
John Fitzgerald Kennedy takes the oath of office and becomes the 35th President of the United States of America, January
20, 1961. At age 43, he is the youngest man and the first Roman Catholic ever elected, winning by one of the smallest margins
of victory, only 115,000 popular votes. Lyndon B. Johnson, 51, is his Vice-president.



Left - The new President's motorcade on Pennsylvania Avenue during the inaugural parade. Right - An aerial view of the
Kennedy White House.


The President and First Lady, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, arrive at one of numerous inaugural balls held in their honor.
The festivities will last until nearly 4 a.m. the next day. Just before 9 a.m., after a few hours sleep, the President then
arrives at his office for his first day as chief executive.



First Day in Office. Left - The swearing in of the Kennedy cabinet, featuring the controversial appointment of the President's
younger brother Robert as U.S. Attorney General. Right - A group portrait of the Kennedy family along with Lyndon and Ladybird
Johnson.


Just five days after taking office, the President holds his first news conference, televised live from the State Department
auditorium. His easy going style and quick wit instantly endear him to many reporters and to the American people watching
at home.




From the beginning and throughout his presidency, international tensions and political conflicts are a major preoccupation.
Left - His first meeting with Soviet Foreign Affairs minister, Andrei Gromyko. Mid - During a news conference discussing the
problems of Laos in Southeast Asia, the President states, "The security of all Southeast Asia will be endangered if Laos loses
its neutral independence." He orders more military aid including U.S. armed forces to the area. Right - Addressing the Nato
chiefs of staff at the State Department he pledges a strengthening of conventional forces and an effective nuclear capability.


Following the Bay of Pigs debacle, a private conversation between President Kennedy and former President Eisenhower at
Camp David, Maryland. April 22, 1961.
Bay of Pigs refers to the attempt made by over 1200 anti-Castro Cuban rebels to land on the southern
coast of Cuba and overthrow the regime of Fidel Castro, April 17, 1961. Although trained and backed by the U.S. government,
the invasion failed as the rebels were attacked by Cuban military forces and received no support from the U.S. military or
anti-Castro people in Cuba. As a result, they were quickly defeated and put in prison, causing a major embarrassment to the
Kennedy White House. At a press meeting on April 20, the President effectively deflected much of the criticism by commenting
on some of the lessons he learned from the failed mission - "...the forces of Communism are not to be underestimated."
Shortly after this, in early June, the President traveled to Vienna, Austria, where he met with Soviet Premier Nikita Khruschev
for the first time. During two days of meetings, Khruschev sized-up the young President and underestimated his resolve, resulting
later in the October Missile Crisis of 1962.



The Space Race. Left - The President, First Lady and Vice-president watch Alan Shepard on television become the first U.S.
astronaut by making a 15 minute suborbital flight, May 5, 1961. Following the later launch into orbit of John Glenn, the President
visited Cape Canaveral in Florida and presented Glenn with NASA's Distinguished Service Medal. Right - Astronaut Glenn shows
the President the space capsule in which he traveled into orbit and circled the earth three times.
In September of 1962 the President delivered a speech at Rice University in which he pledged the U.S.
would put a man on the moon "before the end of this decade." Seven years later, July of 1969, Astronaut Neil Armstrong sets
foot on the moon.


At the request of his brother Robert, standing behind him, the President signs three tough new anti-crime bills targeting
organized crime. The bills prohibit telephone betting, interstate transportation for purposes of racketeering and commercial
transportation of betting equipment.
