REAGAN MAY BE COUNTRY'S OVERLOOKED WISDOM FONT.Byline: Mark Burson Local View AN old Broadway tune goes, ``Everything Old Is New Again,'' and the many bell-bottomed jeans I see walking the streets just might prove the lyrical adage. But while fashion seems to come and go and come again, some ideas are as timeless as they are true. For example, just when you thought California leaders lacked new insight about the state's energy crisis comes one of the Golden State's favorite sons with some bright perspectives to light the days ahead. ``All the world, I guess, is aware of the California shortage. Some think we are careless guzzlers and it serves us right. Others laugh it off as proof that Californians are pixilated pix·i·lat·ed or pix·il·lat·ed adj. 1. Behaving as if mentally unbalanced; very eccentric. 2. Whimsical; prankish. 3. Slang Intoxicated; drunk. . One thing we can prove: Californians aren't to blame, as a Washington Post editorial suggested they were.'' These sentiments sound like contemporary stuff, but the words were written a generation ago - and they show for the umpteenth time that Ronald Reagan predicted most of what ails and ailed our country, and that he prescribed common-sense solutions that others still suggest today. A new book has helped capture this fact - ``Reagan In His Own Hand'' edited by Martin Anderson, Annelise Anderson and Kiron Skinner. It is a collection of the radio addresses Reagan delivered between 1975 and 1979, leading up to his election as president in 1980. And make no mistake: While already a popular figure, the special qualities of his radio work were instrumental in elevating Reagan to the White House. He broadcast more than 1,000 of these radio essays, and in reading them, one can literally hear a full voice of the vintage Reagan wit. In describing environmentalist environmentalist a person with an interest and knowledge about the interaction of humans and animals with the environment. foes of energy source expansion, he writes, ``It is rude and ungentlemanly to call them ignorant. They just know a great many things that aren't true.'' Another asks, ``Will Alaska wind up as our biggest state, or will it be our smallest state surrounded by our biggest national park?'' But most of all, these writings provide ready proof not only of President Reagan's instinctive understanding of foreign policy, domestic affairs, human rights and social issues - we knew that already - but of his deep intellect and keen mind. And they leave us with perhaps the most compelling evidence of all in making the case for Ronald Reagan as the quintessential quin·tes·sen·tial adj. Of, relating to, or having the nature of a quintessence; being the most typical: "Liszt was the quintessential romantic" Musical Heritage Review. thinking man. In truth, Reagan has already received the most important tributes: Statesman, patriot, peacemaker, restorer of the American spirit. But one acclaim that has too often eluded him is that of intellectual, mostly because he surely did not seek it. He proudly volunteered Louis L'Amour Louis L'Amour (March 22, 1908 – June 10, 1988) was an American author of primarily Western fiction. He was born Louis Dearborn L'Amour of French-Canadian background March 22, 1908 in Jamestown, North Dakota. westerns as his favorite reading, when he surely could have told us of his fondness for Proust or Stendahl. His favorite food? Not the haute cuisine haute cuisine n. 1. Elaborate or skillfully prepared food, especially that of France. 2. The characteristic manner or style of preparing such food. of the well-to-do, but the American staple macaroni macaroni: see pasta. and cheese. Take a look at today's newspapers. Most every subject dominating the present headlines is captured among Reagan's radio addresses: taxes, crime, education, economics, energy, the environment, China. Reagan did not merely comment on the affairs of the day, he considered where America was, and plotted a new and better course for her to choose. Facts, figures, data, research, studies, percentages - all leap off the pages of this book and show Reagan's love of knowledge. And as an avid outdoorsman (he even labeled himself ``an ecologist''), he could be graceful in writing of natural beauty: ``There is a vast wilderness of mountains, lakes, rivers, glaciers This is a list of glaciers. Due to somewhat sparse information, some glaciers, especially those in the tropics, may no longer exist as listed. This is especially true for glaciers in Africa and New Guinea. and tundra tundra (tŭn`drə), treeless plains of N North America and N Eurasia, lying principally along the Arctic Circle, on the coasts and islands of the Arctic Ocean, and to the north of the coniferous forest belt. , where Kodiak bears roam and the great Arctic wolves stalk stalk (stawk) an elongated anatomical structure resembling the stem of a plant. allantoic stalk the caribou Caribou, town, United States Caribou (kâr`ĭb ), town (1990 pop. 9,415), Aroostook co., NE Maine, on the Aroostook River; inc. 1859. .''
The Sierra Club Sierra Club, national organization in the United States dedicated to the preservation and expansion of the world's parks, wildlife, and wilderness areas. Founded (1892) in California by a group led by the Scottish-American conservationist John Muir, the Sierra Club couldn't have put it any better. This book is truly the definitive work on Ronald Reagan, and how appropriate it is that the man himself would be its primary author. As future historians seek to understand the 40th president, and place him into the context of the American experience American Experience (sometimes abbreviated AmEx) is a television program airing on the PBS network in the United States. The program airs documentaries about important or interesting events and people in American history, many of which have won impressive , they will look first, and often, to ``Reagan In His Own Hand.'' For me, one device used in every address is most memorable. Each commentary begins with a short, provocative thought, followed by Reagan's assurance that ``I'll be right back,'' as the broadcast went to commercial break. With this collection, Reagan will always ``be right back.'' Those of us who watched him and admired him can treasure him anew, and perhaps even more importantly, those not old enough to remember him can learn what made him great. |
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