Yes, I remember it very well, and that's why history is so important, you can see what was actually going on before this event, because what happend in the years after it was the result of what was being contrived in this world before it actually took place, and this event punctuated what came before, and what followed, along with, just a few days between them, President Diem's assassination in Saigon: The death of these two leaders, the real beginning of the Viet Nam War. That's what it came to mean to me, and a whole bunch of other folks, whether they know it or believe it or not. It was also the begining of the end of political innocense in this society. I remember the militant denial of the WWII generation-my own parents-when it was even suggested that the Government might have had something to do with this horrible event, or that they might try to cover it up, or that there was a faction or "Second government" that we didn't know about, etc etc. The idea that the USA didn't always wear a white hat was not even to be considdered by the older generation, as oposed to the idea that nobody wore one, including the USA, first and foremost, by the younger generation, what we call baby boomers now. The real beginning of the generation gap? It's all there to look at in almost 50 years of national history, especially the truth that "history has taught us that we have learned nothing from history. Flapjack.