One thing we saw lots of this week as power switched from one political party to the other was presidential pardons.
When future President Gerald Ford graduated from the University of Michigan, he faced a choice that might have been decided very differently today: to join the NFL or try for law school.
No one was hurt when a small plane made an emergency landing at the Gerald R. Ford International Airport Wednesday morning, a spokesperson for the airport told News 8.
Future Gerald R. Ford-class nuclear-powered US aircraft carriers will be named after former presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.
The Mustangs ' 2025 non-conference football schedule is officially complete. SMU announced Thursday afternoon a matchup with East Texas A&M on Aug. 30, 2025 at Gerald J. Ford Stadium to open the Mustangs' 2025 season.
The aircraft was forced to land after it was discovered that a nose gear tow bar was still attached to the aircraft.
The Ford School of Public Policy hosted former Chicago Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot and former Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan Wednesday evening.
May 1975 - Cambodia seizes the American ship Mayaguez. Ford sends in the Navy, Marines and Air Force. The ship is retaken and the crew of 39 is rescued, although 41 American service members are killed as a result of the operation. July 8, 1975 - Formally announces he will seek the Republican nomination for the presidency in 1976.
The Potsdam Public Museum has obtained an archive of articles from a Potsdam reporter who worked here in the late 1940s, who later became an editor of Newsweek magazine and then a domestic affairs advisor for President Gerald R.
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A country without referees
This assessment by a president about another president is the exact opposite of what a Nigerian would probably say about a fellow Nigerian, both knowing that “honesty and truth-telling” will be antonyms to their characters as Nigerians.
Preemptive pardons, like the ones Joe Biden issued in his final hours as president, have been used by Donald Trump, Jimmy Carter and other presidents.
Joe Biden has pardoned more than 3,000 people during his final days in office. Other presidents have used the power to exonerate friends, family and supporters.