This was posted on Facebook by my boss from my days at DOJ.  Thought I'd pass it on:
  Fifty years ago the nation was captivated by T.V. coverage of the  Kennedy assassination and funeral.  I was an impoverished law student  living in Arlington, Virginia, across Route 50 from the Arlington  cemetery, and without a television set.     Since I had missed what most  of the country had seen on T.V., I decided to watch the final  ceremonies in person.  I went to the cemetery on foot and walked through  the back gate.  There was no one there guarding the gate, as I am sure  there would be today.   I joined hundreds of on-lookers standing on the  graves of deceased soldiers to witness the burial.  The overwhelming  recollection that I have is of an eerie silence; all those people and no  one making a sound, not even a cough.  Finally I heard the slamming of  car doors as the dignitaries arrived, then the military commands, the  creaking of the horse drawn caisson, and the neighing of the rider-less  horse, but still none of the on-lookers spoke.   All of a sudden planes  roared overhead, then soldiers executed the twenty-one gun salute, the  bugle played taps, people took out their handkerchiefs, but still none  of the on-lookers spoke.  Even after the ceremonies were over, although  you could hear car doors slamming and the rustle of the on-lookers  moving as they navigated their way through the headstones, still no one  spoke.
  ~Patrick Mullarkey |