Highlights

Born Jacqueline Lee Bouvier on July 28, 1929 in Southampton, New York, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died May 19, 1994. She was the wife of former President John F. Kennedy. (Photo AP)
Born Jacqueline Lee Bouvier on July 28, 1929 in Southampton, New York, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died May 19, 1994. She was the wife of former President John F. Kennedy. (Photo AP)
Displaying items 1-12 of 247
» View baltimoresun.com items only
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11-21
Next >
-
Baltimore native played key role in Johnson's swearing-in
Kenneth O'Donnell, aide to President John F. Kennedy, stepped into a small cubicle at Parkland Hospital, where Vice President Lyndon Baines Johnson nervously waited with his wife and several aides to learn the condition of the president. Kennedy had...Tags: Arts, Robert F. Kennedy, George Washington, Colleges and Universities, Photography
-
Alice C. Steinbach, Pulitzer Prize winner
Alice C. Steinbach, the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for The Baltimore Sun, whose work captured the wonder and grace of people and places around the world, died Tuesday of cancer at her Roland Park Place home. She was 78.
In her more than two-...Tags: Arts, Newspapers, Pulitzer Prize Awards, Entertainment Events, Trials
-
Sparkling wine recommendations for any price range
Whether true or just a bit of wishful folklore, champagne was reportedly first cooked up by the French Benedictine monk Pierre Perignon (c. 1638-1715). When Dom Perignon first tasted his concoction, he is reported to have said, "Come quickly, I am...Tags: Dining and Drinking, Bars and Clubs, Alcoholic Beverages, Wines, Roland Park
-
Andy Warhol is back in the 'Headlines' at NGA
Andy Warhol died in 1987, but he continues to make headlines. This is almost literally the case with a National Gallery of Art exhibit, "Warhol: Headlines," that showcases screenprints and paintings whose design imitates that of a newspaper front page....Tags: Arts, Artists, National Enquirer, Keith Haring, Madonna
-
Charles Leo Coyle
Baltimore Sun reporterCharles Leo Coyle, a retired advertising executive for the Hecht Co. and the News American who was a World War II dive bomber, died of kidney disease Sept. 23 at the Hospice House of Williamsburg, Va. He was 88 and had lived in Towson for many years....Tags: Guerrilla Activity, Air and Space Accidents, World War I (1914-1918), Kidney Disease, Philippines
-
Smithsonian exhibit details White House furnishings
It is hard to believe, considering our national fondness for the White House and its history, but new presidents used to sell off the furnishings from the previous administration in something like a garage sale.
In an attempt to make "the people's house"...Tags: Arts, Artists, Theodore Roosevelt, Benjamin Harrison, Entertainment Events
-
Best week ever: Baltimore events, music, movies and more
MOVIES OPENING (Friday)
I Don’t Know How She Does It
Drive
The Lion King 3-D
Straw Dogs
NOTABLE TV
Monday:
Anderson (talk-show premiere; syndicated)
Monday Night Football: New England at Miami (season premiere; 7 p.m.; ESPN)
Bachelor Pad...Tags: Arts, Star Wars (movie), VH1 (tv network), ABC (tv network), Laura Marling
-
'Project Runway' recap: A history lesson
Reality CheckHere's Janell on last week's Project Runway:Previously, on “People Who Sew Together, Grow Together”: April won, Michael D was thrown under a bus, and Casanova’s grandmother was out.There’s a quiet morning of people getting ready,...Tags: Goth (genre), Dining and Drinking, Bars and Clubs, The Happiest News!, Eyewear
-
25 movies added to National Film Registry
Baltimore Sun reporterFrom the MIchael Sragow Gets Reel blog: Today the Library of Congress announced 25 more selections for the National Film Registry. The Registry is designed to highlight the American cinema's broad social-cultural significance as well as mark its key...Tags: William S. Hart, Armed Forces, Star Wars (movie), Theater, Bars and Clubs
-
The Obamas put their stamp on the White House interior
Special to The Baltimore SunBarack Obama, his wife, two daughters and mother-in-law are set to move Tuesday into a big old barn of a house that is not exactly homey. The White House contains two floors of ceremonial, museumlike rooms topped by two floors of family quarters filled...Tags: Design and Engineering, Monuments and Heritage Sites, Tourism and Leisure, Gerald Ford, Cindy Crawford
-
'First lady' of civil rights
Sun ReporterCoretta Scott King, a pioneer of the civil rights movement who marched alongside her husband, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., in the fight for equality and carried his torch for nearly four decades after his death, died early yesterday in Mexico. She was...Tags: Elijah E. Cummings, Arts, Holidays, Ku Klux Klan, Demonstration
-
Along the parade route, quiet memories and tears
Sun StaffWASHINGTON - The horse-drawn caisson moved up Constitution Avenue and silence followed. A street usually marked by rush-hour commotion filled only with the traffic of a national ritual; the city of political battles had only a funeral on its mind. As the...Tags: Trips and Vacations, IBM, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Family, Satellite and Cable Service
May 18, 2012
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Mar 14, 2012
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Dec 27, 2011
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Dec 14, 2011
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Sep 30, 2011
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Oct 21, 2011
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Sep 12, 2011
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Sep 20, 2010
|Blog| Baltimore Sun
Dec 29, 2010
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jan 17, 2009
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Feb 1, 2006
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jun 10, 2004
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Original site for Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis topic gallery.

