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Page 28 text:
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ASK NOT what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country. These words of our thirtyefifth President ring in the mournful students' ears as they rememberingly gaze at Iohn Fitzgerald Kennedy's picture and memorial letter after his assassi- nation, November 22, 1963. SGT. KETCHUM, father of football co-captain, Bob Ketchum, told cub reporters Carole Negilski and Nancy Twitty to remind Bob to play his best in up-coming foot- ball games. The girls inter- viewed men of the Second Armored Division and Ha- waiian Senator Inouye at Bergstrom Air Force Base in Austin prior to the men's takeoff for Germany in Big Lift. Caught in the Emotional Grip I f 22-Student Life FIRST YEAR journalism students try out foreign cor QW' respondents' seats in the Fort Hood sports arena ww. during a briefing on Big Lift exercises N.
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Page 27 text:
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STUDENTS RETURN to their seats after enthusiastically standing to cheer as the Spirit of KHS is released from the Spirit Iug during a pre-football game pep rally. Occasions Command Assemblies AMONG A row of teach- ers seated in front oi the student bleachers, Miss Iacquie Patterson happily receives a trinket of appreciation from Nina Parker at the Teacher's Recogni- tion Day assembly. Student Life-21
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Page 29 text:
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of World News When the Air Force moved out the entire 2nd Armored Division for the Big Lift maneuvers staged last October, many homes were left fatherless. For most, however, two months absence did not seem a great price to pay for the significance of the air- lift. Eyes of nations around the world focused on Texasp and as international newsmen flocked to Fort Hood, papers everywhere speculated on the lift's success. In spite of poor weather conditions, Operation Big Lift ended eight hours and four minutes ahead of schedule, thus reassuring a dubi- ous world that the U.S. is capable of strengthening overseas forces in emergencies. Friday afternoon, November 22, 1963, the flag seemed almost reluctant to be pulled to half-mast as six students students, shocked into remembrance, ran to lower the flag. The President had been assassinated. Softly, like the mist settling over an autumn meadow, a stillness fell over KHS. No one spoke, no cars passed in the streetg birds stopped singing, even the wind ceased. It was as if God had pro- claimed to His angels: Let there be silence . . .'
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