The White House kitchen has the capability to whip up whatever a president desires at any hour. So what did Richard Nixon ...
Fifty years ago last week, Richard Nixon resigned from the presidency. His resignation was compelled by the impending release ...
two Justice Department officials -- Attorney General Elliot Richardson and Deputy attorney General William Ruckelshaus -- resigned after U.S. President Richard Nixon ordered them to fire special ...
A Pulitzer Prize–winning photojournalist—and former White House photographer—captured the scene as last night’s rally took a ...
The decline in trust of journalism was carefully orchestrated. One man who worked for the Heritage Foundation in the '80s and advocated for repeal of the Fairness Doctrine, James Gattuso, would go on ...
Only three of his predecessors underwent similar proceedings: Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton, who were acquitted after trials in the Senate; and Richard Nixon, who resigned to avoid being ...
In the old days, when daily newspapers provided intensive local news coverage, the media could take down a congressman. Back ...
Richard Nixon served as President of the United States from 1969 until he resigned from office in 1974. It was now up to the newly sworn-in President Ford to lead the nation through this ...
Gerald Ford assumed the Oval Office after a year when Richard Nixon resigned. Lyndon B. Johnson was among the eight VPs who became president before an election - but after their predecessor died.
What will it take for a woman to obtain the highest office in the land? Historian Alexis Coe looks back at a speech former President Gerald Ford gave to a bunch of school kids and wonders if he—and ...
Editor's note: This is a regular feature on issues related to the Constitution and civics education written by Paul G. Summers, retired judge and state attorney general. The 25th Amendment ...