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- <text id=93HT1303>
- <link 93XP0441>
- <title>
- Kennedy: The Assassination
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Kennedy Portrait
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- November 29, 1963
- The Assassination
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> To President Kennedy, popularity was the breath of
- life--and now he was breathing of it deeply. Texas was supposed to be a
- hostile political land, but for 23 hours he had been acclaimed
- there. Conservative Dallas was supposed to be downright
- dangerous, but he had just come from a warm airport welcome and
- along much of his motorcade route in the downtown district he had
- basked in waves of applause from crowds lined ten and twelve
- deep. What was about to happen must have been the farthest thing
- from his mind.
- </p>
- <p> Next to him sat Jackie. In front of them, on jump seats of
- the President's Lincoln, its bubbletop off, were Texas'
- Democratic Governor John Connally, 46, and his wife Nellie. As
- the President's car approached an underpass near the intersection
- of Elm, Main and Commerce Streets, Nellie Connally turned to
- Kennedy, said laughingly: "You can't say that Dallas isn't
- friendly to you today." The President started to reply...
- </p>
- <p> That reply was stilled by a shot. It was 12:30 p.m. C.S.T.,
- and in a split second a thousand things happened. The President's
- body slumped to the left; his right leg shot up over the car
- door. A woman close by at the curb saw it. "My God!" she
- screamed. "He's shot!" Blood gushed from the President's head as
- it came to rest in Jackie's lap. "Jack!" she cried. "Oh, no! No!"
- </p>
- <p> John Connally turned--and by turning, probably saved his
- own life. There were two more shots, and a bullet pierced his
- back, plowed down through his chest, fractured his right wrist,
- and lodged in his left thigh. A photographer looked up at a
- seven-story building on the corner--the Texas School Book
- Depository, a warehouse for textbooks--and caught a glimpse of
- a rifle barrel being withdrawn from a window on the sixth floor.
- </p>
- <p> There was a shocked, momentary stillness, a frozen tableau.
- Then Kennedy's driver cried: "Let's get out of here quick!" He
- automatically pulled out of the motorcade--the set procedure in
- emergencies. The Secret Service agent next to him grabbed the
- radio telephone, called ahead to the police escorts, and ordered
- them to make for the nearest hospital. Jackie bent low, cradling
- the President's head in her lap, and the Lincoln bolted ahead as
- if the shots themselves had gunned the engine into life. Spurting
- to 70 m.p.h., it fled down the highway, rounding curves on two
- wheels. A Secret Service man, who had jumped onto the rear bumper
- of the car, flung himself across the trunk, and in his anger and
- frustration pounded it repeatedly with his fist.
- </p>
- <p> The next car in line, an open touring sedan containing
- agents bristling with weapons, followed swiftly. In the third
- car, an open convertible carrying the Lyndon Johnsons and Texas'
- Democratic Senator Ralph Yarborough, security agents yelled for
- the passengers to duck low, and that car followed in wild
- pursuit.
- </p>
- <p> Five minutes later, the cars arrived at the emergency
- entrance of Parkland Memorial Hospital on Harry Hines Boulevard.
- The agents ran inside to get stretchers. John Connally was still
- conscious. The President had never known what hit him. Jacqueline
- Kennedy, even then proving that she had courage enough for a
- dozen, calmly continued to cradle her husband. Stretchers were
- brought out and both men were placed on them. Jackie, her skirt
- and stockings blotched by blood, helped get the President out of
- the car and, her hand on his chest, walked into the hospital
- beside him. Lyndon Johnson walked into the emergency clinic
- holding his hand over his heart, giving rise briefly to rumors
- that he had either been wounded or was suffering from a heart
- attack. Neither was the case: Lyndon was simply, profoundly
- stunned.
- </p>
- <p> Policemen surrounded the entrance as the crowds thickened. A
- guard was set up around the Lincoln as Secret Service men got a
- pail of water and tried to wash the blood from the car. They left
- the sprays of red roses and asters that Jackie and Nellie
- Connally had been given at the airport lying forlorn on the
- floor.
- </p>
- <p> The Hunt. At the assassination scene, meanwhile, that first
- moment of stillness gave way to frantic, confused movement. At
- the sound of the gunfire, bystanders grabbed children and fell
- over them to blanket them. Newsmen aboard the press bus, far back
- in the procession yelled for the driver to stop, while others
- told him to keep moving. The bus jolted ahead, past horrified
- faces, frantically running figures, huddling women. A cop dropped
- to the ground and drew his revolver. A man fell on a grassy
- knoll, beating the earth with both fists in mindless fury. A
- heavy-set policeman began running, tripped, fell, scrambled to
- his feet, lumbered on. Police cars and motorcycle patrolmen
- stopped dead in their tracks. The officers got out, guns drawn,
- to search aimlessly. For what? For anything.
- </p>
- <p> They surrounded the schoolbook warehouse. Dozens of them
- poured inside with shotguns and began a room-to-room search. And
- near the fifth-floor landing, half-hidden behind crates of
- textbooks, they found an Italian-made kind of 6.5-mm. rifle
- fitted with a four-power telescopic sight. One flight above, near
- a sixth-floor window only 75 yds. from the point where Kennedy
- and Connally were shot, they discovered remnants of a chicken
- dinner in a bag, an empty pop bottle, and three spent cartridge
- cases. The assassin was gone.
- </p>
- <p> But a Negro boy gave police a description of a man who had
- been seen leaving the building a few minutes earlier. At 12:36,
- an all-points pickup went over the radio to watch for a "white
- male, about 5 ft. 10 in. tall, weighing 160 to 165 lbs., about 30
- years old."
- </p>
- <p> "This Is It!" In the 400 block of East 10th Street, about
- four miles from the warehouse, Patrolman J. D. Tippitt, 38,
- driving alone in a squad car, heard the call. He saw a man on the
- sidewalk and stopped his car to question him. The fellow's height
- and weight corresponded to the description. He had kinky brown
- hair, a prominent forehead, thick eyebrows, a crimped, tight
- mouth, and a defiant air. Tippitt and the man exchanged a few
- words. Then the policeman got out of his car and walked around to
- the sidewalk. The man pulled a .38-cal. revolver, shot and killed
- Tippitt with hits in the head, chest and abdomen. Then he fled.
- It was 1:18 p.m.
- </p>
- <p> A bystander jumped into the patrol car, called headquarters.
- Seven blocks away, the cashier at the Texas Theater telephoned
- police to report that a suspicious-looking man had entered the
- movie house, was constantly changing seats. At 1:35, four cops
- entered the theater, where the movie, War Is Hell, was just
- starting. The lights went up. The cop killer rose and cried:
- "This is it!" He aimed his revolver at one policeman and pulled
- the trigger--but the weapon failed to fire. The cops jumped him
- and there was a fierce, brief struggle. Hauled bruised and
- kicking to police headquarters, the man was booked as Lee Harvey
- Oswald, 24, 5 ft. 9 in., 160 lbs.
- </p>
- <p> "Terrible, Terrible." At the hospital had gathered the
- spirit-spent remnants of the presidential party. Outside the
- emergency entrance stood Senator Yarborough, who had had his
- political differences with both Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. Now
- he was weeping. "It didn't sound like a firecracker; I knew it
- wasn't right off," he said. "It was too loud, and there was a
- sort of concussion. Then all of a sudden they speeded up in front
- of us, and we tore right away from there as fast as we could. I
- saw an agent in front of me pull out his machine gun and look up
- at the building. The shots were like explosives, horrible
- explosives. I knew right away that something terrible, terrible,
- was wrong."
- </p>
- <p> Inside, John Connally was quiet and calm in his pain as
- surgeons prepared to operate. His aide, Bill Stinson, blurted,
- "How did it happen?" Said Connally: "I don't know."
- </p>
- <p> "Where'd they get you?"
- </p>
- <p> "I think they shot me from the back. They shot the President
- too. Take care of Nellie."
- </p>
- <p> For four hours the doctors worked, cleaning the wounds,
- removing bone splinters from the Governor's chest cavity,
- stitching a hole in one lung, treating the wounds in his thigh
- and wrist. At week's end doctors said his condition was
- satisfactory.
- </p>
- <p> "To No Avail." But the President never regained
- consciousness. In Emergency Room No. 1, Dr. Kemp Clark, 38, chief
- of Parkland's neurosurgical department, examined a large wound in
- the President's head and another smaller wound--from the second
- of the three shots--in his throat. Clark and eight other
- doctors worked over him for 40 minutes, but the President was
- already as dead as though he had fallen on a battlefield in
- mortal combat. The doctors gave him oxygen, anesthesia, performed
- a tracheotomy to help breathing; they fed him fluids, gave him
- blood transfusions, attached an electrocardiograph to record his
- heartbeat.
- </p>
- <p> When heart action failed to register, they tried closed-
- chest massage. But, said the doctors, "it was apparent that the
- President was not medically alive when he was brought in. There
- was no spontaneous respiration. He had dilated, fixed pupils.
- Technically, by using vigorous resuscitation, intravenous tubes
- and all the usual supportive measures, we were able to raise a
- semblance of a heartbeat." There were some "palpable pulses,"
- said one doctor, but "to no avail."
- </p>
- <p> While the doctors worked, Jackie waited. The look in her
- eyes, said a young medical student who saw her, "was like an
- animal that had been trapped, like a little rabbit--brave, but
- fear was in the eyes."
- </p>
- <p> At 12:45, two Roman Catholic priests went swiftly into the
- emergency room. A policeman came out. "How is he?" a reporter
- asked. "He's dead," came the reply. Assistant Press Secretary
- Malcolm Kilduff appeared. To a deluge of questions, he screamed,
- "I can't say, I just can't say!"
- </p>
- <p> Last Rites. But he was dead. It was about 1 p.m. The Very
- Rev. Oscar L. Huber drew back a sheet that covered the
- President's face, and anointed John Kennedy's forehead with oil.
- He gave him conditional absolution--tendered when a priest has
- no way of knowing the victim's mind or whether the soul has yet
- left the body. In Latin, Father Huber said, "I absolve you from
- all censures and sins in the name of the Father, and of the Son
- and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. If you are living, may the Lord by
- this holy anointing forgive whatever you have sinned. Amen. I, by
- the faculty given to me by the Apostolic See, grant to you a
- plenary indulgence and remission of all sins and I bless you. In
- the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.
- Amen."
- </p>
- <p> Then he covered the President's face once more with the
- sheet and in English offered the prayers for the Dying and for
- the Departed Soul: "May the most clement Virgin Mary, Mother of
- God, the most loving consoler of the afflicted, commend to her
- Son the soul of this servant, John...Jesus, Mary and Joseph,
- assist me in my last agony. Jesus, Mary and Joseph, may I sleep
- and rest in peace in your holy company...Grant, O Lord, that
- while we here lament the departure of Your servant, we may ever
- remember that we are most certainly to follow him. Give us grace
- to prepare for that last hour by a good life, that we may not be
- surprised by a sudden death but be ever watching, for when Thou
- shalt call that soul, we may enter eternal glory through Christ,
- Our Lord. Eternal rest grant him. O Lord and let perpetual light
- shine upon him. Amen."
- </p>
- <p> Jacqueline Kennedy stood next to the President's body, and
- with a clear voice, prayed with the others: "Our Father, Who art
- in Heaven..." and "Hail, Mary, full of grace...."
- </p>
- <p> Burnished Bronze. Lyndon Johnson, guarded by contingents of
- agents, was hurried away from the hospital to the airport. Press
- Aide Kilduff came out at 1:36. His eyes red-rimmed, his voice
- barely controlled, he said: "President John F. Kennedy died at
- approximately 1 p.m. central standard time here in Dallas. He
- died of a gunshot wound in the brain. I have no other details of
- the assassination."
- </p>
- <p> Soon, a white Cadillac hearse drew up before the entrance
- and a simple bronze casket was taken inside the hospital. Jackie
- removed the wedding band from her left hand and slipped it on the
- President's finger, and then the casket was closed.
- </p>
- <p> Mrs. Kennedy wanted to return immediately to Washington. The
- casket, with Jackie walking alongside, her hand on its burnished
- surface, was carried outside. At Dallas' Love Field, the
- presidential plane was waiting.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-