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John F.

KENNEDY

Although Kennedy was in office for barely more than a thousand days,
his presidency and his presence on the world stage had a huge
historical impact. Much of that was captured in photographs of the
time, following the handsome son of a wealthy businessman from
childhood to the most powerful office in the world, until it all ended in
tragedy in Dallas.

(Nicknames Jack and JFK)

On July 15, 1960, Senator John F. Kennedy tells Democratic convention delegates and some 65,000 others in the
Los Angeles Coliseum that he will be the party's candidate for President in the 1960 campaign. AP Photo/Dick Strobel

In this January 5, 1938 file photo, Joseph P. Kennedy, left, U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain, stands with his 20 year old
son, John F. Kennedy, in New York. Kennedy was the second son, and one of nine children, of business tycoon Joseph P.
Kennedy. When first son Joseph Jr. was killed during World War II, John became the designated heir. AP Photo

Elected to the U.S. Senate in 1952, here, Senator John F. Kennedy, accompanied by Dick Mayer, 15, and Melissa Tyler, 14,
of Shrewsbury, Massachusetts inspects tornado damage in Shrewsbury, on June 10, 1953. At least 86 were left dead in the area
by the tornado, 800 injured and 2,500 made homeless. AP Photo

Senator John F. Kennedy greets President Dwight D. Eisenhower on his arrival for festivities at the National Corn Picking Contest near Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on October 17, 1958. AP Photo

Sen. John F. Kennedy is mobbed by well-wishers carrying Kennedy banners on his arrival at Los Angeles International Airport,
on July 9, 1960 to personally lead his drive for the Democratic presidential nomination. AP Photo

Democratic Presidential nominee Sen. John F. Kennedy, in backseat of Pontiac convertible, talks with farmer James Cox
during his campaign visit to the farm in Fort Dodge, Iowa, on September 22, 1960. AP Photo

Helmet askew, rifle definitely not at the ready, man in military uniform is jammed against fender of car bearing
the Democrats' presidential nominee, on October 25, 1960 in Elgin, Illinois. AP Photo

Sen. John F. Kennedy stands on the hood of a truck to acknowledge the cheers of thousands
who greeted him in a garment workers rally in downtown Los Angeles, on November 1, 1960. AP Photo

A November 1960 photo of John F. Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline Kennedy. AP Photo

Republican Vice President Richard M. Nixon, left, debates Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Democratic presidential nominee,
during a live broadcast from a New York television studio of their fourth presidential debate on October 21, 1960. AP Photo

Jacqueline Kennedy, left center, sits in her living room with a group of Democrats watching her husband on television,
debating domestic affairs with Vice President Richard Nixon, at her Hyannis Port, Massachusetts, home, on September 26, 1960. AP Photo/Bill Chaplis

Senator John F. Kennedy, (lower right), grins happily as backers cheer the Democratic presidential candidate in Minneapolis, on October 1st. Kennedy was leaving his hotel for a rally and was surrounded
by a large crowd of partisans on October 2, 1960. They waved banner threw confetti and yelled heartily. Between 18,000 and 20,000 attended the rally and thousands more were turned away. AP Photo

After winning the election in 1960, President John F. Kennedy, delivers his Inaugural Address in Washington,
District of Columbia, on January 20, 1961. CWO Donald Mingfield/U. S. Army Signal Corps photograph in the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library, Boston

Mrs.

Jacqueline Kennedy has a chuck under the chin for her husband moments after he became president, on January 20, 1961.
This exclusive picture by AP photographer Henry Burroughs was taken in the rotunda of the Capitol
just after President John F. Kennedy left the inaugural stand. AP Photo/Henry Burroughs

President John F. Kennedy addresses Congress in Joint Session for his first state of The Union Address in Washington, on January 31, 1961.
AP Photo/Harvey Georges

President Kennedy and Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy follow the takeoff and space flight of Astronaut Alan Shepard on television. Others, watching from the White House office of the Chief Executive's
secretary in Washington, on May 5, 1961, are, from left: Attorney General Robert Kennedy; McGeorge Bundy, presidential assistant; Vice President Lyndon Johnson; Arthur Schlesinger Jr., another
presidential assistant, and Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Arleigh Burke. AP Photo

President Kennedy smiles as he delivers a joking remark to the 6,000 attending the $100-a-plate Democratic dinner on May 27, 1961 in Washingtons National Guard Armory, to help him
celebrate his 44th birthday. The cake in foreground weights 1.5 tons and is topped by a replica of the White House. AP Photo/Henry Griffin

President Kennedy speaks to reporters at a nationally televised news conference in the State Department auditorium, on March 23, 1961. The Chief Executive at the opening of the conference discussed
the Laos situation and used three different maps, picturing how pro-communist rebels have gained ground in the last seven months in Laos. The map at left was used by Kennedy to Show communist
rebel areas as of March 22 which, he said, are indicated by the dark and shaded portions. AP Photo

Three-year-old Caroline Kennedy pushes past her father as he leaves the elevator at the White House ground floor, on March 16, 1961,
to begin a typical busy day at 9:42 A.M. President Kennedy has a strip of tape across a cut above his left eye, suffered when his head struck
a table as he was bending over to pick up something for Caroline. AP Photo/Henry Burroughs

President Kennedy sits at his White House office desk, on June 6, 1961 as he reports to the nation by television and radio networks, on his talks with
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in Vienna and President Charles de Gaulle of France in Paris. AP Photo

President John Kennedy, right, and his wife, Jacqueline, wearing bathing suit, stand on a pier after spending the afternoon boating on Nantucket Sound at Hyannis Port,
Massachusetts, on August 5, 1961. The President and U.N. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson conferred aboard his yacht during the cruise. AP Photo/RHS

President John F. Kennedy heads for Washington after an overnight stopover on December 18, 1961 in
West Palm Beach, Florida where he rested after his Latin American tour due to a heavy cold. AP Photo

Astronaut John Glenn and President John Kennedy inspect the Friendship 7, the Mercury capsule which Glenn rode in orbit.
Kennedy presented the Distinguished Service Medal to Glenn on February 23, 1962 at Cape Canaveral, Florida. Vincent P. Connolly/AP Photo

President Kennedy starts a windup for the pitch to open the American League baseball season, on April 8, 1962, in Washington. AP Photo

U.S. President John F. Kennedy and Mexican President Adolfo Lopez Mateos are showered with tons of confetti and paper, on June 29, 1962, as they travel down one of
Mexico City's boulevards shortly after Kennedy's arrival for a three-day visit. AP Photo

President Kennedy claps to keep time as his children Caroline and John, Jr. dance in the Oval Office, in October of 1962. Cecil Stoughton/AP Photo/White House

President Kennedy confers with his brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, at the White House in Washington, District of Columbia,
on October 1, 1962 during the buildup of military tensions between the U.S. and the Soviet Union that became Cuban missile crisis later that month. AP Photo

President Kennedy is surrounded by photographers as he sits at his desk in the White House, on October 23, 1962,
shortly after signing a presidential proclamation concerning the Cuba Missile crisis. AP Photo

A cheering crowd, estimated by police at more than a quarter of a million, fills the area beneath the podium at West Berlin's City Hall,
where U.S. President John F. Kennedy stood. His address to the City Hall crowd was one of the highlights of his June 26, 1963 visit to West Berlin,
where he received one of the greatest receptions of his career. AP Photo

President Kennedy greets a 16-year-old Bill Clinton (not smoking cigars yet) in the Rose garden of the White House at an American Legion Boys Nation event, on July 24, 1963.
Arnie Sachs/CNP/Corbis

In this photo provided by the White House, President Kennedy, first lady Jacqueline Kennedy and their children, Caroline and John Jr.,
with the family dogs at their Hyannis Port, Massachusetts, home, on August 14, 1963. AP Photo/White House/Cecil Stoughton

President Kennedy takes his daughter Caroline out for a spin in the Honey Fitz, off Hyannis Port in August of 1963.
Robert Knudsen/White House/John F. Kennedy Presidential Library

The Kennedy brothers, from left, Robert, Edward and President John F. Kennedy, pose together in August of 1963, in Washington D.C. AP Photo

Aboard the USS Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr., named after the brother killed in World War II, President and Mrs. Kennedy watch the first race of the
1962 America's Cup competition off Newport, Rhode Island. Robert Knudsen/White House/John F. Kennedy Presidential Library

This photo provided by John McInnis Auctioneers in Amesbury, Massachusetts, shows late President John F. Kennedy, right, with his wife, Jacqueline, center,
and sister-in-law Ethel Kennedy at left. The photograph is among items that were auctioned on February 17, 2013. AP Photo/John McInnis Auctioneers

President John F. Kennedy, wearing a windbreaker, watches through binoculars as a Polaris missile clears the surface after firing from a
submerged nuclear sub off Cape Canaveral, Florida, on November 16, 1963. AP Photo

On November 21, 1963, President John F. Kennedy and first lady Jacqueline Kennedy shake hands with well-wishers who lined the ramp at
Houston International Airport to welcome them to the Texas city. AP Photo

In this November 22, 1963 photo, President Kennedy and his wife, Jacqueline Kennedy, arrive at Love Field airport in Dallas, Texas. AP Photo/File

President John F. Kennedy's motorcade in Dallas, November 22, 1963. PRNewsFoto/Newseum

Never released photo, until 2015, of president John F. Kennedy and Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy on that day of November 22, 1961 in Dallas. Picture provided by Victor E. Rosez.

Seconds after shots rang out, the limousine carrying the mortally wounded President John F. Kennedy races toward the hospital in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963.
Secret Service agent Clinton Hill is riding on the back of the car, Nellie Connally, wife of Texas Gov. John Connally, bends over her wounded husband,
and first lady Jacqueline Kennedy leans over the president. AP Photo/Justin Newman

Women burst into tears outside Parkland Hospital upon hearing that President John F. Kennedy died from a gunshot wound while riding in a motorcade in Dallas, on November 22, 1963. AP Photo

Lyndon B. Johnson is sworn in as President by Federal District Judge Sarah T. Hughes aboard the Presidential plane, as wife Lady Bird,
former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy and others look on. UPI Photo/Library of Congress

People waiting for flights from Dallas at Love Field read the news of President John F. Kennedy's assassination in the Dallas Times Herald newspaper, on November 23, 1963. AP Photo/File

Kennedy's casket lying in state in the East Room of the White house, before it was moved to the Capitol Rotunda. Abbie Rowe/White House/President John F. Kennedy Library

With the illuminated U.S. Capitol in the background, mourners form an endless line which lasted through the night, to pay their respects
to the slain President John F. Kennedy, in Washington, District of Columbia, on November 24, 1963. AP Photo

Widow Jacqueline Kennedy kneels and reaches out to touch the casket of her slain husband, John F. Kennedy, in the rotunda of the Capitol in
Washington, District of Columbia, on November 24, 1963. Their daughter Caroline kneels beside her. AP Photo

World leaders follow members of the Kennedy family in the funeral procession for the murdered president. Robert Knudsen/White House/John F. Kennedy Presidential Library

The First Family watches John F. Kennedy's funeral procession in Washington on November 25, 1963, three days after the president was assassinated in Dallas.
Widow Jacqueline Kennedy, center, daughter Caroline Kennedy, left, and son John Jr., are accompanied
by the late president's brothers Sen. Edward Kennedy, left, and Attorney General Robert Kennedy. AP Photo

An Irish cadet honor guard, with arms outstretched, stand in formation as the U.S. flag is lifted from the coffin of President John F. Kennedy during his funeral services at
Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, on November 25, 1963. The cadets, 18- and 19-year-old soldiers, had been whisked from their remote barracks in
County Kildare the day before and were flown to the U.S. to perform a special ceremonial drill at the funeral of the slain president.
He had been captivated by the drill when he saw it performed in Dublin months earlier. AP Photo

People visit the eternal flame at the grave site of former President John F. Kennedy burns at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, on October 29, 2013.
AP Photo/Susan Walsh

http://fortune.com/2011/04/10/joseph-p-kennedy-a-portrait-of-the-founder-fortune-classics-1963/

https://books.google.be/books?id=4LMtAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT195&lpg=PT195&dq=the+kennedy+copper+mines&source=bl&ots=35NBzO_yvV&sig=Rd5nkqnFSyg2cdtK9RD50iIFqCU&hl
=nl&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiBhPn4joPLAhWBGKYKHXmOBhIQ6AEIWjAJ#v=onepage&q=the%20kennedy%20copper%20mines&f=false

https://www.archives.gov/research/jfk/warren-commission-report/

The Kennedy family, as well as Dag Hammarskjld had very huge interests and
participations in the copper mines business.
A close down of the Union Minire of Katanga was probably a main target of both of
them. The world surplus of copper was in that time 300,000MT/year and that was
exactly the production of Katanga while being the cheapest on the market. There was
also a threat that this copper and other minerals (Uranium) would fall in the hands of
a communist regime supporting the politics of Patrice Lumumba and its plans to
nationalize the mines. After the death of Lumumba, during the Mobutu reign
supported by the USA, the production of copper fell to almost nil.
They had the power to do it: one was the president of the United States
one was Secretary General of the United Nations
one was the prime minister of the Congo

Offered by Victor E. Rosez


Founder of Hakuna Matata 1961
55 years ago:
1001 days later JFK died
No fairy tale

All three
were killed

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