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Paul Danish: History鈥檚 First Draft

President Kennedy arrives at the Hotel Texas parking lot rally in Fort Worth, Texas, Nov. 22, 1963

President Kennedy arrives at the Hotel Texas parking lot rally in Fort Worth, Texas, Nov. 22, 1963.

I got the call at my pad in the Lazy J Motel, a housing complex on 28th Street across from campus. It was at 12:20 p.m. Friday, Nov. 22, 1963.

It was Mike Fallert (A&S ex鈥64), a baby直播app Daily editor. I was editor-in-chief.

鈥淪ome鈥 cretin shot Kennedy,鈥 he said.
鈥淰ery funny,鈥 I said.
鈥淲e want to put out an extra,鈥 he said.
鈥淒on鈥檛 waste my time,鈥 I said.
鈥淎鈥揾ole,鈥 he said and hung up.

Ye gods! Could it be true?

I flipped on the radio. It was true.

The phone rang again. It was journalism professor John Mitchell, a Daily staff mentor. He was at the paper鈥檚 office.

He strongly recommended we put out an extra.

鈥淟et me think about it,鈥 I said. 鈥淚鈥檒l be right in.鈥

Putting out an extra defied logic. It would be old news before the ink dried, and it would be distributed late Friday afternoon on a largely deserted campus. But newspaper people instinctively respond to a crisis by putting out newspapers.

I made a snap judgment while driving in. We would put out an extra.

The atmosphere in the newsroom was one of excitement, crisis, anger, fear and brittle professionalism. Our world had been shattered. We were liberals. JFK was our hero.

The Daily鈥檚 UPI teletype machine was going nuts every five or 10 minutes, ringing five bells, the signal that a big story was moving.

There was only one story moving that day.

鈥淭丑别&苍产蝉辫;Camera won鈥檛 print us, but Pruett [a Boulder printer] will print a one-page broadsheet for us,鈥 Mitchell told me. 鈥淲e鈥檒l have to set our own type.鈥

Gad.

So we took copy from the UPI machine, retyped it into double-wide newspaper columns on the best typewriter we had and pasted up something vaguely resembling a newspaper page.

The Camera agreed to handset a couple headlines for us, including a two-inch-tall banner announcing the president was dead. Other headlines were hand-lettered.

The lead story was cobbled together from the UPI wire. We were so rattled that one paragraph was repeated three times.

In terms of production and content, it was junk. Yet, it perfectly encapsulated the chaos and horror of that day. Not in spite of its errors but because of them.

My most lingering memory was when Daily staffer Bruce Comstock (Econ鈥66), a close friend, and I drove to CU Vice President Eugene Wilson鈥檚 house at the foot of Flagstaff to deliver the extra. Several administrators were in his living room looking ashen and poleaxed 鈥 and instantly much older. It was the first time I genuinely saw them as human beings instead of authority figures.

Paul Danish (Hist鈥65) firmly believes newspapers are the first draft of history, which explains why history contains so many typos.

Photography by Cecil Stoughton. White House Photographs. John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston.