14-08-2011, 12:12 AM
(This post was last modified: 20-08-2011, 01:46 AM by Bernice Moore.)
Jim DiEugenio Wrote:I knew that tabloid story was phony instantly.
That recycled intern story made it pretty obvious that this was neither Jackie nor Caroline.
here is the latest from the JFK Library of what can be expected...Jim, Dawn also mentioned the Enquirer story, this all came from a post from a forum blog type site, connected with the english newspaper i believe, i think perhaps someone started a thread about them, and another whom had read the tabloid, jumped in with their info, and ta da, away it went all over the web, bad news travels fast as we know, and it did again, i am thinking..we shall simply have to wait, and see when released, though imo i cannot see jackie saying what some hope she has, at the time, knowing it was going in writing, she was simply, too smart, and cagy and knew better......but as far as what she told Caroline when she was grown, is a horse of another colour..perhaps some day she will write the end all book, with information only known to her, she seems to have that quiet understated intelligence and cunningness her mother had.so far..take care b:phone:........
http://www.jfklibrary.org/Exhibits/Speci...Voice.aspx
In September 2011, the Kennedy Library will open a new exhibit
highlighting Mrs. Kennedy's 1964 oral history interview. Sealed for 47
years and scheduled to be published in September is a series of
wide-ranging conversations with historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., in
which Mrs. Kennedy reveals her thoughts and impressions on topics
spanning John F. Kennedy's early campaigns to the Cuban Missile
Crisis. The conversations cover Mrs. Kennedy's impressions of world
leaders and events, her role as First Lady, and her life as a wife and
mother living inside the White House.
In the exhibit, excerpts from these conversations will be presented
alongside the objects, documents, and photographs that chronicle the
events Mrs. Kennedy describes. This unique presentation, joining
iconic treasures from the Kennedy Library with the words of Mrs.
Kennedy, sheds new light both on the great events and personalities of
the 20th century, as well as on the extraordinary sensibilities of the
woman describing them.