Sadly, university presidents, business leaders and Democrats are doing little as Kentucky's Republican legislators roll back the racial clock.
Jimmy Carter, 39th president of the United States, arrives at Winfield House for his stay during the Economic Summit, London, UK, May 7, 1977. (Hilaria McCarthy/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images) The nation paid its final respects on Thursday to former President Jimmy Carter, who died at 100 on Dec. 29.
The political life of Jimmy Carter had several threads in Kentucky ... Al Cross is professor emeritus of journalism at the University of Kentucky. He was the longest-serving political writer for the Louisville Courier Journal (1989-2004) and national ...
The official state funeral honoring the life of former President Jimmy Carter ... scheduled to honor Carter's life and legacy Thursday, and how to watch them from Kentucky.
(WLS, JUSTIN BARNES, CNN) This year’s route will drive by several historical landmarks around the Metro, including Quinn Chapel AME Church, the only church in Louisville that Dr. King was allowed to preach in.
Staff Sgt. Benjamin Garnett, a 2002 graduate of Franklin County High School and former member of the Flyer band and chorus, played trumpet with the 282nd Fort Jackson U.S. Army
Others are reading:Former President Jimmy Carter dies at 100. Remember his visits to Kentucky Thursday's schedule ... on to serve two terms in office. Louisville lawsuits and police:Louisville ...
I was privileged to become acquainted with President Jimmy Carter's personal executive secretary, Susan Clough, while she and my father resided at Louisville's Treyton Oak Towers.
Even Richard Nixon was honorable enough that he ordered the flag at half-staff for his own inauguration. Not Trump.
After a former president dies, federal flag code dictates that flags should be flown at half-staff for 30 days out of respect. When Carter died Dec. 29 at age 100, President Joe Biden issued a proclamation to lower flags to half-staff for the standard period.
As Biden prepares to leave the White House, a federal investigation into classified documents raises questions about his handling of sensitive information
It mirrors actions taken in recent days by some Republican governors who have announced that flags in their states would be raised on Inauguration Day.