Jacqueline Kennedy - Caroline Kennedy [163]
women:
at bandage rolling, 76
feminists, xxvi, xxix, 170
First Lady, 141
journalists, 99
and power, 305–7
roles of, xxix, 58–59, 241–43, 348
Women's Press Club, 341
World War II, and postwar Germany, 201n49
Wrightsman, Charles, 188, 228
Wrightsman, Jayne, 188, 228
Y
Yarborough, Don, 90n25
Yarborough, Ralph, 89–90
Z
Zsa Zsa (rabbit), 332n57
SOURCE NOTES
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xx "tall thin young congressman": Carl Sferrazza Anthony, As We Remember Her (HarperCollins, 1997), p. 37.
xx "across this great crowd": Charles Bartlett oral history, John F. Kennedy Library.
xx "a spasmodic courtship": Robert Dallek, An Unfinished Life (Little, Brown, 2003), p. 193.
xx "start to cry again": JBK to Lyndon Johnson, January 9, 1964, transcription of recording of telephone call, in Michael Beschloss, Reaching for Glory (Simon and Schuster, 2001), p. 22.
xxi "his acid wit": New York Times, March 1, 2007.
xxi "I return your letters": JBK to Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., December 3, 1963. JBK letters cited here and below appear in her still-closed papers at the Kennedy Library and, in most cases, in the archives of the recipients.
xxi "much on my mind": American Archivist, Fall 1980.
xxii "a matter of urgency": Ibid.
xxii "thousands" of people: New York Times, April 6, 1964.
xxiv "an historian of the twenty-first": American Archivist, Fall 1980.
xxiv "From time to time": Ibid.
xxv "flighty on politics": Journal of Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., July 19, 1959, Schlesinger Papers, New York Public Library.
xxvi "nobody wonders": John F. Kennedy at Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce breakfast, November 22, 1963.
xxvii "pass a law": David Finley, memorandum of conversation, February 19, 1962, Finley Papers, National Gallery of Art Archives.
xxvii "ripped down": JBK to Bernard Boutin, March 6, 1962.
xxvii "practically nothing": White House History, #13, 2004.
xxvii "Hold your breath": JBK to David Finley, April 18, 1962.
xxvii "may be the only monument": Time, November 20, 1964.
xxviii "would walk halfway": JBK to Edward Kennedy, September 17, 1970.
xxviii "early Statler": Mary Van Rensselaer Thayer, Jacqueline Kennedy: The White House Years (Little, Brown, 1971), p. 93.
xxviii "my predatory instincts": JBK to Adlai Stevenson, July 24, 1961.
xxviii "ran a curio shop": JBK to Lady Bird Johnson, December 1, 1963.
xxviii "the setting in which": A Tour of the White House, CBS-TV, February 14, 1962.
xxviii "a New England sitting room": New York Times, January 29, 1961.
xxix "She was a worker": Lady Bird Johnson oral history, Kennedy Library.
xxix "What has been sad": Ms. magazine, March 1979.
xxix "It is the major temple": JBK to John F. Kennedy, handwritten, undated, 1962.
xxix "Egyptian rocks": Richard Goodwin, Kennedy Library Forum, November 4, 2007.
xxx "remind people that feelings": JBK to JFK, memorandum entitled "Abu Simbel," handwritten, undated.
xxx "excruciating": Look, November 17, 1964.
xxx "a new life": JBK to David Finley, August 22, 1964.
xxxi "So now he is a legend": Look, November 17, 1964.
xxxi "things I think are too personal": JBK to Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., handwritten, undated, 1965.
xxxi "if I could steel myself": JBK to Lyndon Johnson, March 28, 1965.
xxxi "Close your eyes": U.S. News & World Report, July 26, 1999.
9 "I had publicly endorsed": Ted Sorensen, Kennedy (Harper and Row, 1965), p. 80.
10 "a stormy meeting": Ibid.
15 "My sweet little house": Gordon Langley Hall and Ann Pinchot, Jacqueline Kennedy (Frederick Fell, 1964), p. 141.
18 "I'm going to get in": William Manchester, The Death of a President (Harper and Row, 1967), p. 186.
25 "as if Jack were President of FRANCE": Oleg Cassini, A Thousand Days of Magic (Rizzoli, 1995), p. 29.
27 "a Stevenson with balls": Dallek, p. 259.
32 "You