A digitized version of the entire two-hour-and-22-minute recording is now available online from …
http://www.archives.gov/research/jfk/air-force-one-tape.html
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Now available. The Kindle version contains the audio from the taped interviews, as well as several video clips - viewable on an iPod touch or iPhone.
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Another Irene victim last week: The magnificent Arlington Cemetery oak tree. According to Arlington National Cemetery, the oak was most known for the role it played in the selection of the grave site for President John F. Kennedy.
Kennedy is said to have visited Arlington House - now a national memorial - in the spring of 1963 and said the view was so magnificent that he could stay there forever. The Arlington Oak was part of that view.
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Set to be released in 2013, the Kennedy family has authorized a book and an ABC-TV two-hour special to be aired September 13 of the series of recordings Jackie made with Arthur Schlesinger shortly after the assassination.
Caroline reportedly gave these to ABC News in exchange for their dropping the Katie Holmes mini-series.
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JFK Historymaker (US$4.99) from MultiEducator, Inc. is an extensive and comprehensive multimedia biography app for the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad. The amount of information is massive and includes 250 photos, 200 full text documents and 25 videos chronicling the life of John F. Kennedy, the United States’ 35th president. In structure, it’s very similar to an earlier app from the same company about the Civil War. Both apps have many positive attributes, but also quite a few nagging problems.
The design of the app lets you easily get to and keep track of information. With its larger screen, viewing it on an iPad is far more satisfying since, in landscape mode, there is always a menu on the left side of the screen that shows the categories and sub-categories of information. On the right of the screen is the content. The menu isn’t there in portrait mode, but tapping on a menu button makes it appear. In the iPhone version, all you see is the menu; tapping on an item brings up the content, making things more difficult to navigate. The menu items contain distinctive icons that let you know if the item contains a video, photo, audio file or text. A list of Recent places is kept, and anything can be marked as a Favorite so that you can build your own list of interests. Everything but videos can be sent to email as well. Text and photos can be pinched or stretched, which really comes in handy on a small screen.
Organization is important in this type of app, since there are around 35 topic-oriented categories that range from JFK’s early life to his assassination. Within each category is a sub-menu that lists the content. Tapping on an item brings up the text, photo, video or audio. It sounds complicated, but after a few minutes of using it, I could easily get anywhere quite quickly, and saving Recents and Favorites made it even easier. There is a button letting you go back to the last category; in the unlikely event you did get lost, there is a Contents button that will bring you back to the main menu. On the iPad there is also a search box to get you to the right place.
Categories are grouped well and break everything down to bite-sized topics, such as Civil Rights, Bay of Pigs, The Navy and so on. Many categories start with an overview then drill down to an in-depth discussion of the topic. Under that are all the supporting items. A great deal of the text is comprised of transcripts of speeches, minutes of meetings and scanned documents, including JFK’s report card from the Canterbury School in 1930. (He wasn’t a terrific student.) When looking at anything other than a video, there is an Info button on the iPad or a tab on the iPhone to get specific information on what is being viewed.
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JFK assassination: Jacqueline Kennedy’s pink hat is a missing piece of history - latimes.com
http://shar.es/3XbqX
In the nation’s collective memory, the assassination of John F. Kennedy is a clash of images and mysteries that may never be sorted out to the satisfaction of everyone …
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President Kennedy hands Shriver a pen after signing legislation at the White House on Sep. 28, 1961. The law gave the Peace Corps permanent status. Kennedy jokingly praised Shriver, head of the corps, as “one of the most effective lobbyists Washington has seen.”
]]>When Stoughton’s family auctioned them last month, collector and filmmaker Keya Morgan purchased about 15,000 of the images, including many showing private Kennedy family moments.
“He was there all the time, and he trusted him with his life,” Morgan said of Stoughton.
Expect them to be published on the Web.
]]>Rep. Gabrielle Giffords – back in March:
“We’re on Sarah Palin’s targeted list. But the thing is the way
that she has it depicted has the crosshairs of a gunsight over our
district. People who do that, they’ve got to realize there’s
consequences to that action.”