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- JFK: His Life and Legacy
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- On November 22, 1963, while being driven through the streets
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- of Dallas, Texas, in his open car, President John F. Kennedy was
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- shot dead, apparently by the lone gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald. The
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- world had not only lost a common man, but a great leader of men.
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- >From his heroic actions in World War II to his presidency, making
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- the decisions to avert possible nuclear conflict with world
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- superpowers, greatness can be seen. Kennedy also found the time
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- to author several best-selling novels from his experiences . His
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- symbolic figure represented all the charm, vigor and optimism of
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- youth as he led a nation into a new era of prosperity.
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- From his birth into the powerful and influential Kennedy
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- clan, much was to be expected of him. Kennedy was born on May
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- 29,1917 in Brookline, Massachusetts. His father, Joe, Sr., was a
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- successful businessman with many political connections. Appointed
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- by President Roosevelt, Joe, Sr., was given the chair of the
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- Securities and Exchange Commission and later the prestigious
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- position of United States ambassador to Great Britain(Anderson
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- 98). His mother, Rose, was a loving housewife and took young John
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- on frequent trips around historic Boston learning about American
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- So 2
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- revolutionary history. Both parents impressed on their children
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- that their country had been good to the Kennedys. Whatever
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- benefits the family received from the country they were told,
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- must be returned by performing some service for the
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- country(Anderson 12). The Kennedy clan included Joe, Jr., Bobby,
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- Ted and their sisters, Eunice, Jean, Patricia, Rosemary, and
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- Kathleen. Joe, Jr., was a significant figure in young John's life
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- as he was the figure for most of John's admiration. His older
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- brother was much bigger and stronger than John and took it upon
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- himself to be John's coach and protector. John's childhood was
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- full of sports, fun and activity. This all ended when John grew
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- old enough to leave for school.
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- At the age of thirteen, John left home to attend an away
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- school for the first time. Canterbury School, a boarding school in
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- New Milford, Connecticut and Choate Preparatory in Wallingford,
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- Connecticut completed his elementary education("JFK" 98). John
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- graduated in 1934 and was promised a trip to London as a
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- graduation gift. Soon after, John became ill with jaundice and
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- would have to go to the hospital. He spent the rest of the
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- summer trying to recover. He was not entirely well when he started
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- Princeton, several weeks later in the fall of 1935. Around
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- Christmas the jaundice returned and John had to drop out of
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- school. Before the next school year began, he told his father he
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- wanted to go to Harvard("JFK" 98). On campus, young people took
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- interest in politics, social changes, and events in Europe. The
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- United States was pulling out of the Great Depression. Hitler's
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- So 3
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- Nazi Germany followed aggressive territorial expansion in Europe.
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- It was at this time that John first became aware of the vast
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- social and economic differences in the United States. In June
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- 1940, John graduated cum laude(with praise or distinction) from
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- Harvard. His thesis earned a magna cum laude(great praise)( "JFK"
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- 98). After graduation, John began to send his paper to publishers,
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- and it was accepted on his second try. Wilfrid Funk published it
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- under the title Why England Slept. It became a bestseller. John, at
- twenty-five, became a literary sensation.
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- In the spring of 1941, both John and Joe, Jr., decided to
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- enroll in the armed services. Joe was accepted as a naval air
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- cadet but John was turned down by both the army and navy because
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- of his back trouble and history of illness("JFK" 98). After months
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- of training and conditioning, John reapplied and on September 19,
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- John was accepted into the navy as a desk clerk in Washington. He
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- was disgusted and applied for a transfer. In June 1941, Kennedy
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- was sent to Naval Officers Training School at Northwestern
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- University in Evanston, Illinois and then for additional training
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- at the Motor Torpedo Boat Center at Melville, Rhode Island.
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- In late April 1943, Lieutenant John F. Kennedy was put in
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- command of a PT 109, a fast, light, attack craft in the Solomon
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- Islands in the South Pacific. Kennedy saw action in the form of
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- night patrols and participated in enemy bombings. On August 1,
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- 1943, during a routine night patrol, a Japanese destroyer collided
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- in the darkness with Kennedy's craft and the PT 109 was sunk.
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- Through superhuman effort, the injured Kennedy heroically swam
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- So 4
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- back and forth rescuing his wounded crew. Two were killed in the
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- crash. The injury had once again aggravated his back. Still,
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- Kennedy pushed on swimming from island to island in the South
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- Pacific hoping for a patrol to come by. The lieutenant had no idea
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- he had been in the water for eight hours. Finally, an island was
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- spotted that could provided cover from Japanese planes. With no
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- edible plants or water, Kennedy realized that he and the crew must
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- move on.
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- The next day, he once again attempted to search for
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- rescue. After treading water for hours, the lieutenant was forced
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- to admit no patrol boats were coming. He turned back for the island
- but was swept away by a powerful current. Kennedy collapsed on an
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- island and slept. He recovered enough energy to return to the
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- island and gathered the crew to move to another island in search
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- of food. JFK was now desperate enough to seek help from
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- natives on a Japanese controlled island. After making contact
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- with the natives, Kennedy persuaded the natives to deliver a
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- message written on the back of a coconut shell to allied forces.
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- The coconut fell into the hands of allied scouts and a patrol was
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- sent. The coconut would appear again on the desk of an American
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- President(Anderson 35).
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- The crew of the PT 109 were given a hero's welcome when they
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- returned to base, but Kennedy would have none of it. He refused
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- home leave and was given another boat. In constant pain from the
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- back injury, JFK soon contracted malaria, became very ill, and lost
- twenty-five pounds. He was forced to give up command and was sent
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- So 5
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- home to Chelsea Naval Hospital near Hyannis Port. The lieutenant
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- received the Purple Heart, the Navy and Marine Corps Medal, and a
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- citation from Admiral W. F. Halsey. John's back failed to recover
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- was an operation was performed on his spine in the summer of 1944.
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- During recovery, Kennedy received word that his brother Joe,
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- Jr. had been killed in action. Joe had been eligible for home
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- leave, but had volunteered for a special bombing mission. The bombs
- had detonated early and Joe and his copilot were caught in the
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- explosion. Kennedy put his feelings onto paper and a second book
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- was published for the family and close friends. He called it As We
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- Remember Joe.
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- The family- particularly JFK's father- had assumed that
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- Joe, Jr. would carry on the family tradition and go into
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- politics. Both of his grandfathers had been active in
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- politics(Anderson 41). Now , suddenly, JFK was the oldest
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- Kennedy of his generation. Kennedy's first chance in politics
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- came when Congressman James Curley from the 11th District of
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- Massachusetts decided to retire in 1946(Gadney 42). JFK won
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- his first Congressional seat by a margin of more than two to
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- one. At the age if twenty-nine, JFK was placed on the front page of
- the New York Times and in Time Magazine. He was often mistaken in
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- Congress as a Senate page or an elevator operator.
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- It was during this time period in which Kennedy met and fell
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- in love with Jacqueline Bouvier. "Jackie",as she was known, came
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- from a wealthy Catholic background as prestigious as the Kennedys.
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- She attended Vassar College and the Sorbonne in Paris, France. She
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- So 6
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- spoke French, Italian, and Spanish fluently. They were wed on
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- September 12,1953, at St. Mary's Catholic Church in Newport, Rhode
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- Island. All seemed well, yet after three two-year terms as a
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- Congressman, Kennedy became frustrated with House rules and customs
- and decided to run for Senate.
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- In 1952, Kennedy ran for Senate against Republican Senator
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- Henry Cabot Lodge. Fifteen years older than Kennedy, Lodge was
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- the incumbent of two terms in the Senate. JFK prevailed in the
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- victory but was soon stricken with Addison's disease during his
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- first year in the Senate and had to operate on a fifty-fifty
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- chance for survival procedure(Gadney 52). While recovering,
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- Kennedy wrote Profiles in Courage, a bestseller on examples of
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- moral courage in the lives of eight senators who risked their
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- careers for a great cause or a belief. Kennedy returned to Senate
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- and participated in the powerful Senate Foreign Relations
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- Committee. He was also chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on
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- Labor. JFK believed strongly in education, equal job opportunity,
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- and the civil rights movement. His biggest success came in the form
- of his Labor Reform Bill which passed by a margin of 90 to 1 in
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- Senate debate. Kennedy's first child, Caroline, was born during
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- this time.
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- Due to his enormous success in Congress, the Democratic
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- party nominated him for the presidential ticket in 1960.
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- Lyndon Johnson was chosen as the running mate with Kennedy to
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- secure and build upon the democratic bases in the southern states
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- while the Kennedys sought out the younger voters, the factory
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- So 7
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- workers, and the liberals(Gadney 61).
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- During the Kennedy Administration, a great deal of events
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- were going on.Jackie had given birth to JFK, Jr., while all over
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- the south, the civil rights movement was going in full force with
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- incidents breaking out. Specific attention gathered around a black
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- air force veteran, James Meredith, applied for admission to the
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- University of Mississippi. In Cuba both the Bay of Pigs occurred,
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- in which U.S. supported rebels revolted in a poorly laid out plan
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- of events that fell out beneath them, and the Cuban Missile
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- Crisis in which the Soviet Republic were building missile silos
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- in Cuba, 100 miles away from Florida. The Space Race was in full
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- force with both Russia and the U.S. in competition to reach the
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- moon. U.S. involvement in Vietnam was in the latter stages with
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- plans to withdraw after the 1964 election.
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- On a trip to Dallas to stir up support for the reelection,
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- the President's auto were coming down elm street when three shots
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- rang out. The first projectile entered at the base of Kennedy's
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- neck and exited through the back of his head. The second bullet
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- hit Texas Governor John Connally. Seconds later there was another
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- shot and the back of the president's head was torn away. The
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- assassin- Lee Harvey Oswald with a mail-order rifle fired from
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- the Texas School Book Depository(Warren 5). Oswald had recently
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- applied for a passport to Communist Russia which led to a series
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- of private meetings between Oswald and the Russian
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- Government(Warren 614). Oswald protested his innocence.
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- President Johnson set up what quickly became known as the
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- So 8
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- Warren Commission headed by Chief Justice Warren to find the
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- motive behind the assassination, The Commission finds the lone,
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- depressed, mentally unstable, anti-social nut kills an American
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- president("Theories" 1). Other theories have evolved over time
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- such as the Grassy Knoll theory. Witnesses say that a man in
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- black was present and fired simultaneously with Oswald and
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- doubled the actual shots fired("Theories" 1) Another theory is that
- the fired CIA director Allen Dulles used his considerable
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- connections and plotted revenge("Theories 2").
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- On Nov. 24, 1963 as Oswald was being escorted from the city
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- jail, Jack Ruby shot Oswald with a single shot from a Colt .38
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- revolver(Warren 350). Ruby was arrested and stood trial in Dallas.
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- He was found guilty and was sentenced to hang. He died in jail of
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- cancer, on January 3,1967.
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- Kennedy was the first President to be born in the twentieth
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- century and was very much a man of his time. He was restless,
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- seeking, with a thirst of knowledge, and he had a feeling of deep
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- commitment, not only to the people of the United States, but to
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- the peoples of the world. Many of the causes he fought for exist
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- today because of what he did for the rights of minorities, the
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- poor, the very old and the very young. He never took anything for
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- granted and worked for everything he owned. Perhaps Kennedy summed
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- up his life best in his own inaugural speech: "Ask not what your
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- country can do for you, but ask what you can do for your country."
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