conservative movement and effectively launched his political career. Two years later he defeated the incumbent governor of California, Democrat Edmund G. "Pat" Brown, by a landslide. In 1970 he was elected to a second term in office.

In 1968, while still governor of California, Reagan made a tentative bid for President, announcing his candidacy at the Republican National Convention in Miami Beach. Eight years later he waged an active campaign, and although he lost the 1976 Republican nomination to incumbent Gerald R. Ford, his strong showing in the primaries and at the convention in Kansas City set the stage for his next presidential run.

Pledging to reduce the federal government’s role in the lives of all Americans, Reagan was the frontrunner during the 1980 presidential primaries. He received the Republican nomination at the convention in Detroit and won a landslide victory over incumbent Jimmy Carter in the November election. On Jan. 20, 1981, he was sworn into office as the 40th President of the United States. That same month TIME magazine named him its 1980 “Man of the Year.”

Adept at promoting his conservative agenda and deregulation policies, Reagan became known as the “Great Communicator.” He persuaded Congress to pass legislation aimed at curbing inflation, increasing employment, reducing social welfare programs and strengthening national defense. The popular and charismatic President had succeeded in rallying Americans and inspiring their renewed confidence in the nation. In 1984 he was reelected by another landslide, receiving an unprecedented number of electoral votes.

"Peace through strength” is how Reagan characterized his foreign policy toward the Soviet Union and to that end he promoted and obtained a massive defense budget. But in 1984 he also began to make diplomatic overtures to Moscow. The following year Mikhail S. Gorbachev rose to power. Gorbachev’s willingness to end the Cold War by arms reduction and political reform in Eastern Europe brought Reagan to the bargaining table. Working together to improve relations between the two countries, Reagan and Gorbachev held a series of summit conferences during the next few years. At the 1987 summit in Washington, DC, they signed the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, the first pact to reduce nuclear arsenals. Strategic arms were limited in a later treaty. By the end of his second term, Reagan had visited Moscow and regarded Gorbachev as a friend.

When Reagan left office in January 1989, he and former First Lady Nancy Reagan returned to California. Later that year, on November 9, Communist East Germany opened its borders, including the Berlin Wall, to the West. This momentous event occurred less than two and a half years after Reagan’s famous speech at the Brandenburg Gate, in which he had boldly challenged Gorbachev to, “tear down this wall!”

In California, Reagan worked on his second autobiography, published in 1990. But his highest priority was to oversee completion of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in Simi Valley. A tribute to Reagan’s legacy of peace, freedom and democracy, the facility has welcomed more than a million visitors since it opened in 1991.

In 1994, Reagan shared his diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease with the American people in a moving, handwritten letter. After that he retired from public life and his family delivered periodic updates to the nation and helped raise awareness of Alzheimer’s.

On June 5, 2004, Ronald Reagan died in California at the age of 93, the longest-lived President in American history. His state funeral, the first to be held in Washington, D.C., in more than 30 years, drew hundreds of thousands of mourners, including past and present world leaders. After the national funeral service at the Washington National Cathedral on June 11, his body was flown back to California where a private burial service took place at sunset on the grounds of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum.

The stamp art is a portrait of Reagan painted by award-winning artist Michael J. Deas, whose many projects for the Postal Service include several stamps in the Legends of Hollywood series and the Literary Arts series. The portrait is based on a 1981 photograph of Reagan made by White House photographer Jack Kightlinger

Posted by Mike on June 14, 2006 | Permalink

Joe Biden 1988 Announcement

Biden Announcement for Presidency on June 9, 1987 in Wilmington, Delaware.

“I run for President because I believe the 1988 election, at its heart, can be reduced to a fundamental choice between two paths to our future; the easy path, in which we consolidate our current comfort and a quick and false prosperity by consuming our children's future; and another, more difficult path, that builds a more genuine prosperity for ourselves, while guaranteeing to our children their birthright. If we choose the easy path, raiding our nation's stores, and devouring the seed corn of our children, we will deliver to them a lesser America, the fading shadow of a dimming promise.

“We must rekindle the fire of idealism in our society -- for nothing suffocates the promise of America more than unbounded cynicism and indifference. We must reclaim the tradition of community in our society. We must reassert the oneness of America. America has been and must once again be a seamless web of caring and community...I am absolutely convinced that this generation is poised to respond to this challenge. And for my part, this is the issue upon which I will stake my candidacy.”

Full Speech Text

Posted by Mike on June 09, 2006 | Permalink

Carter/Mondale Become Longest Living, Post-Administration Team

Jimmy Carter 1976

Carter/Mondale Set Record.

ATLANTA, GA.- On Tuesday, May 23rd, President Jimmy Carter and Vice President Walter Mondale will become the longest-living, post-administration President and Vice President in U.S. history. On that day, they will surpass President John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. Adams and Jefferson lived 25 years, 122 days after the end of their administration. Both Adams and Jefferson died on July 4th, 1826. On Thursday, President Carter and Vice President Mondale will have lived 25 years, 123 days after leaving office. “While breaking the Adams and Jefferson record is certainly a milestone, the important thing is how President Carter and Vice President Mondale have used that time,” Carter Presidential Library Director Jay Hakes said.

In 1982, a year after leaving the White House, President and Mrs. Carter founded the Carter Center to advance peace and health worldwide. The Carter Center is a permanent legacy to the vision and values of both President and Mrs. Carter," said Center Executive Director Dr. John Hardman. "Because of their passion and commitment, once forgotten people in 65 developing nations have renewed hope for lives free of preventable diseases, a voice in their own governance, and the means to create sustainable peace."

Former Vice President Walter Mondale has also continued a distinguished career of public service. Having traveled extensively throughout the United States and the world promoting U.S. policy as Vice President, Mondale was selected as the Democratic Party’s nominee for President in 1984. He has also been a vital contributor to the Humphrey Institute at the University of Minnesota. "The Vice President," according to Dean J. Brian Atwood, "has been a driving force in teaching tomorrow's leaders about public service and in founding our new Center for the Study of Politics and Governance." Mondale is Senior Counsel with the law firm Dorsey & Whitney, LLP.

Posted by Mike on May 23, 2006 | Permalink

Terry Sanford 1976 Announcement

Terry Sanford's declaration of candidacy for the Presidency of the United States on May 19, 1975 in Washington, D.C.

"If you believe as I do, that the people are the ones who must govern, then you are running with the people and not with the ambition.  That is an important distinction, especially today, for it is not the imperial president we need, but many people united to choose a spokesman who can provide the focus for bold, determined, and honest self government. 

That is why I made the preparation and today announced that through the Democratic Party I seek the Presidency of the United States. 

I promise a bold campaign and a bold administration, determined to put into practice again the radical promise of the American Revolution, but determined to talk sense and issues, openly and candidly, pledged to make the government join the people, to put people first in all our affairs and aspirations. 

To these challenges I bring experience not born in Washington, and not tainted by Washington.  We need freshness.  We need change. 

I am different in many ways from the other candidates who have announced.  Those differences can be seen as the campaign progresses.  It is not for me to assert finally that my concept of America is better.  But it is different.  It demands boldness, faith in ourselves, creative change, and a focus on opportunity for all people. 

I expect to be running for the Presidency, with a positive program, but I have a duty of also to show the Nation that the South stands for more than the politics of fear.  I want the people of this country to be given a clear choice between what I see as the politics of fear and the politics of hope. 

I知 going to campaign in all the caucus states, and will enter 17 to 20 primary campaigns, not expecting to win them all, but expecting to lay out in all of them the creative tasks that lie before us."

Full Speech Text

Posted by Mike on May 19, 2006 | Permalink

Bob Dole 1980 Announcement

Bob Dole Presidential Announcement Speech held in Russell, Kansas on May 14, 1979.

"I am announcing today that I shall seek my Party's nomination to the office of President of the United States.

I have no illusions about the magnitude of the undertaking; neither have I any undue concern for the magnitude of the problems associated with it. Financing, logistics, simple human effort or the lack of these may conspire in time to defeat a candidacy, but they cannot deter it at the outset. The magnitude of the endeavor rests not in the institutional necessities which must carry it forward, but rather in the expectations which any candidate must engender and then satisfy in the minds and the hearts of the American people. This is the great task.

I came home simply because the strength I need for the undertaking before me is here. I know that as I travel the country in the weeks and months ahead, I will be heard and helped by others who agree with me, who will consider my views and examine my record and judge my capacities and they will determine, as they should, whether I succeed or fail.

But there ought to be at least one place for every person where he or she is accepted with unjudging love and strengthened and reassured by it, and for me that place is here. I was born here, I left for awhile, I was hurt and I came back. I was helped and healed in this place by my townsmen and I began my public career here. And whenever I have set out on a new path, I have come back here to begin. No failure has ever been so hurtful that this place could not ease the pain. And no success has ever been so great that its satisfaction exceeded the satisfaction of being a part of the people of Russell, a citizen of Kansas."

Thank you.

Full Speech Text

Posted by Mike on May 14, 2006 | Permalink

Bob Graham 2004 Announcement

Bob Graham 2004Bob Graham's Declaration of Candidacy for President of the United States on May 6, 2003.

"We are gathered here today because this is where the future is built. In communities across America. And especially in places like Florida.

This land at the southern tip of the United States has lured people for centuries with the promise of a better future.

But we Floridians know well that a dynamic future rests on a fragile foundation: an environment we must protect; diversity we must nurture; values we must safeguard; families and communities in which we must invest.

We know we will be judged by whether we leave our children and grandchildren an America that is better than the one we inherited.

I am an optimist. America's best days are still ahead of us. Yet, realizing that future starts with an honest assessment of where we are today.

We must become one America again -- an America energized with optimism -- an America that continues its never-ending experiment of democracy -- an America that looks to the dawn and the spring -- an America whose sights are higher, never lower, whose aspirations are greater,
never lesser.

That is why...I am today...Declaring that I am a candidate for President of the United States of America."

Full Speech Text

Posted by Mike on May 06, 2006 | Permalink

George Bush 1980 Announcement

George Bush 1980Presidential Announcement Statement of Ambassador George Bush on May 1, 1979.

"Ladies and gentlemen, I am a candidate for President of the United States.

With the help of friends and supporters throughout the country, I intend to seek and win our party's nomination and the general election in 1980.

I seek this nomination as a lifelong Republican who has worked throughout his career, in business and in public office, on behalf of the principles of Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower.

At the outset of this campaign, let me say that I am not running for President as a regional or factional candidate, but as a national candidate. I ask all Republicans to join me in a common effort to bring America the principled, stable leadership we must have in the decade of the eighties.

As a national- candidate, I will welcome the support of all Americans -- Republicans Democrats and Independents -- in my campaign, to give America the new leadership needed to keep our country free prosperous and second-to-none in the years ahead.

In this spirit, too, I from this day will go forward to seek the Presidential nomination of my Party and the support of Americans everywhere who believe that in the decade of the eighties, America must have a new leadership -- a leadership confident of our strength, compassionate of heart, and clear in mind, as we turn to the great tasks before us."

Full Speech Text

Posted by Mike on May 01, 2006 | Permalink

John McCain Unveils New 2000 Presidential Campaign Web Page

John McCain 2000John McCain unveiled his 2000 Presidential Campaign web page on April 30, 1999 with this release.

(WASHINGTON, DC) -- Republican presidential candidate U.S. Senator John McCain today unveiled his Presidential campaign web page.

"I'm excited my campaign is making use of the cutting edge in communications technology," said McCain, who yesterday also participated in the first online chat of his campaign. "My web site offers the latest features to help supporters, committed or potential, as well as reporters, students and the just plain curious."

"The Internet provides us with a new and exciting opportunity to communicate directly with voters," said McCain. "Each of us can now become better informed and more closely involved with candidates and their positions on the issues. Using sites like mine, citizens young and old can find the information they need to make more educated choices about their leaders."

McCain's site offers biographical video of the Senator's stirring life story, as well as clear statements of his stands on the important issues of the day. Major speeches as well as the Senator's campaign schedule and press releases are also available at the site. Supporters will also able to volunteer their time, donate money and request campaign paraphernalia.

Posted by Mike on April 30, 2006 | Permalink

Paul Tsongas 1992 Announcement

Paul E. Tsongas Announcement Speech in Lowell, Massachusetts on April 30, 1991

Two hundred years ago, our Founding Fathers gave us a democracy. It was based upon the simple, yet noble, idea that government derives its validity from the consent of the governed. That consent must be constantly renewed. And it can only be renewed by a full and vigorous debate on the issues that confront our nation.

Today that search for renewal begins. Today that search for consent proceeds as the Constitution has provided. Today the national debate will commence.

You are Americans. You love this country. Together we are entrusted with the principles that represent mankind's greatest political and social achievement.

America is hope. It is compassion. It is excellence. It is valor.

We must return to the glory of our forebearers by unleashing the greatness of our people. We need leadership that calls upon the best of what we are. We need leadership that embraces a higher vision.

Today that leadership is not in Washington. That leadership is here and across America. It is in the hearts and minds and souls of the American people. I want to deploy the leadership to meet the challenges that face us and to restore America's greatness.

That is why I declare today my candidacy for the President of the United States."

Full Speech Text

Posted by Mike on April 30, 2006 | Permalink

Hubert H. Humphrey 1968 Announcement

Hubert H. Humphrey 1968

Hubert H. Humphrey Declaration of Candidacy for the Presidential Nomination given in Washington, D.C. on April 27, 1968.

"My fellow Americans, we're here today on important business, freedom's business, American's business, the Democratic Party's business, and in that order. These priorities of freedom, country, and party have guided me as I have sought to reach an important personal decision. Any man who has had the privilege of spending almost twenty years near the President and the Presidency as I have, must weigh very carefully the implications of seeking an office that demands perhaps more judgment, wisdom, and maturity than any single man possesses. Yet any man who has spent a lifetime, at least who has spent his adult life in public service, also knows within himself that he must be willing to give of himself, when and where he feels he can best serve what he believes in. And so my friends and fellow Americans, facing and knowing the hard realities of the office, yet also knowing the potential for good which lies within it, I shall seek the nomination of the Democratic Party.

(We want Humphrey...) Like it or not, you have him. Yes, as I said, I shall seek the nomination of the Democratic Party for the Presidency of the United States. My credentials, well, they may be stated rather simply: of a loving family; teacher; mayor of my city; senator from my state; vice-president of my country; grateful husband; proud father; believer in the American Dream-the concept of human brotherhood."

And I shall make everything that I do on one conviction: that this country, we the people of these United States, working in a spirit of unity,  can overcome any obstacle, finally realizing the fullness of freedom, the prize of peace, in the happiness of human opportunity, both here and in the world.  My fellow Americans, we are the people of today; we are the people of tomorrow, it is to the future that we look and we aspire. And I found some words are told me exactly what I want to tell you; you値l find them inscribed in the great literature. The future has several names: for the weak it is impossible, for the faint-hearted it is the unknown, for the thoughtful and the valiant it is ideals. The challenge is urgent, the test is large, the time is now -- on to victory!

Full Speech Text

Posted by Mike on April 27, 2006 | Permalink

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