From Deseret News archives:
JFK's 1963 assassination was like Shakespearean tragedy
Everyday stuff, unfortunately. Most of the victims merit a story in the local newspaper and are quickly forgotten.
The shooting of John F. Kennedy, in contrast, continues to resonate 40 years after the fact. Part of the reason is the obvious the man was president of the United States, the most powerful political figure in the world. That alone upgrades the incident's description from "murder" to "assassination."
But that's only part of it. There have been many assassinated world leaders, the vast majority of them failing to elicit as much fascination and curiosity (morbid and otherwise) as Kennedy. And there are good reasons.
For one, JFK's death was, if there is such a thing, the perfect tragedy. Images of a beautiful, grieving widow, a 3-year-old boy saluting his father's casket, a leader struck down in the prime of his life Kennedy's life and, especially, death were Shakespearean in scope.
There's more to it, though. The Warren Commission, which concluded one year after the 1963 shooting that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone, was unable to bolster its conclusions with facts because the documents it relied on were largely classified. Hall himself helped declassify 99.8 percent of those documents during the 1990s as a member of the John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Review Board, but the damage had already been done.
With 1960s officialdom unwilling or unable to explain itself, theories involving, among much else, Cuba, the USSR, Jack Ruby, Mexico, the mob and the CIA filled in the gaps. Those theories have thrived over the years, resulting in a literal Kennedy assassination market economy: countless books, a hugely influential movie (Oliver Stone's 1991 "JFK," which spurred the creation of the review board), the only assassination museum in the United States (in Dallas), magazine articles and discussion groups.
"Americans have long had a penchant for believing in conspiracy," Hall said. "The uncertainty surrounding the assassination influenced how we explained it."
Comments
- Afghan vows to keep out corruption 10:35 a.m.
- Anti-Taliban mayor killed in Pakistan 10:27 a.m.
- Dalai Lama visits town near Tibet 10:26 a.m.
- Some saw trouble ahead for Hasan 10:21 a.m.
- China pledges funds, aid to Africa 10:20 a.m.
- 40 dead in El Salvador flooding 10:19 a.m.
- Dixie campus briefs 1:10 a.m.
- Westminster campus briefs 1:09 a.m.
- UVU campus briefs 1:07 a.m.
- Utah Utes campus briefs 1:07 a.m.
- Gay advocates trek to LDS office
207 - Dirk does dirty work in Dallas
190 - Lobo suspended
173 - Cougars crush hapless Cowboys
138 - Speed has never been BYU's game
136 - House passes health care bill
135 - RSL rallies to advance
102 - Thousands protest health bill
100 - Provo company innovating engines
98 - BYU cuts Women's Research Institute
87
Why do so many people live so close to refineries in Utah and elsewhere?
NASA's Stardust probe continues to bring new knowledge about the nature...
Execution won the game? How about playing a patsy vs. playing a TCU? It's...
The second team was in (skill players at least) after with about half of the...
I think the defensive coaches were at the beach. That was the worst defense...
help a child who does not ask for the help, but it is clearly seen that help...
Props to the Cougs, but where is this kind of effort and execution when it...
It is very sad that these hearty people who have spent their lives living off...
Yes, the trillions we've spent on war have made many U.S. war suppliers and...
Someone has to pay for it. There is voluntary charity, that provvided by...
Here's an interesting statistic I came upon recently: Evangelical Christians...
It was disgraceful. Hope that the ref and the 2 linesman get suspended as...



You can be the first to comment on this story.