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A Biography of John F. Kennedy


Having scarlet fever at the age of three hospitalized him for over a month and almost killed him. These conditions made Kennedy miss a great portion of the school year and keep him behind. Even with the problem of missing so much school, Kennedy never was serious about his education. In 1931, John attended Canterbury, an all boy's Catholic boarding school. During this time he was a very impish and a poor student, and always being compared to his older brother, Joe Jr. Regardless of his bad grades, Kennedy was accepted to an elite preparatory school in Connecticut, named Choate, for his high school years. All of his professors knew he was intelligent because of his consideration and times when he worked hard. For the majority of the time he slacked off and cared more about girls, pranks, sports, and having fun. But in college, however, when Kennedy transferred to Harvard University in 1936, he became more focused on his schoolwork. He studied harder and started maturing into a young man. After a trip to parts of Europe and the Soviet Union, Kennedy became more interested in political philosophy, which inspired his thesis paper for graduating. This thesis, known as "Appeasement in Munich" was about the British in the Munich Agreement. It soon was published and Kennedy then joined the United States Navy after he graduated from Harvard in 1940 with a political science major. .
             During World War II, at 2:30 a.m. on August 2, 1943, Kennedy's boat, PT-109, was hit by a Japanese ship in the South Pacific. The ship was ripped in half and ignited its fuel tanks. During this attack, two soldiers died and Kennedy hurt his back severely from being pushed into the ship's bulkheads. Kennedy, however, led the other soldiers to an island, known as Plum Pudding Island, about four miles away, which took them an excruciating five hours to reach. Kennedy knew he needed to travel somewhere else to find help, so he swam to Ferguson Passage.


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