RFK - 45 years. June 6, 1968

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Bogtrotter07

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45 years ago, a boy's joy...then grief


By Terence Moore, Special to CNN

updated 4:37 PM EDT, Tue June 4, 2013

Editor's note: Terence Moore has been a sports columnist for more than three decades. He has worked for the Cincinnati Enquirer, the San Francisco Examiner, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and AOL Sports. Follow him on Twitter

(CNN) -- Now, 45 years later, I still see it.

I still feel it.

Among the most exhilarating moments of my life was when I touched the fingertips of Robert Fitzgerald Kennedy.

That's ultimately where I'm going. Until then, let's discuss the months, weeks and days before everything stood still for a 12-year-old that bright Thursday afternoon on a mostly empty street in northern Indiana. This journey of fate began in a classroom of politically astute sixth-graders at Benjamin Harrison Elementary School in South Bend, Indiana. It was the spring of 1968, when turmoil was everywhere, and it was just the start of horrors to come for what would rank among the most violent years in American history.

Just like that, courtesy of the Tet Offensive in late January and early February, the Vietnam war went from winding down to raging out of control. There were nerve gas leaks in Utah. There was the Orangeburg Massacre in South Carolina, where state police killed three college students protesting a segregated bowling alley.

Then there was our discussion in a back corner of that classroom involving a small gathering of sixth-graders on who deserved the Democratic nomination that year for the presidency of the United States. It was a discussion that had nothing to do with the scheduled agenda of our teacher, Mr. Petrass, and it was a discussion that came out of nowhere.

What about Lyndon Baines Johnson who couldn't solve Vietnam, but who had done more with Civil Rights than any president since Abraham Lincoln? Three years earlier, in Mrs. Plummer's third-grade class, she ushered us to the window to see LBJ's helicopter fly by in the distance en route to landing in town to kickoff his "Great Society" program.

For those who despised war, Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy made sense. He even caused Johnson supporters to squirm in early March by finishing a tight second to the sitting president in the New Hampshire primary.

One more name ... RFK.

He actually spurred the conversation. He was charismatic, and he was highly sympathetic to the black community of which I was a part. Not only that, he was a Kennedy, which was as magical a name then as it is now. On March 16, a few days before our discussion, he did what many thought he would do earlier: He declared he was running for the Oval Office that once belonged to John Francis Kennedy, his brother who was assassinated five years earlier.

During JFK's administration, Robert was the ruthless attorney general who doubled as the confidant of the president. In 1968, his edges became softer, partly because of his ongoing grief, but mostly because of his sense of mission. He was a 42-year-old senator from New York who was obsessed with helping the poor, and he was an outspoken champion of racial and social justice.

Robert Kennedy also was anti-war. The same as McCarthy. The difference was that McCarthy wasn't a Kennedy. Neither was Johnson nor Hubert Humphrey, LBJ's vice president, who later ran for president after Johnson shocked the universe by abruptly dropping from the race at the end of March.

Our consensus was RFK.

Consider, too, our discussion involved white and black kids. In fact, most South Bend schools were racially mixed, and such was the case even when my parents moved through the school system during the 1940s and 1950s.

South Bend also was the definitive blue-collar town back then as the headquarters for Studebaker cars, Singer Sewing Machine and the Bendix Corporation. Plus, you had the free thinkers at the University of Notre Dame within the city limits. Notre Dame is the world's most famous Catholic university, and the Kennedys are Catholic. Despite their overwhelming wealth, RFK became the face of the Kennedys' desire to help the less fortunate while promoting racial harmony.

Translated: South Bend was made to hug Kennedys.

With that in mind, several days after our discussion in Mr. Petrass' class, a wonderfully crazy thing happened. The principal announced over the intercom that school was finishing early that afternoon to give everybody a chance to stand on the curb in front of the building to see a passing motorcade -- RFK's motorcade. He had landed in town to begin his campaign for the Indiana primary, which would be his first primary since announcing his candidacy.

My birthday is in October, but it came early back then, along with Christmas, Thanksgiving Day and the Fourth of July.

Robert Kennedy?

We were just talking about the guy.

There were no cell phones during the spring of 1968. No Internet. No opportunity to contact the parents, other relatives or friends to inform them about our pending dance with history -- and, yes, even then, we knew this would be something huge for the ages. So my crew of sixth-graders joined hundreds of others on the edge of Western Avenue waiting. We waited some more. We kept waiting. As 20 minutes became a half-hour, the crowd dwindled to half.

By the time the wait reached an hour, it was clear RFK was MIA.

My brother, Dennis, and I were in the same grade. We thought of waiting some more, but we decided to begin our usual half-mile walk home. We moved down Western Avenue, looking over our shoulders along the way -- hoping, praying. Nothing. The motorcade must have gone a different way to the South Bend airport en route to wherever, or maybe RFK just left earlier than expected.

Or maybe ... nah. We kept walking.

Once we got home, we were supposed to start our daily routine. Off with the school clothes, then on to homework and house chores. Then we could enjoy the great outdoors. School day after school day, we did that routine without fail, but this time, Dennis talked me into altering things to take a quick spin around the block on our brand-new bikes.

Good thing.

Soon, we heard sirens. We glanced at each other with wide eyes, and without a word, we pedaled faster than a sunbeam toward Western Avenue, which was a block or so in front of us. We jumped off our bikes with the banana seats and stingray handle bars, and after a group of South Bend motorcycle cops passed by, a convertible headed our way with flashing lights. We knew. We just knew. So we stood there, waiting, hoping, just the two of us, with nobody else in sight on the street. The convertible got closer, and the man sitting on its right side stood up with his light-colored hair waving in the wind as he gave a signal to the driver to slow down.

With the car shifting into a lower gear, the man leaned over as much as he could without tumbling out of his car. It was RFK, alright, and as his convertible kept traveling toward its destination in slightly less than a hurry for that moment, he touched my brother's fingertips and then mine.

We watched the motorcade fade into the distance. Then, after Dennis and I looked at each other with even wider eyes, we unleashed the biggest "WOW!" of joy ever known.

That was in contrast to the sorrow we felt two months later after our mother shook us out of our beds in the middle of the night/morning of June 5. We rushed to the television in our parents' room to see a heavy dose of live grief across the television screen. The man with that light-colored hair waving in the wind was gunned down in the kitchen of The Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, and this was after he moved closer that evening to the Democratic nomination by winning the California primary.

It was as if a family member had died.

We touched fingertips.

As the years became decades, I kept thinking: When did that happen? Then came last autumn, when I satisfied my curiosity. I was back in South Bend for a Notre Dame football game, so I dedicated an afternoon to searching old South Bend Tribune newspaper editions at the public library. Within the hour, I found a brilliantly written story of RFK's 1968 trip to northern Indiana in the Tribune's evening edition, and it mentioned how Kennedy was leaving South Bend for Indianapolis.

I got chills. I touched RFK's fingertips a few hours before he gave one of the most passionate speeches ever. He spoke without notes. He urged a potentially angry crowd to stay calm. He preached the need for everybody in Indianapolis to practice nonviolence, especially since he had experienced the suffering that comes from the gruesome death of a brother.

It was April 4, 1968 ...

The day Martin Luther King Jr. was killed.

I saw this posted on CNN. I remember it like yesterday. It was the beginning of June, a sunny day, and the same wave of sorrow passed over us on the playground . . .
 

dshans

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This is one of the far too many days in my life I wish I had no reason to recall. I was a high school sophomore. My clock radio alarm clicked on to wake me for another school day. I heard "... Kennedy was shot and killed ...". At first I thought it was a replay of something broadcast 11/22/1963 or some sick "joke" by the morning DJ.

I was on the political fence. LBJ had lost me with his foolish and dogged approach to Viet Nam. I'd dabbled with Nixon's "Peace With Honor" smokescreen. I really liked Eugene McCarthy but was impressed with Bobby and respected the political clout he carried.

JFK, RFK, Medgar Evers, MLK, Kent State, Altamonte ... so much sh¡t in so little time.



[Two points on the article: 1) Robert's middle name was Francis, John's was Fitzgerald. 2) Notre Dame is an entity separate from South Bend. It may be surrounded, but it's not "incorporated," as much as the city might drool over possible property taxes assessed and campus access for the police and those beverage agent (or whatever they're called) clown/revenoors/revenue-by-fine-generators.]
 

ACamp1900

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June 6th is a date I always tend to associate with another event... Either way, from one who grew up with the Kennedy's always being viewed from historical viewpoint it's hard to imagine it ONLY being 45 years ago...

Good read, thx Boggs
 

Bubba

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Not that it matters, but this is my exact birthdate. June 6, 1968.

Another weird fact, my son was born on 11/22... The anniversary of JFKs assassination.
 

tadman95

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Nice post Bogs. 1968 was a tough/scary year for a 10/11 year old.
 

Rhode Irish

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I was not around during Bobby's life, but he is a hero of mine nonetheless. I have a picture of Bobby on the wall in my office. One of my other favorite pictures is one my mother took of me and my two younger brothers standing together having a conversation, and on the wall in the background is a picture of Bobby, Jack and Ted standing together having a conversation. (I'm sure my mom did that on purpose, but we weren't in on it.)
 

alaskandomer

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I remember it like it was yesterday. It was the summer between my junior and senior years in HS. I stayed up long enough to hear Bobby's victory speech. While sleeping, I dreamed that Nixon had been assassinated. The next morning, still groggy, I turned on the TV, and took a few minutes to realize who had been shot. Among the worst days of my life.
 

ChiRish

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Interesting read - thanks Bogs. It's strange to imagine what would have happened without his - or his older brother's - assassination. One of the most fascinating things during my history undergrad days was a look at the counterfactual, i.e., what would have happened - the what ifs. Bobby's what ifs are up there with any other in American history. Sad day in our country's history.
 

Rhode Irish

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Interesting read - thanks Bogs. It's strange to imagine what would have happened without his - or his older brother's - assassination. One of the most fascinating things during my history undergrad days was a look at the counterfactual, i.e., what would have happened - the what ifs. Bobby's what ifs are up there with any other in American history. Sad day in our country's history.

1968 was quite likely the most important year in history in terms of changing the course of world history. It is crazy the amount of thing that happened that year that have rippled out through the decades.
 

ChiRish

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1968 was quite likely the most important year in history in terms of changing the course of world history. It is crazy the amount of thing that happened that year that have rippled out through the decades.

Agreed. A revolutionary year indeed.
 

EddytoNow

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Bobby Kennedy remains my political hero. He was fearless in his fight against organized crime and a champion of the down-trodden. He stood up for Native Americans, Black Americans, and the poor of Appalachia. His opposition to the Vietnam War endeared him to my entire generation. I was 16 years old when Bobby was taken from us, and I am still waiting for another political leader with his combination of courage and compassion. Jack Kennedy may have been President and Ted Kennedy may have dominated the Senate for years, but Bobby was the greatest of all the Kennedys. In the words of a popular song of the time, "Has anyone here seen my old friend, Bobby?" We could sure use his leadership now.
 
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Bogtrotter07

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Bobby Kennedy remains my political hero. He was fearless in his fight against organized crime and a champion of the down-trodden. He stood up for Native Americans, Black Americans, and the poor of Appalachia. His opposition to the Vietnam War endeared him to my entire generation. I was 16 years old when Bobby was taken from us, and I am still waiting for another political leader with his combination of courage and compassion. Jack Kennedy may have been President and Ted Kennedy may have dominated the Senate for years, but Bobby was the greatest of all the Kennedys. In the words of a popular song of the time, "Has anyone here seen my old friend, Bobby?" We could sure use his leadership now.

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/yZfRyWPZAII" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 

EMAN51

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Memories of that time

Memories of that time

I did not go to ND. My father was the headmaster at the Stanley Clark School in SB from
'64 to '68. We lived on York Road and I walked to school. However, I read the Knute Rockne story a million times and my parents used to attend home games. I was hooked as a young man as a ND fan. Page, Lynch, Huarte, Snow, Eddy, Hanratty and Seymour and countless others were my favorite players. (In fact, there is a Life magazine photograph in '66 or '67 showing OJ running the ball at ND stadium with my parents clearly visible in the background. Not unexpectedly, my mother was smoking and my dad was looking away from the action).

The author of this article was about my age (I was 10). I was in the 5th grade. My best friend's father was a Poli Sci prof at ND and the campaign manager for Eugene McCarthy in Indiana. Naturally, my friend and I would "volunteer" at the McCarthy headquarters stuffing envelopes and handing out fliers at street corners. (We went to Indianapolis to see McCarthy speak and I ran to shake his hand as he stepped out of his limo much to the chagrin of security personnel).

One day, we were handing out fliers and a young man came to a stop for a stop sign. He was driving a sports car with the top down. We enthusiastically asked him to vote for McCarthy. He replied that while he liked McCarthy, he was supporting Bobby Kennedy.

The terrible June day occurred not to long after this incident. As the years passed, I came to appreciate Bobby Kennedy for his vision and understanding. I have his biography on my nightstand having cultivated the voluminous pages several years ago. I understood what he meant to the young man in the sports car.

We moved that summer. I have been back only twice for ND games and visited the old neighborhood. The street corner remains the same.
 
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