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 4 of 7)
I was in ninth grade, at Saint Augustin High School in San Diego. I was going to a Catholic school, so you can imagine how important Kennedy was to all of us. He showed a tremendous amount of grit during the Cuban Missile Crisis, but his main thing was the psychological factor. He made us believe in the future, in a better world, in the Peace Corps. He created a feeling of a future filled with hope at a time when we were coming out of a dark period of paranoia, of nuclear holocaust, of fear, the cold war.
I was sitting in the gym, and the coach came in. He had a little transistor radio in his ear, and he said the president had been shot. It was like this beautiful world of hope and youth had just come crashing down. We didn’t know that he was dead yet. The school stopped, and everybody was hanging on every word. When the news came that he had been killed, I wept.
What he did have was this vibe, this aura, the energy that anything was possible. I’ve carried with me that optimism. I constantly revisit it. Had he lived, I think the nation would have followed a completely different path.
WILLIAM SEALE
64, FORMER WHITE HOUSE HISTORIAN
I was a senior at SouthwesternUniversity in Georgetown, Texas, about 30 miles north of Austin. I was taking a French exam. The proctor came in, and he looked so strange. I got home at 8:30 p.m., and I hadn’t seen a soul, and there was my newspaper, the Durham Times, an evening paper, and it said Kennedy had been shot in Dallas. It was so outrageous and horrible that this bright man was taken out like some bird in the field. I was at a friend’s house watching them transfer Lee Harvey Oswald and watched Jack Ruby shoot him, and it was as if the whole world was coming apart.
Kennedy was a wonderful political figure. He knew the system, and he interested the public and drew them to the presidency. Of course, they staged a lot of it, and Kennedy and his wife “featured” themselves. The Kennedy administration brought civil rights in as a means of saving themselves. They had not been committed to it for a long time. There was the semi-famous moment when he met with Martin Luther King Jr. at the White House. When King left, Kennedy said, “I didn’t know what to say to him.”
I can look beyond the assassination and see an administration with enormous ideas and enormous reach and a lack of study and planning to carry them out. I don’t think it was a time of great presidents. He was a good president. His death made him bigger than he was in life.
TOM CLANCY
56, NOVELIST
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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