My Night During an Assassination

RFK ZSpinThe movie "Bobby" has deep personal meaning for me. I was at the Ambassador Hotel the night Robert Kennedy was assassinated.

Rewind to March 16, 1968. I was a senior at Cleveland High School in Los Angeles. Senator Robert Kennedy announced he would run for President. I loved politics back then and had never been more excited. I immediately found out which muckamucks were running the campaign in Southern California. I contacted them and made a convincing case that they should create a organization called High School Students for Kennedy and that I was the guy to run it. They agreed and installed a phone in my bedroom -- it was the bomb. I organized car washes, airplane washes, fake primaries at high schools which all the local media covered. But more than anything, I really believed passionately in Robert Kennedy, because he had electricity. No one could stir people's emotions like him.

On June 4th, I went to the Ambassador for the victory party. It wasn't certain that he'd win but it sure seemed like he would. It was an amazing night filled with hope. People felt like the country, which lost its way in Vietnam, could come back in a big way.

About an hour before Kennedy took the stage, I somehow went up a security elevator -- I don't remember if I was invited or not, but I ended up on the floor where Kennedy and company were watching results. I didn't see Kennedy, but I remember leaving and Ethel bumped into me as we both entered the elevator. She kissed two of her kids goodnight and then Rosie Grier appeared. Grier is the former football star/Kennedy stalwart who one hour later would subdue Kennedy's assassin.



We all rode down together and victory was in the air. It was exhilarating.

I can't describe the events that followed. How could someone that vibrant and important be standing at a podium one second and dying in a pantry the next? It was too much for a high school student to process. I do remember a feeling I've never had before or since. I think I was capable of killing Sirhan Sirhan that night; at least I would have tried.

The events changed my life. I never connected with politics that way again. But it changed someone else's life more. That fall, I became a freshman at the University of California at Santa Barbara. There was a girl in my poli sci class who was also a big Kennedy supporter. She was also at the Ambassador that night. She wore a polka dot dress. When Kennedy was shot, she ran out of the ballroom and for weeks there were press reports that "the girl in the polka dot dress" may have been an accomplice to the assassination.

She was profoundly affected by assassination and her own drama. Sometime in the mid 70's, I heard she had taken her life. Too much to bear. So sad.

Reader Comments

(Page 3 of 6) Previous 15 Comments | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Most Recent | Next 15 Comments

31. Wow - how truly exciting to have witnessed and been a part of such a tragic, yet memorable, time in our history. Although I wasn't born until 1976, I have always loved and been fascinated with that time period. Kudos to you for allowing yourself at such a young age to become involved with the political arena. If only our young people today would take a lesson and become involved...

Posted at 12:26PM on Nov 17th 2006 by Poli Sci Buff

32. Memories never die and our love will last forever. The time has come to let go of the Kennedy's...and just let them be. I'm neither democrat or republican, just an observer, who is sick of all this kennedy crap that fills the news on all those "slow" days when bush or clinton don't stick their feet in their mouths. Give us all a break Harvey. You were there. Big deal. Boo hoo on you.

Posted at 12:32PM on Nov 17th 2006 by paulie

33. Memories never die and our love will last forever. The time has come to let go of the Kennedy's...and just let them be. I'm neither democrat or republican, just an observer, who is sick of all this kennedy crap that fills the news on all those "slow" days when bush or clinton don't stick their feet in their mouths. Give us all a break Harvey. You were there. Big deal. Boo hoo on you.

Posted at 12:29PM on Nov 17th 2006 by paulie

34. my father passed away in February, Martin Luther King was assasinated in March and Bobby in June....it was a terrible year for me....just terrible!

Posted at 12:29PM on Nov 17th 2006 by mary

35. Ever since that insane evening, I have tried to identify the "girl in the polka dot dress". I watched it "live" as she ran down the steps. My first thought was that she was so frightened. My second thought was accomplice. She has always been in my mind and some thirty eight years later the mystery is solved. Thank you for your article, Mr. Levin
PS: Many of us had near nervous breakdowns at that time.

Posted at 12:32PM on Nov 17th 2006 by Perry Lawrence

36. #26 Poli Sci Buff --- "If only our young people today would take a lesson and become involved..."

I agree. It is sad that the younger generation (of which I am a part) is generally so consumed with base pursuits like celebrities, sports, and buying things. (I am inserting a disclaimer that I am NOT classifying all young people in this group, and I like my fair share of perezhilton, sports, and designer clothes.)

Our culture literally has no culture. And it's most unfortunate, because if you DO become involved you are labeled the "liberal elite" or called a "blue state snob" a la David Brooks in his NY times column yesterday. It is pretty ironic though, how with this war in Iraq and wordlwide religious persecution, we are actually quite close to the issues in the Vietnam Era...

Posted at 1:54PM on Nov 17th 2006 by robyn

37. I suppose that horrible event has effected his "lingo" The Bomb???? Who says that????

Posted at 12:53PM on Nov 17th 2006 by Vanessa

38. Harvey, I remember that horrible night, too. I was born and raised in Mississippi, a state where the Kennedys were not particularly liked in the mid 1960s. I took a completely different tack from everyone I knew. I believed the Kennedys were taking the country in a new direction. I was just becoming politically aware myself (though being in junior high school, I was too young to work in a campaign) and I saw Robert Kennedy as the man who, in many ways, was the social conscience behind his brother's presidency. I believed (and still do) that Robert changed after JFK was assassinated and became an even more compassionate man and politician. I was only at home that horrible night, and not at the Ambassador, but I remember exactly where I was and what I felt the night Robert Kennedy was killed. In the wake of JFK and MLK's assassinations, it felt like there was no one left to lead us out of darkness. It was, in many ways, the death of this nation's political and social rebirth and I don't think we've ever been the same since. Thank you for sharing your experience with us. I appreciate it.

Posted at 1:47PM on Nov 17th 2006 by Donna

39. Harvey, thank you for sharing your memories of the night of Bobby Kennedy's assassination with such poignancy! Though I am a child of the 80s, I have always been fascinated by the Kennedys and their almost unprecedented history of horrific tragedies and immeasurable successes. Thank you for sharing your memories with us!



On another note, I'm disgusted by bloggers who are so socially enept and starving for acceptance that their only recourse is to lash out ignorantly about ultimately unimportant details. Grow up, get off your high horse, and please realize that no one gives a crap about your misdirected aggression.

Posted at 1:00PM on Nov 17th 2006 by Heather

40. A few months before Bobby was assassinated I was walking down Madison Avenue near 67th Street in NY one very late Sunday evening. The street was deserted and I was headed to an all night deli for a snack when out of the shadows a couple were casually strolling down the same street in my direction. As we got within a few feet of each other I looked up and recognized Ethel Kennedy. When I looked at who was with her it was Bobby. We exchanged a few words and they explained to me that the reason they were going for a walk so late at night on deserted Madison Avenue on a Sunday night was because it was the only time the crowds were gone and they could be anonymous and enjoy a simple stroll like the rest of us. They were very polite and charming to me. I will never forget that encounter...it was a very thrilliing experience for a young 24 year old girl. I was devastated to see him dying on the floor of the Ambassador Hotel a few months later. The Kennedys may not have been perfect people...none of us were or are. They gave this country hope and a promise of a better future...for people of all backgrounds. They had millions and did not have to do much of anything but devoted their lives to public service and for that we are very grateful.

Posted at 1:12PM on Nov 17th 2006 by sandy k.

41. Thank you for sharing your experience with us, Josh. Very moving.

Posted at 1:41PM on Nov 17th 2006 by Kelvin

42. The Kennedy's did not start the war in Vietnam, we were embroiled in that mess since the 1950's, when France was still occupying Vietnam. Thank Eisenhower and his administration for getting us in that mess.

Thanks for the touching article, Harvey.

Posted at 1:37PM on Nov 17th 2006 by WTF?

43. How can the hate-filled people here put down Harvey for sharing a personal memory and a piece of American history? That's shameful. The Kennedys are no more or less corrupt than any other politicians to come down the line. Look what we got instead of RFK - Nixon. Look who we have now. Look who we've had in between. The way our political system works you just about have to be corrupt to make it to the top. The bottom line is, they all love their country and want to do what they feel is best for it. We just don't all agree with their vision as to what it ought to be. But, I digress. Bless you, Harvey, for sharing a fascinating tale as a witness to history.

Posted at 1:54PM on Nov 17th 2006 by David

44. that reminds me of the night jr ewing got shot, i remember it unfolding on the tv in front of me, it was way too much for my young brain to process.
I remember thinking, why, why, why couldn't they have shot someone on dynasty?
i remember my little sister was watching wearing her favorite smurf pajamas and crying her little eyes out.
She was so affected that she never wore those little pj's again.
I think the whole country changed that night.

Posted at 1:55PM on Nov 17th 2006 by huh?

45. #42 ROFLMAO thanks for the laugh

Posted at 2:08PM on Nov 17th 2006 by jackdaniels

Previous 15 Comments | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Most Recent | Next 15 Comments