This past week many of us were reminiscing and playing
the game “where were you when?” This was
particularly significant since November 22nd was the 50th
anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
Over the Thanksgiving weekend, I came across tickets dated November 21, 1985. Where were you on what may be recognized as
one of the most important dates in history? That evening, Debbie and I were
seated in the House of Representatives gallery
We took a trip to tour our Nation's Capitol and when we visited with our good friend Congressman Sam Gejdenson, he asked if
we’d like to attend a rare joint session of Congress, quickly convened that
morning for an address by the President.
I remember the event vividly. To
this day I’m somewhat dismayed at what I perceived the lack of respect some of
the stalwarts of my Democratic Party displayed prior to the President’s
arrival. Senators such as Ted Kennedy, Chris Dodd
and Gary Hart, bantering and joking amongst themselves – I could almost read their
lips as they downplayed the significance of the joint session called to report the meeting between the President and the leader of the Soviet Union. Up until that time, I can honestly say I
wasn’t a fan of the President, but when the Sergeant of Arms, in his gravelly
voice pronounced, “Mr. Speaker (then Tip O’Neill from our neighboring Massachusetts) the President of the United
States,” I saw the face of victory, President Ronald Reagan’s, beaming like a Cheshire cat. Several minutes later, smug faces and jaws
dropped and a bi-partisan cheer erupted as Reagan announced he had stared down
the Soviets and Mr. Gorbachev had blinked.
That evening, the doomsday watchers turned the nuclear clock back an hour and from there we have witnessed the collapse of the Soviet
Union and Communism, the dismantling of the Berlin Wall and fall of the Iron Curtain. So in a small sense, East Hampton was there! Oh - as for my initial question – Mr. May’s American
History class.
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