The President's Been Shot
Forty years ago, the assassination of JFK stunned Americans, who vividly recall the day even as they grapple with his complex legacy
- By Dana Calvo
- Smithsonian.com, November 01, 2003, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 7)
SUMNER REDSTONE
80, CHAIRMAN AND CEO OF VIACOM, THE ENTERTAINMENT CONGLOMERATE
I did know the president fairly well. At the time, I was president of the major trade organization in our industry, Theater Owners of America. It represented all the exhibitors in the United States. In the South, black people were being turned away at theaters. I have a telegram from him:May 28, 1963. I am meeting with a group of business leaders to discuss some aspects of the difficulties experienced by minority groups in many of our cities in securing employment and equal access to facilities and services generally available to the public. These subjects merit serious and immediate attention, and I would be pleased to have you attend the meeting to be held in the East Room of the White House. Please advise whether you will be able to attend. John F. Kennedy. He was always filled with energy. He was a fighter for things that weren’t as they should be.
I was walking down the street in Cincinnati. I was there to look at a location for a theater. Somebody stopped me. I was overwhelmed. I was crying. I remember it like it was this morning. All the credit that he has been given, all of the praise, I think is due him. . . . I’ve never felt that his private life was the way to judge him. We should judge a president by the way he performs as president.
ARVAMOOREPARKS
64, MIAMI HISTORIAN AND AUTHOR
When he was shot, I was teaching government to seniors at MiamiEdisonHigh School. Some of these kids were 18, and I was 23. We’re tied together for eternity. I was standing in front of my fifth-period class and the announcement came over the intercom. Everyone was stunned and shocked.
There was such a sense of optimism in 1963. It spilled over. You were proud to be bright-eyed and bushy-tailed. The assassination was a terrible blow to our self-esteem, to our naiveté.
REYNOLDS PRICE
70, DUKE UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR, POET, PLAYWRIGHT, SCREENWRITER AND NOVELIST
I was walking on the DukeUniversity campus to teach my freshman English class, and I saw Josephine Humphreys, who’s become a wonderful novelist and was then a freshman. She was holding a small transistor radio up to her ear. I said, “Jo, what are you doing?” She said, “The president’s been shot.” We went up to the classroom, and the other 15 or so students were up there. We just sat there. The radio began playing the funeral march from Beethoven’s Third Symphony. Then Roger Mudd’s voice came on and said President Kennedy had died. We sat there stunned. I didn’t even possess a television. I raced over to another student of mine off-campus who had a rickety black-and-white TV. We sat there until 2 or 3 a.m. watching news. I was utterly horrified.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (2)
Amongst the Kennedys, the one that I miss the most if Robert F. Kennedy. Had he became the president, he would have made America much better, especially the wars that it is involved in would have never become the trend of its foreign policies.
I always say that only Robert F. Kennedy's work and character alone could save him against the rumours spread to smear his character. What is worse is that each time, there is always a new book trying to sell on rumours. I seriously question the American people's approach in doing this with the last best politician they had who promised true hope, not like Obama who is full of deception.
Posted by Amnah Khan on October 29,2011 | 04:31 PM
I ALWAYS LOVE READING ABOUT JOHN F.KENNEDY WHEN HE GOT SHOT BY 24 YEAR OLD LEE HARVEY OSWALD IT ALWAYS SEEMS VERY INTERSTING FOR TO ALL ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED TO HIM ON NOVEMBER 22,1963 IN DALLAS,TEXAS I LOVE US HISTORY A LOT AND I LOVE LEARNING ALL ABOUT US HISTORY,BLACK HISTORY AND WORLD HISTORY TOO SO I LOVE READING THIS ARICLE ON THE PRESIDENT'S BEEN SHOT ON YOUR WEBSITE JUST NOW SMITHSONIAN.COM THANK YOU VERY MUCH AND GOD BLESS YOU ALL FOREVER AND ALWAYS.
FROM,
ANGELA BETH HARTMAN
Posted by ANGELA BETH HARTMAN on October 7,2010 | 07:04 PM