Saturday, April 27, 2024 Apr 27, 2024
71° F Dallas, TX
Advertisement
Publications

BOOK REVIEW Reporting the Kennedy Assassination

|

JUST WHEN YOU THOUGHT you’d read everything you wanted to about the Kennedy assassination, Dallas’ Three Forks Press does its best to convince you otherwise. Reporting the Kennedy Assassination provides a venue for the recollections of those members of the local media who worked the story.

In 1993, SMU invited these reporters, editors, cameramen and photographers to a conference to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the assassination. The result is a fascinating, first-person account of how reporters like Hugh Aynesworth, John McConal and Vivian Castleberry became part of Dal-las history.

Dallas Morning News reporter Kent Biffle and WFAA-TV cornerman Tom Alyea entered the Texas School Book Depository just minutes after the shooting. Associated Press reporter Mike Cochran recalls being pressed into service as a pallbearer for Oswald’s funeral. “It became obvious that if we were going to write a story about the burial of Lee Harvey Oswald, we were going to have to bury him ourselves.”

What the book reveals is the consciousness of journalists who were first to ask the question that still haunts us today: How could this tragedy have happened?

Related Articles

Image
Local News

In a Friday Shakeup, 97.1 The Freak Changes Formats and Fires Radio Legend Mike Rhyner

Two reports indicate the demise of The Freak and it's free-flow talk format, and one of its most legendary voices confirmed he had been fired Friday.
Image
Local News

Habitat For Humanity’s New CEO Is a Big Reason Why the Bond Included Housing Dollars

Ashley Brundage is leaving her longtime post at United Way to try and build more houses in more places. Let's hear how she's thinking about her new job.
Image
Sports News

Greg Bibb Pulls Back the Curtain on Dallas Wings Relocation From Arlington to Dallas

The Wings are set to receive $19 million in incentives over the next 15 years; additionally, Bibb expects the team to earn at least $1.5 million in additional ticket revenue per season thanks to the relocation.
Advertisement