mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
180 lines
8.3 KiB
XML
180 lines
8.3 KiB
XML
<xml><p>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 02
|
|
Subject: Keyword(s) : <ent type='PERSON'>KENNEDY</ent> and ASSASSINATION
|
|
Title : A Remembrance of <ent type='PERSON'>Kennedy</ent>
|
|
Author : <ent type='PERSON'>Jim Henderson</ent>
|
|
Source : <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent> Times Herald (<ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>, <ent type='GPE'>Texas</ent>)
|
|
Publication Date : Nov. 20, 1983
|
|
Page Number(s) : Special Sec. 1+
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
. . . Reprinted with permission from
|
|
<ent type='ORG'>DALLAS TIMES HERALD</ent>
|
|
(<ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>, <ent type='GPE'>Texas</ent>)
|
|
Nov. 20, 1983, Special Section, pp. 1+
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
A REMEMBRANCE OF <ent type='PERSON'>KENNEDY</ent>
|
|
by <ent type='PERSON'>Jim Henderson</ent>
|
|
Staff Writer
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
'Let the word go forth from this time and place...that the torch
|
|
has been passed to a new generation of <ent type='NORP'>Americans</ent>--born in this
|
|
century, tempered by war, disciplined by a hard and bitter peace,
|
|
proud of our ancient heritage.'
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
After 20 years, the events seem as compressed as a leanly
|
|
edited videotape.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
A sunny day, a dark convertible, a steady din rebounding
|
|
from the canyon walls above a crowded street, three cracks from a
|
|
rifle in a sniper's nest, a scramble below, engines racing, a
|
|
sobbing black woman outside Parkland Memorial Hospital, a
|
|
policeman shot across town, a pronouncement of death, a scrawny,
|
|
handcuffed suspect in a corridor with <ent type='PERSON'>Jack Ruby</ent>'s .38 exploding
|
|
in his belly.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
The nation was stunned by the images that were transmitted
|
|
from <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>--hard images formed in terse, teletype prose and more
|
|
vivid ones fashioned from bits and pieces of celluloid.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
<ent type='GPE'>America</ent> paused to watch the newsreel.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
A new President quickly sworn in and airlifted into command,
|
|
a bloodstained widow never far from the coffin, a change to
|
|
black, a bewildered daughter kneeling before a flag-draped box in
|
|
the Capitol rotunda, the wintry streets of the capital, a dark
|
|
riderless horse with empty boots facing backward in the stirrups,
|
|
a slow-moving caisson, a young boy saluting the honor guard
|
|
carrying his father to <ent type='ORG'>Arlington National Cemetery</ent>, the lighting
|
|
of the eternal flame.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
On the day John F. <ent type='PERSON'>Kennedy</ent> was buried, <ent type='PERSON'>Alistair Cooke</ent> wrote:
|
|
"He was snuffed out. In that moment, all the decent grief of a
|
|
nation was taunted and outraged. So along with the sorrow, there
|
|
is a desperate and howling note from over the land. We may pray
|
|
on our knees, but when we get up from them, we cry with the poet:
|
|
Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the
|
|
dying of the light."
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
It is only in memory that the howling note from those four
|
|
days flits past. Behind the newsreel, the hours were agonizing
|
|
and interminable. For many, particularly in <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>, time moved as
|
|
slowly as a motorcade or a horse-drawn caisson.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
Erik Jonsson, then-president of the <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent> Citizens Council,
|
|
would recall the anxiety he felt when the President did not show
|
|
up on schedule for a luncheon at the Trade Mart. What's going on?
|
|
he asked himself over and over as the wait, only a few moments in
|
|
duration, seemed endless.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
After 12:33 p.m. Nov. 22, 1963, the time the first news
|
|
bulletin notified the republic that its President had been shot
|
|
in <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>, the city stood motionless and helpless, waiting for
|
|
the firestorm of scorn. It came in searing, overlapping bursts.
|
|
"Are these human beings or are these animals?" <ent type='PERSON'>Adlai Stevenson</ent>
|
|
had asked moments after he escaped from a violent crowd in <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>
|
|
a month earlier.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
The world looked again at <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent> with the same question. It
|
|
would seem, in the slow-motion drift of events, that the answer
|
|
would never come. <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent> mourned the assassination as the rest of
|
|
the nation mourned it, as a deeply personal tragedy.
|
|
Schoolteachers wept as they broke the news to their classes. Men
|
|
cried in public. Rage and shame and guilt and dread melted into
|
|
one great immobilizing glob of emotional turmoil.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
An eternity, two hours and 20 minutes, passed before the
|
|
truth would be known. Kennedy's assassin was not of <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>, was
|
|
far removed from the nation's perception of the city and the
|
|
city's own worst fears of itself.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
In time, the world, as well as <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>, would believe the
|
|
city was merely caught in one of history's inscrutable warps,
|
|
that it was only by chance that the light passing through the
|
|
long prism of that era intersected in Dealey Plaza.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
The howl that was heard through the dark night of those
|
|
times had the tone of a primal scream, a victim raging against a
|
|
felon. In truth, it was a cry of national doubt, of the sense
|
|
that <ent type='GPE'>America</ent> would not be the same. More than mere innocence was
|
|
lost that day in <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>. With it went the cable that anchored the
|
|
nation to its sense of order.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
To the historians who define eras in terms of events rather
|
|
than years, the decade of the '60s was born in <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
In a great, shuddering spasm, the fragile floodgates that
|
|
had held back the reservoir of a restless social movement was
|
|
punctured by the bullets that rained down from the <ent type='GPE'>Texas</ent> School
|
|
Book Depository.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
Within months, <ent type='GPE'>America</ent> would experience the first of her
|
|
long hot summers, just the beginning of another newsreel: the
|
|
dogs and fire hoses of <ent type='GPE'>Birmingham</ent>, the first smiling <ent type='NORP'>Marines</ent>
|
|
marching into <ent type='GPE'>Vietnam</ent> and returning in body bags, campus radicals
|
|
occupying the administration building at <ent type='GPE'>Columbia</ent> University,
|
|
rioting outside <ent type='ORG'>the Democratic National Convention</ent> in <ent type='GPE'>Chicago</ent>,
|
|
the fires of <ent type='GPE'>Watts</ent> and <ent type='GPE'>Newark</ent> and <ent type='GPE'>Detroit</ent>, Dr. Strangelove,
|
|
<ent type='ORG'>Apollo</ent> 11, <ent type='GPE'>Woodstock</ent>, <ent type='PERSON'>Charles Manson</ent>, the cultural revolution,
|
|
the counterculture revolution, the sexual revolution, the
|
|
yippies, the hippies, the peaceniks and the crazies.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
In 1968, <ent type='PERSON'>Stuart Udall</ent>, secretary of interior for both
|
|
<ent type='PERSON'>Kennedy</ent> and <ent type='PERSON'>Johnson</ent>, was asked his opinion of the times, which
|
|
seemed to be reeling out of control. He offered a sober, but
|
|
startling, observation.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
"This may be remembered," he said, "as the most creative
|
|
time in our history."
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
It did not seem such an outrageous judgment when the
|
|
hurricane had passed. A sorting out had occurred in the storm.
|
|
Not many years would pass before a black preacher from <ent type='GPE'>Chicago</ent>
|
|
would run for the presidency. Women would flood the work place
|
|
and supervise staffs of men. Men with an eye on <ent type='ORG'>the White House</ent>
|
|
could talk of a female running mate without risking ridicule.
|
|
Wars would be harder to make, nuclear waste harder to conceal,
|
|
books harder to burn, air harder to pollute, justice harder to
|
|
deny.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
<ent type='GPE'>America</ent> was starkly different. Kennedy's presidency and his
|
|
assassination may have been essential to unlocking the passions
|
|
of the time, but what the land became was neither his legacy, nor
|
|
Oswald's nor <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent>.'
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
After the trauma and shame and guilt were gone, the judgment
|
|
of history would be that <ent type='PERSON'>Kennedy</ent> and <ent type='PERSON'>Oswald</ent>, <ent type='PERSON'>Edwin Walker</ent> and
|
|
<ent type='PERSON'>Martin Luther King</ent>, <ent type='PERSON'>George Wallace</ent> and <ent type='PERSON'>Stokely Carmichael</ent>, Angela
|
|
Davis and <ent type='PERSON'>George Lincoln Rockwell</ent>, <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent> and <ent type='GPE'>Los Angeles</ent>,
|
|
<ent type='GPE'>Memphis</ent> and <ent type='GPE'>Birmingham</ent>, <ent type='GPE'>Detroit</ent> and Da Nang were fragments of the
|
|
<ent type='GPE'>America</ent>n character, slivers of the dream and the nightmare.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
The legacy of that sunlit moment in <ent type='GPE'>Dallas</ent> was a nation's
|
|
fretful and all-consuming search for itself, a long and howling
|
|
rage against the dying of the light.
|
|
</p>
|
|
<div>
|
|
</div></xml> |