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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In five pages and three parts, this paper examines the government findings of the Warren Commission and the subsequent government investigation into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, assesses the evidence along with mistakes made, inconsistencies, and cover-up attempts, and argues that there was indeed a conspiracy with supporting information provided. Three sources are cited in the bibliography.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGjfkdeath.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
thereafter joined by Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson and his wife Lady Bird. The President went to Texas to observe firsthand how the space program was doing, which involved
a tour of the space center in Houston on Thursday, November 21. However, JFK also had a political agenda as well. There was a presidential election approaching in
1964 and rifts were beginning to emerge among Texas democrats that could harm the Presidents reelection campaign. Kennedy sought to ease the growing tensions between conservative Texas Governor John
B. Connally and liberal Senator Ralph Yarborough. On Friday, November 22, the President and his wife were scheduled to ride in a motorcade through downtown Dallas, which would take
them to a Trade Mart luncheon where JFK was scheduled to give an important speech. The Kennedys would ride in an open car with Governor Connally and his wife
Nellie while Senator Yarborough would ride in the car containing Vice President and Mrs. Johnson. A presidential commission headed by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren subsequently documented what transpired
on the last leg of the motorcade route: "At 12:30 p.m., e.s.t... shots fired from a rifle mortally wounded President Kennedy and seriously injured Governor Connally. One bullet passed
through the Presidents neck; a subsequent bullet, which was lethal, shattered the right side of his skull. Governor Connally sustained bullet wounds in his back, the right side of
his chest, right wrist, and left thigh" (Warren et al, 1964, p. 48). The injured men were rushed to Parkland Memorial Hospital where Governor Connally underwent successful surgery for
his injuries and John F. Kennedy was pronounced dead at 1 p.m., which was officially announced thereafter by Assistant Press Secretary Malcolm Kilduff. Less than an hour after the Presidents
...