President Donald Trump canceled trade talks with Canada on Thursday, citing a recent ad released by the government of Canada’s Ontario province that quoted former President Ronald Reagan’s 1987 radio ...
The Great Storm of 1987 was a forecasting blunder that left at least 18 people dead, felled 15 million trees and caused a billion pounds’ worth of damage. Credit...By Getty Images Supported by By ...
Oct 24 (Reuters) - The 1987 radio address by the former U.S. President Ronald Reagan at the centre of a new U.S.-Canada row was a defence of free but fair trade in which he explained his decision to ...
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The ad, which will stop airing on Monday, used audio of a 1987 address by Ronald Reagan making a case against tariffs. By Matina Stevis-Gridneff Reporting in Toronto President Trump doubled down on ...
Since debuting nine (!) years ago, Stranger Things has been regularly dubbed “Amblin-esque,” despite the show expanding beyond E.T. and Poltergeist pastiche to incorporate riffs on Terminator and Die ...
A one-minute government ad out of Canada’s Ontario province includes part of a 1987 address by President Ronald Reagan about tariffs and trade. Overall, the ad’s message aligns with most of Reagan’s ...
The Ontario government ad that has triggered President Donald Trump's wrath and his decision to halt trade talks with Canada uses excerpts of a 1987 speech by former U.S. president Ronald Reagan. A ...
Throughout the history of Harley-Davidson, the words "best handling" have seldom been used to describe the brand's bikes without considerable heated debate following. For the longest time, ...
The radio address made by former President Ronald Reagan focused on the impact of tariffs US President Donald Trump halted all trade negotiations with Canada earlier this week over an advert in which ...
The latest storm in Canada's tense trade negotiations with the United States erupted over an Ontario government advertising campaign that pushes back on tariffs by using snippets of former U.S.