President Donald Trump announced over the weekend that he would be releasing long-sought classified documents pertaining to the assassinations of John F.
Jon Stewart admitted Republicans are simply "better" at "new media," making Democrats look like Richard Nixon compared to John F. Kennedy. The post Jon Stewart Says Republicans Lapping Dems When It Comes To ‘New Media’: ‘They Are Kennedy and Television!
In 1960, the presidential race between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon was a tight one, and both sides were looking for an edge. Kennedy's advantage had wings.
A ferocious New York lawyer, Mr Cohn became Mr Trump’s mentor, “introducing him to the netherworld of sordid quid pro quos that Cohn ruled”, wrote Mr Trump’s dogged biographer, Wayne Barrett, in “Trump”.
We know that U.S. vice presidents are often the objects of humorous jabs for their secondary role in the executive branch or their public mishaps.
It was Sept. 6, 1960. The Gate City was one of many stops for John F. Kennedy during the Western states tour of his presidential campaign. Accompanying him during his visit was Idaho’s U.S. Senator, Frank Church, who’d nominated Kennedy at the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles two months earlier.
For millions, it was an event that would be seared into their memories for the rest of their lives – on par with the Kennedy assassination and 9/11.
On one popular ranking website, there is an unexpected entry at the top of the list of the greatest films in history.
Trump’s funding freeze potentially affects programmes like school meals and cancer trials. What are the consequences?
After the Tet Offensive in December 1968, U.S. involvement in Vietnam exploded and at one point some 33,000 soldiers trained at Fort Rucker; there was no traffic light at Dixie
The new official White House bio for Trump reads more like a campaign pitch. And it opens with a falsehood, claiming he won a "landslide election victory" when in fact his 1.5-point popular vote margin was one of the smallest since the 19th century. https://t.co/F0i6tUnNMm
Following her brutal election loss, former Vice President Kamala Harris reportedly spoke with Hillary Clinton on multiple occasions as she mulls her future in the wake of President Trump’s return to the White House.