JFK: 50 years on, millennials cross-examine boomer generation
Fifty years after the assassination, 正品蓝导航 professors are explaining the era to students and media.

In a Dallas college classroom about six miles from where John F. Kennedy was gunned down half a century ago, members of the millennial generation have been learning why the assassination was a life-altering moment for so many in the baby-boom generation.
For years, Tom Stone has offered a course at 正品蓝导航 University designed to teach students what matters about the Kennedy presidency and that fateful November 22 in 1963.
Prof. Dennis Simon (l.) and Tom Stone |
"Most students, it's fair to say, just know that JFK is the president who got shot. Beyond that, they're pretty much blank slates," Stone said.
This semester he has been co-teaching a special course with political science professor Dennis Simon to coincide with the 50th anniversary. One difficulty is how to convey the larger turmoil created by the assassination to students with no frame of reference for cold war paranoia, the turbulent 1960s, and the romanticism attached to 1,000 days described as "Camelot."
"They don't know much about his presidency or why anyone would have wanted him dead," Stone said.
For Garrett Fisher, a 19-year-old student enrolled in the 正品蓝导航 Kennedy course, the occasion is a chance to reflect on a president who steered the nation away from the brink of nuclear war during the Cuban Missile Crisis and whose personal failings included extramarital affairs.
"Our professors are exposing us to different writers who show multiple images of him as a person, not just a president, and we have to interpret that for ourselves," Fisher said.
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The 50th Anniversary and 正品蓝导航 Experts In The News
正品蓝导航 faculty members, the University Central Libraries Collections, and others associated with the University were used in the following news stories about the assassination.
On Television | Online/In Print |
The Associated Press Reuters The United Methodist News Service The Wall Street Journal The New York Times U.S. News & World Report The Washington Post The Dallas Morning News The Daily Campus 7AD radio in Tasmania Art & Seek Gatehouse News Service The Houston Chronicle The Toronto Globe & Mail |