Tuesday, November 22, 2022

Former Joplin Globe reporter was first to tell the country President Kennedy had been assassinated

 


Sixteen years ago, former Carthage Press editor John Hacker, who is writing a healthy portion of the Joplin Globe these days, asked me to write a weekly column for GateHouse Media's shortlived effort to gain access to the Joplin market, the Joplin Daily.

When the Daily launched in January 2006, I wrote a column about the 15th anniversary of the death of Nancy Cruzan, whose right-to-die case began in Carterville, went all the way to the U. S. Supreme Court and then back to Jasper County Circuit Court.

As it turned out, that was the only column I ever wrote for the Daily. The powers that be at GateHouse Media told Hacker they did not want a weekly column from me, but that he could run my columns every once in a while.







Since I was just as arrogant then as I am now, I decided if they did not want a weekly column from me, they would not receive any columns.

When I made that decision, I already had a second column written, a look at the role a former Joplin Globe newspaper delivery boy and later Globe reporter Jud Dixon played in a historical event that forever changed the United States.

I published the column in the Turner Report in January 2006 and for the past several years, I have reprinted it each year on November 22, the anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy 59 years ago.

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"Get your Joplin Globe, five cents. Get your Joplin Globe five cents."

The job didn't pay much, but the country was in the midst of a depression, and every cent counted. Even more importantly for teenager Jud Dixon, it was his entry into the magical world of news.

That road took Jud from the Globe street sales to reporting jobs with the Globe and the Springfield Daily News to a seven-decade career in journalism that ended last month with his death at age 85 at his Dallas home.








Jud Dixon spent the last five decades of his life in the Dallas area, and it was there on Nov. 22, 1963, that the Joplin High School and Joplin Junior College graduate had a brush with history.

Jud was in charge of the United Press International (UPI) bureau in Dallas when he received word that President Kennedy had been assassinated during a political trip to the city. 

Within seconds, with the cool demeanor that characterized his entire reporting career, he sat behind his manual typewriter pounding out the story that no reporter ever wants to write, but at times like that, when people absolutely have to know what is going on, that’s when reporters must be at the top of their game.

"He was completely stone-faced, pouring it out of that typewriter," Jack Fallon, who was UPI’s Southwest Division editor at the time, told the Dallas Morning News. "Just by his presence, he kept everyone else around him calm."

Within moments, it was Jud Dixon’s version of the death of President John F. Kennedy that went out over the UPI wire to radio stations and television stations across the United States.

Though Jud Dixon’s coverage of that watershed moment in American history was what led his obituary, he perhaps did his greatest service to journalism and to the public after his retirement from UPI two decades ago.








Jud spent the next 18 years of his life as editor of the newsletter for the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas fighting for the public’s right to know.

When Jud retired for a second time, Freedom of Information director Tommy Thomason praised his years of service. "Jud’s a journalist’s journalist. His entire career has been committed to open government as the basis of solid reporting of the issues and events important to his readers."

Jud Dixon knew the importance of a free and unfettered press serving as the public’s representative. He knew that when the workings of government were open to the public that this country could survive anything from unpaved streets to official corruption to the death of a president.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Can you imagine if it happened today, with all the cell phone cameras around? Since the whole scene would have been recorded, there would be less chance of a "second shooter" controversy.