Free Essays, Free Research Papers, Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers
Essay Express Free Essays, Free Research Papers,
Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers

FREE ESSAY ON WELAFRE

Click here for more essays on WELAFRE

WELAFRE

In November 1960, at the age of 43, John F. Kennedy became the youngest man ever elected
president of the United States. Theodore Roosevelt had become president at 42 when
President William McKinley was assassinated, but he was not elected at that age. On Nov.
22, 1963, Kennedy was shot to death in Dallas, Tex., the fourth United States president
to die by an assassin's bullet. 
Kennedy was the nation's first Roman Catholic president. He was inaugurated in January
1961, succeeding Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower. He defeated the Republican
candidate, Vice-President Richard M. Nixon, by little more than 100,000 votes. It was one
of the closest elections in the nation's history. Although Kennedy and his
vice-presidential running mate, Lyndon B. Johnson, got less than half of the more than 68
million votes cast, they won the Electoral College vote. Kennedy thus became the 14th
minority president. 
Because of the close vote, election results were challenged in many states. The official
electoral vote was Kennedy 303, Nixon 219, and Senator Harry F. Byrd of Virginia 15. 
Kennedy's Family
President Kennedy's great-grandparents immigrated to the United States from Ireland in
1858. They settled in Boston, Mass. His grandfathers, Patrick J. Kennedy and John F.
(Honey Fitz) Fitzgerald, were born there. Both men became influential in state politics.
Honey Fitz served several terms as Boston's mayor and as a member of the United States
House of Representatives. Patrick Kennedy was a powerful ward boss and served in both
houses of the Massachusetts legislature. 
Patrick's son, Joseph, was a brilliant mathematician. At the age of 25 he became the
youngest bank president in the United States. His fortune continued to grow, and he was
one of the few financiers to sense the stock market crash of 1929. He made hundreds of
millions of dollars. 
Joseph married Rose Fitzgerald, daughter of Honey Fitz, on Oct. 7, 1914. Their first
child, Joseph, Jr., was born in 1915. John was born on May 29, 1917. Seven other children
followed: Rosemary, Kathleen, Eunice, Patricia, Robert, Jean, and Edward (called Teddy).
All were born in Brookline, Mass., a suburb of Boston. 
Training Pays Off
Joseph Kennedy, Sr., set up a million-dollar trust fund for each of his children. This
freed them from future financial worry and allowed them to devote their lives to public
good, if they desired. As the children grew, their parents stressed the importance of
competitive spirit. One of their father's favorite mottoes was: Second place is a loser.
The drive to win was deeply embedded in the children, and they never did anything
halfheartedly. 
Their parents were careful to neglect neither the intellectual nor the physical
development of the children. As they grew older, the children would eat their evening
meals in two groups, divided by age. Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy ate at both meals. This allowed
them to discuss subjects which were of interest to each group. All the children attended
dancing school while very young, and all, with the exception of Rosemary, loved sports
activities. Rosemary did not take part in rough-and-tumble play. The other children,
however, thrived on it. Even when they were adults, one of their favorite pastimes was a
rousing and often bruising game of touch football. 
On pleasant days, Mrs. Kennedy took her children for long walks. She made a point of
taking them into church for a visit each day. I wanted them to form a habit of making God
and religion a daily part of their lives, she said later in life. 
With this background, it was quite natural for John Kennedy and his brothers and sisters
to excel in school and in sports. John attended public schools in Brookline. Later he
entered private schools in Riverdale, N.Y., and Wallingford, Conn. In 1935 and 1936 he
studied at the London School of Economics. Then he followed his older brother, Joe, into
Harvard University. An excellent athlete, John was a star swimmer and a good golfer. His
athletic activities, however, were cut down after he suffered a back injury in a Harvard
football game. The injury was to plague him later in life. 
John and his older brother were very close. While a young boy, Joe said that someday he
would be president of the United States. The family took him at his word. Of all the
children Joe seemed the one most likely to enter the political field. 
Joseph, Sr., was named ambassador to Great Britain in 1937. John and his older brother
then worked as international reporters for their father. John spent his summers in
England and much of the rest of his time at Harvard. The brothers often traveled to
distant parts of the world to observe events of international importance for their
father. The clouds of World War II were hovering over Europe at that time. 
Return to the United States and College
The senior Kennedy was a controversial ambassador. His candid remarks about the progress
of the war in Europe earned him the disfavor of the English and of some of his countrymen
in the United States. His family returned home in 1939, and he followed the next year. 
John finished his studies at Harvard and was graduated with honors in 1940. Later that
same year he did graduate work in economics at Stanford University. He also expanded a
college thesis into a full-length book entitled 'Why England Slept'. It dealt with
England's unpreparedness for World War II and was based on John's own experiences while
working for his father. The book became a best seller. 
Serves with Navy in the Pacific
A few months before the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in December 1941, John attempted
to enlist in the United States Army. His old back injury kept him from being accepted.
After several months of exercise, he was granted a commission in the Navy. Eventually he
became the commander of a torpedo boat and saw extensive action in the South Pacific. 
In August 1943, during a night action in the Solomon Islands, John's torpedo boat was
rammed and cut in half by a Japanese destroyer. The force of the collision threw him to
the deck, reinjuring his back. Despite this, he gathered the ten members of his crew
together. One of the crew members was so badly injured that he was unable to swim. He was
put into a life jacket. 
Kennedy gripped one of the jacket's straps between his teeth and towed the man as the
crew swam to a nearby island. It took them five hours to reach it. For his heroism,
Kennedy was awarded the Navy and Marine Corps medal, the Purple Heart, and a citation.
The back injury, however, put him out of action for the remainder of the war. 
Nearly one year after John's narrow escape, Joe, Jr., a Navy pilot, was killed when his
plane exploded in the air over the English coast. To his brother's memory John wrote 'As
We Remember Joe', a collection of tributes. In 1948 John's sister Kathleen died in an
airplane crash in the south of France. She was the widow of the marquess of Hartington of
England. He too had been killed in action during World War II, while leading an infantry
charge in Normandy, France. 
Begins Political Career
The death of his brother deeply affected John Kennedy. Before the war Joe had decided to
carry on with his ambition to enter politics. This caused a certain degree of
disappointment for John, because he too had considered that field. He felt, however, that
one Kennedy in politics was enough and determined to become a newspaperman. After his
discharge from the Navy he worked for a short time as a correspondent for the Chicago
Herald American and the International News Service. In 1946 he decided to enter politics.
To the family this was the most natural thing for him to do. 
For his first target, Kennedy chose to try for a seat in the United States House of
Representatives. He would represent the 11th Massachusetts Congressional District. His
family rallied to his side as he began his campaign for the nomination. Because the 11th
district was predominantly Democratic, the candidate for the office would have no trouble
being elected once he had gained the nomination. Kennedy and his family worked
tirelessly. Their efforts, Kennedy's own impressive war record, and his family's
political background greatly aided his campaign. He easily defeated eight other
candidates running for the same nomination. 
In office, Kennedy quickly established himself as a moderately independent thinker.
Occasionally he voted against proposed measures which had met with the approval of his
own Democratic party. He was reelected in 1948 and 1950. An accomplished orator, the
young congressman became a popular speaker. 
His back injury, however, continued to bother him. He often appeared on the House floor
and at speaking engagements supported by crutches. In 1946 he was named by the United
States Chamber of Commerce as one of the nation's outstanding men of the year. 
Elected to the Senate
In 1952 Kennedy decided to run for the United States Senate. His opponent was Republican
senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. Again the Kennedy family worked side by side to get John
elected. Kennedy defeated Lodge by more than 70,000 votes. The victory was particularly
impressive because across the rest of the nation Republican candidates were swept into
office along with the landslide of votes for the new Republican president, Dwight D.
Eisenhower. 
In the Senate Kennedy had woolen textile tariffs raised and urged President Eisenhower to
obtain an agreement with Japan to cut textile imports. The president agreed to do so.
Kennedy helped pass several other measures important to Massachusetts' textile industry.
He also sponsored bills which improved his state's conservation programs. 
One of the many committees Kennedy served on was the Select Committee of the Senate to
Investigate Improper Activities in Labor-Management Relations. His younger brother Robert
was chief legal counsel for this group. The two Kennedys were frequently in the public
eye in 1959 as the committee investigated racketeering among top labor union officials.
John sponsored a labor bill which did a great deal to eliminate criminal practices in
unions. 
Weds Long Island Beauty
Kennedy met his future wife, Jacqueline Lee Bouvier, at a Washington, D.C., party shortly
after his election to the Senate. Described as a cameo beauty, Jackie was the daughter of
a Long Island family. At the time they met, she was a photographer and a pen-and-ink
artist for a Washington, D.C., newspaper. They were married on Sept. 12, 1953. Their
daughter, Caroline, was born in 1957. Their son, John Fitzgerald, was born on Nov. 25,
1960, 17 days after Kennedy was elected president of the United States. As wife of the
president, Jackie became one of the most gracious and most beautiful White House
hostesses. 
Jackie was born on July 28, 1929, at Southampton, Long Island. She attended several
private American schools and the Sorbonne, in Paris, France. She was graduated from
George Washington University, in Washington, D.C. 
Back Surgery
Kennedy's old back injury still gave him a great deal of pain. Beginning in October 1954
he underwent a series of spinal operations. 
While he was recuperating in 1955 he decided to write a book he had been contemplating
for several years. It was a series of portraits of eight of the most courageous senators
in the nation's history. Entitled 'Profiles in Courage', it became a best seller and won
Kennedy the 1957 Pulitzer prize for biography. 
Misses Vice-Presidential Nomination
During his campaign for the 1960 Democratic nomination, Kennedy often began his speeches
with this remark: Thanks for not voting for me in 1956. That was the year he barely
missed being nominated vice-president on the Democratic ticket. Senator Estes Kefauver of
Tennessee, who won the nomination, and Adlai E. Stevenson, the presidential nominee, were
defeated in the election. Had Kennedy won the nomination and been defeated in the
election, his chances for the presidency might have been lost. 
The Presidential Nomination
Following the 1956 national election, Kennedy began an elaborate campaign for the 1960
Democratic presidential nomination. His popularity increased. In 1958 he was reelected to
the Senate by a margin of some 874,000 votes, more than any other Massachusetts senator
had ever received. His brother Robert managed John's senatorial campaign. In 1958 Teddy,
the youngest of the Kennedy family, worked with Robert in managing John's campaign for
the Democratic nomination. 
In the early months of 1960 Kennedy entered and won seven primary elections across the
nation. At the 1960 Democratic convention in Los Angeles he received his party's
nomination on the first ballot. 
During the campaign Kennedy and Vice-President Richard M. Nixon met in four nationally
televised debates. It was generally conceded that these television appearances helped
Kennedy more than Nixon. 
Problems Facing the New President
As Kennedy took office, cold-war tensions between Communist and Western nations
increased. Communist forces pushed into Laos and threatened South Vietnam. The new
president pledged strong efforts to halt the spread of Communism. Toward this end, he
created a Peace Corps of young Americans to work in underdeveloped countries. 
After the Soviets successfully launched the first man into outer space in April 1961,
Kennedy asked for a greatly increased budget for space research. This new phase of the
cold war was called the space race. The first United States manned space flight was in
May. 
In the spring of 1961 the Bay of Pigs near Havana, Cuba, was invaded by opponents of
Cuba's Communist premier, Fidel Castro. The rebels were defeated quickly. The invasion
had been aided by the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Kennedy was
criticized by some for having approved the CIA's support of the invasion. Others blamed
him for the operation's failure. Kennedy met with Premier Nikita Khrushchev of the Soviet
Union in Vienna in June to discuss the German question. The conference did not alter
Communist goals. The Berlin Wall was built in August 
Domestic and Latin American Affairs
At home Kennedy won Congressional approval of a number of his proposals, including
greater social security benefits, a higher minimum wage, and aid to economically
depressed areas in the country. The 23rd Amendment to the Constitution was ratified early
in Kennedy's administration. It gave the residents of Washington, D.C., the right to vote
in presidential elections. 
In March 1961 Kennedy proposed an international economic development program for the
Americas. The charter for the program, called the Alliance for Progress, was ratified in
August by the Organization of American States (OAS). 
Events of 1962
In March 1962 Kennedy used his influence to get a steel-industry wage settlement
generally regarded as noninflationary. Early in April, however, several companies
announced increases in their steel prices. Kennedy reacted strongly. He exerted unusual
pressure by shifting government orders to rival steel manufacturers and by threatening
lawsuits against the companies that were attempting to raise their prices. Within four
days the price increases were canceled. 
Kennedy's most important legislative success of 1962 was the passage of the Trade
Expansion Act. It gave the president broad powers, including authority to cut or
eliminate tariffs. The act was designed to help the United States compete or trade with
the European Economic Community (EEC) on equal terms. Kennedy's medical care project was
defeated in Congress. Under this plan certain hospital expenses for most elderly persons
would have been paid through the social security system. 
In October 1962 Kennedy faced the most serious international crisis of his
administration. Aerial photographs proved that Soviet missile bases were being built in
Cuba. Declaring this buildup a threat to the nations of the Western Hemisphere, Kennedy
warned that any attack by Cuba would be regarded as an attack by the Soviets and the
United States would retaliate against the Soviet Union. He also imposed a quarantine on
ships bringing offensive weapons to Cuba. Negotiations were carried on between the
president and Khrushchev. By the end of November the missiles had been shipped back to
the Soviet Union, the United States had lifted the quarantine, and the month-long crisis
had abated. 
The Civil Rights Crisis of 1963
In 1963, clashes between the police and demonstrating blacks in Birmingham, Ala., and
elsewhere, especially in the South, induced the president to stress civil rights
legislation. Kennedy's new civil rights message included bills to ban discrimination in
places of business; to speed up desegregation of public schools; and to end
discrimination in the hiring of workers on federal construction projects. 
An agreement to set up a Teletype link between Kennedy and Khrushchev was signed in June
1963. This limited, but promising, achievement was intended as a precaution against war
by accident or miscalculation. 
The president also paid increasing attention to strengthening the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO). Visiting Europe early in the summer of 1963, he conferred with
government leaders in West Germany, Italy, and Great Britain. In West Germany, the
president pledged that United States military forces would remain on the European
continent. Kennedy also visited Ireland, from which his great-grandparents had emigrated
to the United States. 
A limited nuclear test ban treaty was signed by representatives of the United States, the
Soviet Union, and Britain in the summer of 1963. The agreement permitted underground
nuclear tests, and signatory nations could withdraw after 90 days' notice. Kennedy called
the treaty a victory for mankind. 
Mrs. Kennedy gave birth to her second son, Patrick Bouvier, on Aug. 7, 1963. Born
prematurely, the infant died after only 39 hours of life. 
In November, looking forward to the 1964 presidential election, Kennedy made a political
visit to Florida and Texas, the two most populous Southern states. His wife,
Vice-President Johnson, and Mrs. Johnson accompanied him on the Texas trip. 
He had been warned that Texas might be hostile. In Dallas, only a month earlier, Adlai
Stevenson, United States ambassador to the United Nations, had been spat upon and struck
with a picket's placard. In San Antonio, Houston, and Fort Worth, however, the crowds
were friendly, and obviously delighted with the charming young Jacqueline Kennedy. 
Kennedy Is Assassinated
A large and enthusiastic crowd greeted the presidential party when it arrived at the
Dallas airport on the morning of November 22. Along the route of the motorcade into
downtown Dallas the people stood 10 to 12 deep, applauding warmly. Next to the president
in the big open limousine sat his wife. In front of them, on jump seats, were John B.
Connally, the governor of Texas, and his wife, Nellie. The third car in the procession
carried Vice-President and Mrs. Johnson. As the cars approached a triple underpass, Mrs.
Connally turned around and said, You can't say Dallas doesn't love you, Mr. President. 
At that moment three shots rang out. The president, shot through the head and throat,
slumped over into his wife's lap. The second bullet hit Governor Connally, piercing his
back, chest, wrist, and thigh. A reporter, glancing up, saw a rifle slowly disappear into
a sixth-floor corner window of the Texas School Book Depository, a textbook warehouse
overlooking the highway. It was 12:30 PM in Dallas. 
President Kennedy died in Parkland Memorial Hospital without regaining consciousness. The
time of death was set at 1:00 PM.Governor Connally recovered from his multiple wounds. 
Six minutes after the shooting, a description of a man seen leaving the textbook
warehouse went out over the police radio. At 1:18 PM patrolman J.D. Tippit stopped and
questioned a man who answered the description. The man shot him dead. At 1:35 PM Dallas
police captured Lee Harvey Oswald in a motion-picture theater, where he had hidden after
allegedly killing patrolman Tippit. 
Although a mass of circumstantial evidence, including ballistics tests, pointed to Oswald
as the slayer of President Kennedy, the 24-year-old professed Marxist and Castro
sympathizer never came to trial. On Sunday, November 24, as he was being led across the
basement of the City Hall for transfer to another prison, Jack Ruby (born Rubenstein), a
Dallas nightclub owner, broke through a cordon of police and shot Oswald. The murder was
committed in full view of television cameras as millions watched. 
The Return to Washington
The casket bearing Kennedy's body was removed to the presidential jet plane, Air Force
One, where Lyndon B. Johnson took the oath of office as president of the United States.
Only 98 minutes had elapsed since Kennedy's death. 
All that long afternoon and into the early morning of the next day, Mrs. Kennedy refused
to leave her husband's body. Close by her side at all times after her return to
Washington, D.C., was her husband's brother and closest adviser, Attorney General Robert
F. Kennedy. Mrs. Kennedy carefully directed the details of the funeral, consulting with
historians as to the traditional burial procedures for other presidents who had died in
office. 
Burial at Arlington
The body lay in repose for a day in the East Room of the White House. On November 24, in
a solemn procession to the slow beat of muffled drums, the casket was removed to the
rotunda of the Capitol and placed on the catafalque which had borne President Abraham
Lincoln's casket. 
The following day the funeral procession moved from the Capitol to the White House and
then to St. Matthew's Cathedral. Here Richard Cardinal Cushing, Roman Catholic archbishop
of Boston, celebrated Low Mass. From the White House to the cathedral, Mrs. Kennedy
walked in the procession between her husband's brothers, Robert and Edward. In a scene
unduplicated in history, 220 foreign leaders followed them. 
Burial was at Arlington National Cemetery, on a hillside overlooking the Potomac and the
city of Washington. At the conclusion of the service Mrs. Kennedy lighted an eternal
flame at the grave. 
Two Kennedy infants were later reburied on either side of their father. They were Patrick
Bouvier and an unnamed daughter who was stillborn in 1956. 
On June 8, 1968, the Kennedy family and a host of other mourners again gathered at the
Kennedy grave site--this time for the burial of Robert F. Kennedy. The president's
brother, who had become a United States senator, was shot on June 5 in Los Angeles,
Calif., while campaigning for the Democratic presidential nomination. He died on June 6
of brain damage. Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, a Jordanian immigrant who was seized at the scene
of the shooting, was eventually indicted for the murder. 
For the second time President Johnson declared a day of mourning for a Kennedy. Many of
the same Americans who honored Robert Kennedy's memory on June 9, 1968, were sadly
reminded of an earlier day of mourning. 
In his proclamation declaring Nov. 25, 1963, a National Day of Mourning for John Kennedy,
President Johnson paid this tribute to the slain president, quoting in conclusion from
Kennedy's inaugural address of January 1960: As he did not shrink from his
responsibilities, but welcomed them, so he would not have us shrink from carrying on his
work beyond this hour of national tragedy. He said it himself: 'The energy, the faith,
the devotion which we bring to this endeavor will light our country and all who serve
it--and the glow from that fire can truly light the world'. 
Warren Commission
On Nov. 29, 1963, President Johnson created the President's Commission on the
Assassination of President John F. Kennedy to investigate and report on the facts
relating to the tragedy. It functioned neither as a court nor as a prosecutor. Chief
Justice Earl Warren was appointed chairman. 
Other members of the bipartisan commission were Senators Richard B. Russell of Georgia
and John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky, Representatives Hale Boggs of Louisiana and Gerald
R. Ford of Michigan, Allen W. Dulles, and John J. McCloy. J. Lee Rankin was the general
counsel. The report was published on Sept. 24, 1964. 
Since Oswald was unable to stand trial and defend himself, and in fairness to him and his
family, the commission requested Walter E. Craig, president of the American Bar
Association, to participate in the investigation and to advise the commission whether the
proceedings conformed to the basic principles of American justice. 
The commission found that the shots that killed President Kennedy and wounded Governor
Connally were fired by Lee Harvey Oswald. There was no evidence at that time that either
Oswald or Jack Ruby was part of any conspiracy, domestic or foreign, to assassinate
President Kennedy. No direct or indirect relationship between Oswald and Jack Ruby had
been uncovered. On the basis of the evidence before it, the commission concluded that
Oswald acted alone. Despite the findings of the commission, conspiracy theories persisted
for decades. 
The commission criticized both the Secret Service and the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI). Some of the advance preparations and security measures in Dallas made by the
Secret Service were found to have been deficient. In addition, though the FBI had
obtained considerable information about Oswald, it had no official responsibility to
refer this information to the Secret Service. A more carefully coordinated treatment of
the Oswald case by the FBI might well have resulted in bringing Oswald's activities to
the attention of the Secret Service, the report stated. 
The commission made suggestions for improved protective measures of the Secret Service
and better liaison with the FBI, the Department of State, and other federal agencies.
Other recommendations were: 
That a committee of Cabinet members, or the National Security Council, should review and
oversee the protective activities of the Secret Service and other agencies that help
safeguard the president. 
That Congress adopt legislation that would make the assassination of the president and
vice-president a federal crime. 
That the representatives of the bar, law-enforcement associations, and the news media
establish ethical standards concerning the collection and presentation of information to
the public so that there will be no interference with pending criminal investigations,
court proceedings, or the right of individuals to a fair trial. 
Bibliography
Mills, Judie. John F. Kennedy (Watts, 1988). 
Reeves, T.C. John F. Kennedy: The Man, the Politician, the President (Krieger, 1990). 
Schlesinger, A.M., Jr. A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House (Greenwich,
1983). 
Selfridge, J.W. John F. Kennedy: Courage in Crisis (Ballantine, 1989). 
Summers, Anthony. Conspiracy, rev. ed. (Paragon, 1989). 
Waggoner, Jeffrey. The Assassination of President Kennedy: Opposing 
The JFK Story 
JFK

Use the Search box at the top to find Term Papers for Sale by keywords or browse Free Essays page by page
(sorted alphabetically by Essay Title):

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
For college-level Term Papers, Essays, Research Papers and Book Reports, please go to the Term Papers for Sale Website


This Free Essays Web Site, is Copyright © 2008, Essay Express. All rights reserved.




Partner websites: Interior Decor Art :: Immigration Lawyer Toronto :: Laser Clinic Toronto :: Original Abstract Paintings :: Learn Violin in Thornhill :: Learn Violin in Toronto :: Buy used Yamaha piano in Toronto