When their terms end, US presidents must move out of the country's most famous address and make other living arrangements.
Perle Mesta’s affable personality and compulsive party-throwing are remembered in Meryl Gordon’s new biography, “The Woman ...
Peter Yarrow, lead vocalist and songwriter for the folk trio Peter, Paul, and Mary, passed away on 7 January 2025 at 86 after a four-year battle with bladder cancer.
After serving as President Dwight Eisenhower's right-hand man for eight years, Nixon faced an uphill battle to the presidency ...
The 41-year-old Southern Baptist pastor—with a reputation for comparing himself to Jesus and for dishing out misogynistic wedding advice ... It was 1954 when Lyndon B. Johnson, then a Democrat ...
James “Jimmy” Carter, the peanut farmer from Plains, Georgia, who became the 39th president of the United States and later redefined the role of an ex-president through decades of humanitarian ...
President Lyndon B. Johnson also had a "blind" trust created for his television station. When Johnson became Vice President in 1963, his staff "urged him to sell the station" to avoid potential ...
There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood in 1964, led on to fame for Lyndon Baines Johnson. From that November afternoon when he made it clear that the torch of continuity ...
For Lyndon Johnson’s 200 million ... s hopes of ever succeeding Johnson on his own. Democrats abandoned the President in droves, forming Dump-L.B.J. movements or rallying behind Gene McCarthy ...