Hugh Sidey (September 3, 1927 – November 21, 2005) was an American journalist who worked for Life magazine starting in 1955, then moved on to Time magazine in 1957. Read full biography of Hugh Sidey →
A sense of humor... is needed armor. Joy in one's heart and some laughter on one's lips is a sign that the person down deep has a pretty good... →
They can see the brave silhouette from almost anywhere in the District of Columbia and use it as a compass to locate other monuments and eventually... →
The problems seem so easy out there on the stump. Deficits shrink with a rhetorical flourish.
The legions of reporters who cover politics don't want to quit the clash and thunder of electoral combat for the dry duty of analyzing the... →
A White House dinner is the American family assembled, from labor leaders to billionaires, actors, architects, academicians and athletes.
Kennedy did not have to run the risk of having his ideas and his words shortened and adulterated by a correspondent. This was the television era, not... →
The prime minister found something hopeful in the man's eyes and manner. The 30 or so people who run this world analyze one another that way and... →