Pecora Hearings: A Political Sideshow
The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, created by Congress to determine the origins of the current crisis, could learn from Pecora's investigation in the 1930s.
Test Your Knowledge
November 22, 1963
Who was the only person prosecuted in connection with the assassination of John F. Kennedy? Prior to ascending to the Senate, who hatched the "single-bullet theory"?
- The answers can be found in U.S. News Weekly.
East Berliners gathering in front of the Berlin Wallas they watch East German border guards demolishing a section of the wall in order to open a new crossing point between East and West Berlin, near the Potsdamer Square.
Bush on the Fall of the Berlin Wall
Former President George H. W. Bush was typically modest when discussing the Berlin Wall.
The 10 Worst Presidents
U.S. News has averaged the results of five polls to compile a list of the worst presidents.
Historic First 100 Days
Not all presidents are successful in their first days in office, but some learn to move past it.
Pres. Reagan gestures as he prepares to depart from the South Lawn for the last campaign swing before the elections.
The Most Consequential Elections
U.S. News examines the most consequential elections in American history.
Great Moments in Campaign History
U.S. News has selected some of the presidential campaign moments that have made a difference in shaping history.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his wife Eleanor Roosevelt are seen in the back seat of an open limousine arriving at the White House in Washington following his inauguration in 1941.
Inaugural History: From Grand to Awkward
Many presidents found their predecessors to be less than gracious during the ceremonies.
Abraham Lincoln's Religious Uncertainty
Unlike recent presidents, Lincoln's religious faith is hard to pin down.
U.S. News Turns 75
The history of U.S. News overlaps with some of the great stories of the 20th and 21st centuries.
Are Christians Wrong About Darwin?
In an interview, one of the authors of Darwin's Sacred Cause argues Darwin was motivated by his faith.
The White Star liner 'Titanic' leaving Queenstown harbour before making her maiden voyage en route for the USA, The ship struck an iceberg and sank near Newfoundland, killing 1550 people
The Secret of How the Titanic Sank
New evidence has experts rethinking how the luxury passenger liner sank.
Secrets of the Civil War
An estimated 50,000 books have been written about the conflict, but there are still some mysteries left to be solved.
Secrets of a Revolution
New research shines a fresh light on the war for independence and the men who fought it.
A Soviet Spy in the U.S. Nuclear Program?
Former nuclear scientists make the case that a spy took nuclear secrets to the Soviet Union.
Photos and documents donated by John Milan Palik to the veterans oral history project at the Library of Congress .
Voices of the Past
From World War II soldiers to the survivors of Hurricane Katrina, more people are sharing memories to bring the past back to life.
England’s Queen Elizabeth I, 450 Years Later
450 years ago, the virgin queen ushered in England's Elizabethan age.



















