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President John F. Kennedy

NOUN
  1. 35th President of the United States; established the Peace Corps; assassinated in Dallas (1917-1963)

How To Use President John F. Kennedy In A Sentence

  • Bolden claimed that in October, 1963, the Chicago Secret Service office received a teletype from the Federal Bureau of Investigation warning that an attempt would be made to kill President John F. Kennedy by a four-man Cuban hit squad when he visited the city on 2nd November. Archive 2008-05-01
  • President John F. Kennedy, lionized by today's supply-siders for his 1963 tax cut, first proposed closing the deferral loophole 40 years ago, when it was a far smaller drain.
  • In some children, the infection showered septic emboli, blood clots that also contained infection, into their lungs, brains, and hearts.41 Then another group in Dallas—at Parkland, the enormous public hospital that older Americans know as the place where President John F. Kennedy was declared dead—found yet another very serious syndrome. SUPERBUG
  • Dallas Police Sgt. Warren C. Mitchell during during a news conference at police headquarters in Dallas F.iday, April 2, 2010 announcing they have charged neosoul singer Erykah Badu with disorderly conduct for her nude video shoot on a downtown street at the spot where President John F. Kennedy was shot dead in 1963. TheState.com: The Buzz
  • Years later, amid Cold War tensions, Democratic President John F. Kennedy chose Republican Douglas Dillon as Treasury Secretary.
  • The year 1963 is etched in the hearts and minds of many people as the year in which President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas.
  • U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy has been laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, D.C., late Saturday near his slain brothers, President John F. Kennedy and Senator Robert Kennedy.
  • An old-fashioned movie camera captured the most famous pictures in the citizen-media genre:the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963.
  • On the final day of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, all of President John F. Kennedy's advisers, civilian and military, urged him to attack the Soviet missile sites.
  • My editorship came to a rather abrupt end after President John F. Kennedy purged the U.S. Civil War Commission's members and staff.
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