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CAMELOT REVISITED

 

By GLEN JOHNSON

​

 

Even in her grief, Jacqueline Kennedy had the

strength to recount her husband's assassination in vivid detail and

the presence of mind to convey her hopes for his memorials.

"His last expression was so neat," Mrs. Kennedy told

journalist Theodore H. White in comments released for the first

time Friday. "He had his hand out, I could see a piece of his

skull coming off ... and I can see this perfectly clean piece

detaching itself from his head.

"Then he slumped in my lap," she said. "His blood and brains

were in my lap.

"I kept saying: `Jack, Jack, Jack' and someone was yelling:

`He's dead, he's dead.' All the ride to the hospital I kept bending

over him saying: `Jack, Jack, can you hear me, I love you Jack.' I

kept holding the top of his head down, trying to keep the brains

in," she said on Nov. 29, 1963, a week after the president's

assassination.

Excerpts from the interview have appeared in Life magazine and

White's 1978 memoir, "In Search of History," and the sight of the

dazed widow in her bloodstained pink suit has become a 20th century

icon. Now, the John F. Kennedy Library has released the full record

of that interview, 34 pages that include White's handwritten notes

and revisions in Mrs. Kennedy's handwriting.

White donated the papers to the library in 1969, saying they

could not be released until one year after the former first lady's

death. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died of cancer May 19, 1994, at

age 64. White died in 1986.

The transcript shows her hopes after the assassination included

privacy for herself and memorials for her husband.

"I wanted that flame and I wanted Cape Kennedy. ... All I

wanted was his name on just that one booster, the one that would

put us ahead of the Russians," she said, apparently referring to

the rocket to the moon.

The eternal flame still burns at Kennedy's grave at Arlington

National Cemetery. And while Cape Canaveral was renamed for Kennedy

on the day of White's interview, the rocket that went to the moon

was not.

Cape Kennedy went back to being called Cape Canaveral in 1973,

although the NASA base there continues to be called the Kennedy

Space Center.

"I'm not going to be the Widow Kennedy," Mrs. Kennedy told

White. "When this is over, I'm going to crawl into the deepest

retirement there is."

Though she personified celebrity for more than 30 years, she

remained largely a stranger to the public that adored her. Even

after she married Aristotle Onassis, a Greek shipping tycoon 30

years her senior, she couldn't change her image as First Widow.

Speaking of her 3-year-old son, Mrs. Kennedy said: "I want

John-John to be a fine young man. He's so interested in planes;

maybe he'll be an astronaut or just plain John Kennedy fixing

planes on the ground."

She recalled that her daughter, Caroline, "held my hand like a

soldier. She's my helper; she's mine now."

John F. Kennedy Jr. is a lawyer and publisher. Caroline also is

a lawyer and co-author of a book on the Bill of Rights; she's

married and has three children.

White became close to the Kennedys when he chronicled the

presidential campaign in his best seller "The Making of the

President, 1960."

The interview marked the first time "Camelot" was linked to

the Kennedy administration in print. In an excerpt published

decades ago, Mrs. Kennedy recalled that her husband loved the

recording of the musical "Camelot."

"The lines he loved to hear were: `Don't let it be forgot, that

once there was a spot, for one brief shining moment that was known

as Camelot,'" she said.

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