Ottawa Citizen

JFK memorial ceremonies to focus on hope

Dallas event aims to highlight positive aspects of president’s legacy

- JAMIE STENGLE

be mirrored Friday in Boston, where the JFK Library and Museum will open a small exhibit of never-beforedisp­layed items from Kennedy’s state funeral and host a musical tribute that will be closed to the public, and in Washington, where U.S. President Barack Obama will meet privately at the White House with leaders and volunteers from the Kennedyest­ablished Peace Corps program.

“It’s 50 years later and it’s also a moment to look forward to the future,” said Thomas Putnam, executive director of the library, which usually doesn’t observe the anniversar­y. “We want our tone to be respectful and we want it to have a certain reverence, but we also want it to be hopeful and end on this notion of what JFK stood for.”

The committee convened by Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings to plan the city’s event wanted to focus “in a positive way more on the legacy of president Kennedy,” said Ron Kirk, a former mayor and member of the panel.

About 5,000 tickets were issued for the free ceremony in Dealey Plaza, which is flanked by the Texas School Book Depository building where sniper Lee Harvey Oswald perched on the sixth floor in 1963.

Friday’s event will include readings from the president’s speeches by author David Mc- Cullough. In a nod to Kennedy’s military service, the U.S. Naval Academy Men’s Glee Club will perform and there will be an Air Force flyover. A moment of silence will be held at 12:30 p.m., when the president was shot.

There was no shortage of events in Dallas this year marking the anniversar­y, including panels with journalist­s and others who witnessed the events of the day, special concerts and museum exhibits.

Press aide for Texas Gov. John Connally, Julian Read was in a media bus several vehicles behind the presidenti­al limousine. Read released a book this year recounting his experience and has attended several of the events, which he called cathartic.

“Even though there are all those melancholy thoughts, the way it’s shaping up ... gives me more of a comfort than any time since 1963,” said Read, who will return to Dealey Plaza on Friday.

John Judge, executive director of the Coalition on Political Assassinat­ions, first came to Dealey Plaza to mark the fifth anniversar­y of JFK’s death in 1968.

Judge’s group, which believes Kennedy’s death was part of a conspiracy, usually gathers on the plaza’s “grassy knoll” for a moment of silence at 12:30 p.m. Since it’ll be blocked off this year, Judge says he’s reached a “livable” agreement with the city in which they’ll gather a few blocks away and move to the plaza after the official ceremony ends.

The group has made Tshirts for the occasion with the slogan, “50 years in denial is enough” and an image like that of Kennedy on the halfdollar coin, except with a bullet hole in his head and blood. “It was meant to be shocking because we think that not solving his murder was shocking,” Judge said.

 ?? TOM PENNINGTON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Bouquets are left at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza on Thursday in Dallas as people visited the memorial on the eve of the 50th anniversar­y of JFK’s assassinat­ion.
TOM PENNINGTON/GETTY IMAGES Bouquets are left at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza on Thursday in Dallas as people visited the memorial on the eve of the 50th anniversar­y of JFK’s assassinat­ion.

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