After Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated John F. Kennedy in November 1963, Jack Ruby murdered Oswald two days later Skyler Trebel is a contributing writer at PEOPLE. He has been working at PEOPLE since ...
America wants to see the files. Not only the Epstein files. The Kennedy assassination files. We now know more. Documents released this year show the Central Intelligence Agency lied to us and knew all ...
On Nov. 24, 1963, Jack Ruby shot and mortally wounded Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy, in a scene captured on live television. Also on this date: In 1859, British ...
Electronic Arts' new Skate is getting its second season in early December, and it appears that developer Full Circle is already responding to player feedback amid its popular but sometimes rocky early ...
Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald in a scene captured live on television. The shooting was in response to the assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States of ...
DALLAS, Nov. 24, 1963 (UPI) -- It was a struggle between a reporter's premonition and sleep, but the premonition won. I was going to be off duty until 3 p.m. today, after spending two days in the ...
DALLAS, Nov. 24, 1963 (UPI) - Dr. Malcolm O. Perry said today that accused presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was "lethally injured" by the time he arrived at Parkland Hospital's emergency room. ...
Kennedy's killer was murdered himself two days later, per police at the time. More than six decades after those fateful shots rang out in Dallas in 1963, the assassination of President John F. Kennedy ...
Detectives and Secret Servicemen continued to question the suspect—but Lee Harvey Oswald defiantly denied any guilt. Nonetheless, the police charged him formally with the murder of the President. Then ...
Publisher Devolver Digital and developer Sam Eng have announced their celestial skateboarding game, Skate Story, is launching day one for the PlayStation Plus Game Catalog on PlayStation 5. News of ...
As often before in his turncoat career, dark, humorless, melodramatic Sir Oswald Mosley was the center of a storm last week. As often before, the storm was more important than its center. The Black ...
In 1963 I was the night police reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, the newspaper in the town where I grew up. I was 26 years old, made $115 a week, and worked the late shift: six o’clock in the ...