Unidentified Photographer [President John F. Kennedy speaking at a joint session of Congress in front of Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson and House Speaker John McCormack, Washington, D.C.]
Hy Peskin Between games Jackie takes it easy on the veranda of the Kennedy home. Daughter of a New York financier, Jackie studied at Vassar, George Washington University and the Sorbonne in Paris.
Unidentified Photographer [John F. Kennedy during new conference ordering Defense Department to take action against any Cuban aggression on American vessels or aircraft, Washington, DC]
Unidentified Photographer [John F. Kennedy handing out souvenir pens to senators and representatives after signing emergency public works bill, Oval Office, White House, Washington, DC]
Danny Lyon 327, 329 and 331 Washington Street, between Jay and Harrison Streets. Demolition of these buildings was delayed as efforts were made to preserve them and the corner they stood adjacent to.
George Skadding The 2,240 survivors of the 5,000 goats, pigs, and rats that were exposed to Atomic Bombs 4 and 5 aboard warships in Bikini atoll arrived in Washington, D.C. last week.
Unidentified Photographer [President John F. Kennedy sitting in a rocking chair talking to the Mayor of Cleveland Anthony J. Celebresse and Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Abraham Ribicoff, Washington, D.C.]
Unidentified Photographer [John F. Kennedy presenting trophy to Charles Thompson, Sr., winner of 1960 President's Cup Hydroplane Race in the President's Cup Regatta, White House Rose Garden, Washington, DC]
Unidentified Photographer [Funeral procession for John F. Kennedy included world leaders Heinrich Lübke, Charles de Gaulle, Queen Frederika, Baudouin I, Haile Selassie, and Diosdado Macapagal, Washington, DC]
George Silk [Jacqueline Kennedy and her children Caroline and John Jr., followed by Rose Kennedy, leaving Saint Matthew's Cathedral for Arlington National Cemetery after John F. Kennedy's funeral, Washington, D.C.]
Danny Lyon 258 Washington Street at the northwest corner of Murray Street. Built by James Bogardus in 1848, this was the first cast-iron building erected in New York, and was possibly the oldest cast-iron building in the world