Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg

Newsday.com:

Caroline Kennedy's new book: 'A Family Christmas'

BY AILEEN JACOBSON
December 6, 2007

During her childhood, Caroline Kennedy would always find such Victorian-era gifts as walnuts and oranges in her Christmas stocking. But by the time her own three children were old enough to write to Santa, her mother had succumbed to the "era of plastic," giving her grandchildren such items as a plastic shopping cart, miniature kitchen and talking phone.

"She had a great sense of fun," says Kennedy of her mother, Jacqueline. And, "she would give books as well."

Jackie O likely would have presented to all on her list her daughter's newest offering, "A Family Christmas." In an introduction to the handsome volume, Kennedy writes about her own family traditions - and the nation's - and includes a trove of surprising historical notes about the importance of Macy's, Coca-Cola and Thomas Alva Edison in the evolution of the holiday's modern celebration. The rest of the book is full of essays, poems, lyrics and other passages as personal as the old-fashioned gifts she and her late brother John received from their parents.

When her editor first suggested compiling a Christmas book, "At first I thought it was a bad idea," Kennedy says in a phone conversation on the morning of her 50th birthday, Nov. 27 (lunch with friends and dinner with her children, 14, 17 and 19, was on the day's agenda).

A different Christmas book

"I thought it would be the same old stuff you see all the time. Then I looked on it as a challenge, to see if there was anything out there that was not the same." This is the seventh book for Kennedy, who graduated from Harvard College and Columbia Law School and is vice chairwoman of the New York City Fund for Public Schools. Her first two books were law-related, the last five anthologies were like this one.

With this project, she discovered that Christmas is "a gigantic historic, cultural, economic phenomenon," she says, closely intertwined with the growth of department stores, soft-drink advertising and the invention of the electric lightbulb. The holiday was also tied to major social changes - several selections describe the accommodations immigrant groups, including Jews, must make to America's tinsel landscape - and wars.

"I really learned a lot," she says, way beyond what she got at the Catholic schools she attended as a girl. Among the more unusual entries are a letter from Groucho Marx about his bad luck with holiday tipping, recipes from the kitchen of Martha Washington and the lyrics to "Christmas in Hollis" by rappers Run-DMC.

Remembering the soldiers

"Because we're currently at war, and there are soldiers away from home, I thought it important" to include writings on war, she says, starting with George Washington's description of crossing the Delaware on Christmas Day, 1776.

There's also a 1961 letter from her father, President John F. Kennedy, to a Michigan girl afraid that the Russians would bomb the North Pole and harm Santa.

After writing that he shared her concerns about atmospheric testing, he concluded: "However, you must not worry about Santa Claus. I talked with him yesterday and he is fine. He will be making his rounds this Christmas." She hadn't known about the letter until the Kennedy Library came upon it for her book, Kennedy says.

Her own childhood letter

Among her own papers was a letter she had written to Santa in 1962, when she was 5, in which she asked for - among other things - silver skates, a real pet reindeer, a basket for her bicycle and a farm. The letter is in her mother's handwriting, but she can't recall dictating it, let alone what some of the items - "one of those horse wagons with lucky dips - and Susie Smart and Candy Fashion dolls" - are. "I'm waiting for some other 50-year-old to tell me," she says.

She probably got at least some of the items, she says, but what she remembers more is that she and her brother were encouraged to make their own decorations and cards, something she continued with her own family. Even though her eldest child is in college and her other two in high school, she hopes they'll create cards for their parents, she says. She plans to give away jars of blueberry jam she made this summer. "And I made this book," she adds.

Until recently, she owned a house in Sagaponack and often spent Thanksgivings there. "We celebrate Christmas more in the city," she says. Because her husband, museum designer Edwin Schlossberg, is Jewish, she says, "We incorporate Hanukkah.... We light the menorah and play dreidel and sing songs at our holiday party." Along with all the fun, they also do some "reading and thinking, which helps the kids to really connect."

She learned from her research - much of which didn't make it into her book - that, starting in the 1830s, special books were often printed for people to give at Christmas. "The idea that I'm continuing in that tradition - I like that," she says. "People should give books for Christmas - though kids don't like to get them." Including her own children. "But they do get them."

Unbottling lesser-known history

Here are some tidbits Caroline Kennedy uncovered as she researched "A Family Christmas."

In 1659, the Puritans of Massachusetts banned the celebration of Christmas, "which had become known for public drunkenness, licentious sex, and gambling."

The American vision of Santa Claus was created by Clement Clarke Moore in his 1822 poem that starts "'Twas the night before Christmas" and was later exported to the world largely via Coca-Cola ads.

Department stores - invented in America - "contributed greatly to the economic growth of Christmas." Macy's began decorating its windows in the 1870s and launched its Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1924. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer was created for Chicago's Montgomery Ward stores in 1939.

"The first electric Christmas-tree lights, eighty hand-blown red, white, and blue glass bulbs, festooned the 1882 tree of Edward Johnson, an executive in the Edison Illuminating Company."

America's first public Christmas tree was lit in 1912 by Caroline Kennedy's great grandfather, Boston Mayor John F. Fitzgerald, at 5 p.m., beating New York's Madison Square tree by half an hour.
 
Caroline Kennedy draws an adoring crowd to West Windsor book-signing

Tuesday, December 4, 2007 7:20 PM EST
By Katie Wagner, Staff Writer


WEST WINDSOR — Strong, dedicated to community service and exhibiting “Catholic values” are characteristics of Caroline Kennedy cited by people waiting to have her sign copies of her new book Monday night at the Barnes & Noble bookstore.

In a line that ran along half of MarketFair shopping center’s interior walls, hundreds of Ms. Kennedy’s adoring fans stood with copies of her most recent book “A Family Christmas.” The anthology contains poetry, prose, scriptural readings, carols, letters, song lyrics and recipes from a diversity of writers as well as her personal stories.

Prior to the 7 p.m. start of the book-signing, one of the families that arrived early enough to among the first in line, were beaming about the opportunity that awaited them inside the store.

”Seven years ago when I was pregnant with my daughter — I was single at the time — I decided that I wanted to give my daughter a strong name that would carry me through, so with my mother’s guidance I named her Carolyn, after Caroline Kennedy,” said Megan Toy of Pennington, who was accompanied by her daughter and mother.

She added, “Everything that she stands for, she has such a great reputation, she’s everything that you want a role model to be. None of us have been to any of her other book-signings, so this is a really big deal to me right now.”

Other people standing in line commended Ms. Kennedy for the way the daughter of the nation’s former president John F. Kennedy conducted herself throughout the losses of family members.

”She must have tremendous endurance and strength to have lived her life so publicly and withstood tragedy at the same time,” said Beth Van Marter of West Trenton, who attended the book-signing with her mother Fran Marasco.

Ms. Marasco’s interest in seeing Ms. Kennedy traces back to about half a century ago, when she began admiring the Kennedy family.

”My generation was in awe of the Kennedy family. Everything about them and anything to do with them was of great interest. They were such a glamorous family and everyone loved them,” said Ms. Marasco, who works as a tour guide in the governor’s residence, Drumthwacket.

Ms. Marasco added, she was very disappointed to have been sick on the day that John F. Kennedy Jr. visited Drumthwacket, and was looking forward to finally getting to see a Kennedy in-person.

Several fans of Ms. Kennedy passed their time in line by skimming through “A Family Christmas,” pausing to read selections they found particularly interesting.

”I really admire her and her work in education and her books,” said Ronnie O’Connor, a teacher at Stuart Country Day School of the Sacred Heart and resident of Pennington.

She added that she enjoyed several aspects of “A Family Christmas.”

”I like that she included an essay by Robert Frost on his poem “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” I love her introduction and I love her letter to Santa,” Ms. O’Connor said. “I just like the mix. She has some famous poets and your traditional Christmas carols. It’s just a real blend of our Christmas tradition."
 
brunopress

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dailyherald.com

City is sweet on Caroline
Book store swamped by Kennedy admirers
By Jake Griffin | Daily Herald Staff

12/14/2007 12:29 AM​


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Caroline Kennedy, daughter of former President John F. Kennedy, was signing copies of her holiday-themed book, "A Family Christmas."
"She is a phenomenal woman who continues to do great things," Karen Volkmer of Warrenville said. "It would have been great to hear her give a talk."
But Kennedy was just signing books at the store. Two lines moved seamlessly through the store. One line snaked through the racks toward the counter to buy copies of the book, while the second started at the registers and wound through the aisles to Kennedy's table.
Gail Wetta, an events coordinator for Anderson's, said everything went smoothly because the large crowd was expected. Kennedy signed more than 1,000 books for 550 people after nearly two hours at the table.
"People were able to have brief encounters with her," Wetta said. "There was one woman who wanted her to sign the book with a pen she brought with her that (Kennedy's) father had used to sign something."
The book was the perfect stocking stuffer for a number of people who spent the afternoon in line.
"We bought several copies to give as gifts, but we thought of someone else while we were in the signing line and so my wife went back to buy another copy," said Roger Hendrickson of Naperville. "I voted for her father, so I'm absolutely intrigued with Caroline Kennedy and the good she has done and continues to do."
This is Kennedy's second visit to Naperville in two years. In 2005, she spoke to several local junior high school students and signed copies of a book of children's poetry she had compiled.
Thursday was a busy day for Anderson's staffers, who orchestrated the Kennedy appearance in the daytime and a talk and signing at North Central College in the evening by former NBC News anchor Tom Brokaw.
Brokaw was in town to promote his new book, "Boom! Voices of the Sixties."
It was going to be a busy day for Plainfield resident Carolyn Domark, who picked Thursday as the first time to go hunting for authors' signatures.
"Caroline Kennedy's book is for me and the Tom Brokaw book is for my new future son-in-law," she said. "I've never done this before, I've never really thought about doing it before, but so far I'm having fun."
 
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napersun.com

Visit from an American royal

Caroline Kennedy in Naperville for book signing


December 14, 2007
By MIKE MITCHELL Staff writer

</DIV>Caroline Kennedy, who was visiting to sign copies of her new book, "A Family Christmas," stepped in the room to a round of applause and took a seat. Greeting her fans one by one with a smile, she didn't speak much.
And that was enough to please the crowd Thursday morning.
"I guess for my family - I'm Irish-Catholic - if you grew up Irish-Catholic in the '60s, that's the family that you looked to," said Maureen Thomas of Naperville, who was visiting with her 9-year-old daughter, Caroline, who was named after the former president's daughter. "We were choosing names for our daughter, and I had always admired Caroline Kennedy. That was one of the reasons we came."
With her father's auburn hair and freckles and her mother's nose, the 50-year-old mother of three is the only remaining immediate family member of the president. Her father was assassinated; her mother, Jacqueline, died of cancer; and her brother, John Jr., died in a plane crash.
"My mother had met much of the Kennedy family back in Massachusetts; she's always felt a connection to them," said Sharon Caldwell of Lisle. "I so wish she had been here. She usually comes for a couple of weeks in the year around Christmastime. But this year, she came in the summer. So, she didn't get to see (Caroline). So I had to be here to get her book autographed."
The book is a compilation of Christmas essays from Caroline's favorite authors. She also includes a letter she wrote to Santa as a 5-year-old, requesting a real pet reindeer and Susie Smart.


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cincinatti.com

Kennedy draws 2,000
BY SARA PEARCE |

NORWOOD – An hour into Caroline Kennedy’s book signing Thursday afternoon at Joseph-Beth, the main floor of the Norwood store was becoming more crowded, the line to have books signed was growing longer and all six cash registers were busy as shoppers continued to snap up copies of Kennedy’s new holiday anthology, “A Family Christmas.”
Close to 2,000 people were crammed into the store.
Kennedy sat at a table at the top of the store’s grand staircase autographing one book after another as quickly as she could, wishing each person a “Merry Christmas,” and chatting with strangers and acquaintances while making sure the line kept moving briskly.
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Thirty minutes before the signing’s 3 p.m. start, Realtor Ora Forusz of Hyde Park had staked out the first spot in line.
Line letters from A through Z were handed out in advance to those who had purchased books and Forusz had a coveted “A.”

“I really admire her for how she has carried on,” she said of Kennedy. “She is a role model for anyone.”

Like others who were waiting, Forusz talked about Kennedy’s many losses. The assassination of her father, President John F. Kennedy, in 1963. The death of her mother, Jacqueline, in 1994 from cancer. And five years later, the death of her younger brother, John, in a plane crash.

“I just had to come see her,” said Forusz, 68.

Dee Glassford of Sharonville stood behind Forusz. She volunteered to get two books signed for her mother, who was ill.

The 23-year-old University of Cincinnati student said that even though she was too young to have first-hand knowledge of Kennedy’s White House years, she knew about them, was interested in politics and found the chance to meet her exciting. “Caroline is living history,” she said.

That sentiment was echoed by Maggie McNerny, 29, a paralegal from Pleasant Ridge. She teared up as she talked about Kennedy and the extended Kennedy clan.
“My grandmother likes to tell people that I was the only fourth-grader on my street reading ‘Life with Rose Kennedy,’ ” she said, referring to a 1986 book about Kennedy’s fraternal grandmother.

McNerny added that she now limits the number of books she reads each year about the family.

Rosemary Bosco, 58, an aide at St. Mary’s School in Hyde Park who was raised in New York City, was just as emotional.

“I am just eight years older than her,” said Bosco of Kennedy. “So, I grew up knowing who she was and wondering about her, what she was doing and what the Kennedy family was doing.”

When Kennedy finally appeared at the second floor railing, shyly peeking over it, people began to point and whisper, “There she is.”

Applause broke out as she was introduced by Annette Meurer, the store’s marketing director.

Kennedy explained that she had compiled the book of poems, lyrics, essays, short stories, letters and lyrics – illustrated by Cincinnati native Jon J. Muth – to bring reading back into the holiday.

“A special thing about growing up for me was that my family loved reading and it was part of all our holidays,” she said.

One of the people waiting, businessman Tony Strike, 52, of Symmes Township, was a Harvard classmate of Kennedy’s. He worked on the university newspaper with her and has stayed in touch. He was getting three books signed as gifts.

Also in the crowd was corporate recruiter Howard Simons of Mason, a second cousin of Edwin Schlossberg, Kennedy’s husband. Kennedy jotted down his name and phone number on the back of a business card.

When Stephany Loudon, an attorney from Bethel, reached Kennedy, she took a coffee mug out of a tote bag, placed it on the table and said “Jackie is with me every day.”

A black-and-white photograph of Jacqueline Kennedy was on the front of the mug.
“You have coffee with her every morning?” asked Kennedy. “Yes,” answered Loudon, who was a political activist during the 1960s.

Other people presented Kennedy with photographs and photocopies of information they had dug up on the Candy Fashion and Suzy Smart dolls that Kennedy had asked Santa for in 1962 in a letter that’s reprinted in the book.

Gloria Santoro of West Price Hill went so far as to buy a Candy Fashion doll on eBay. She had it shipped to her overnight and brought it to the signing to give to Caroline.

“I don’t care if I meet her or what she does with it,” she said. “I just thought it would be fun to give to her.”
 
The Kennedy family Forum

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I think she looks one hundred of times better today!
See it:

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It seems that as she matured, she's been revealed to herself.
Her beauty, IMO, is real, but comes from the inner of her, as a human beeins, as if her soul was visible on her face, through the years and just 'trenscends' her...
I hope you see what I mean, and if not, I'm sorry!:innocent:
 
SWEET CAROLINE - THE FORMER FIRST DAUGHTER TALKS ABOUT HER NEW BOOK, TURNING 50 AND LEARNING SHE WAS NEIL DIAMOND'S MUSE
PEOPLE, December 24, 2007

YOUR NEW BOOK IS A COLLECTION OF WRITINGS ON CHRISTMAS. WHAT INSPIRED YOU?

I like finding things families can read that span generations. It would be nice if reading could be part of the Christmas celebration.

HOW DID YOU CHOOSE WHAT TO INCLUDE?

[Love of] reading is something my mother passed on to my brother and me, and some of our favorites are in this book. And there are things my own children [Rose, 19, Tatiana, 17, and Jack, 14] enjoy, like The Puppy Who Wanted a Boy [by Jane Thayer].

THERE'S ALSO YOUR LETTER TO SANTA FROM '62 YOU ASK FOR SILVER SKATES AND "A REAL PET REINDEER." DO YOU REMEMBER WRITING IT?

No, but I remember dictating to my mother, her writing down things.

OTHER MEMORIES OF CHRISTMAS?

We got oranges and walnuts in our stockings. In the "olden days" those were a treat. My brother and I thought it was completely unacceptable, but I think it's a nice thing to continue. My children don't like it either!

YOU HAD A BIG BIRTHDAY THIS YEAR HOW DID YOU CELEBRATE?

Neil Diamond called in to my party [and said she was the inspiration for his song "Sweet Caroline"]. It was a great surprise my husband [Ed Schlossberg] had cooked up. I couldn't believe it!

HOW DID IT FEEL?

I always felt that was my song because it had my name in it, so it was really fun to find out maybe I had something to do with it.

THOUGHTS ON TURNING 50?

Everything's going well, my kids are healthy. I feel so lucky. I hear it's a lot better than turning 80!
 
mlive.com

Hundreds turn out for Kennedy book signing

Posted by [URL="http://blog.mlive.com/annarbornews/about.html"]Jo Collins Mathis | The Ann Arbor News[/URL] November 02, 2007 08:43AM

Categories: Breaking News, Top Photos
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LEISA THOMPSON, THE ANN ARBOR NEWSCaroline Kennedy, daughter of the late President John F. Kennedy, talks with Dashanay Williams, 11, of Detroit after Caroline signed a copy of her book, "A Family Christmas," at Border's Books and Music in downtown Ann Arbor Thursday. Dashanay was part of a group of children from Detroit who got to listen to Caroline read from her book and ask her questions.
A couple of blocks from where her father stood on the steps of the Michigan Union and outlined his vision for the Peace Corps 47 years ago, Caroline Kennedy on Thursday evening greeted several hundred local residents who'd lined up to see the closest thing to American royalty. "I've been waiting to meet her for 34 years," said Michael Carabelli, 48, who drove nearly five hours from Buffalo, N.Y., to see Kennedy at a book-signing in downtown Ann Arbor Thursday evening. "I just admire the whole family so much, especially her mother and father."
"It's the whole Camelot mystique," said Dianne Gotelaere of Saline.
JFK's daughter was at Borders to kick off the national book tour for her latest book, "A Family Christmas." The 332-page anthology contains prose, poetry, scriptural passages and lyrics selected from an eclectic group of writers, from Truman Capote and Charles Dickens to Groucho Marx and John Lennon.
Before the book signing, Kennedy sat in a curtained-off section of the store and read to 11 Detroit schoolchildren who are part of First Book, a national literacy organization that gives new books to children of low-income families. All proceeds from that evening's sale of "A Family Christmas" support First Book.
Kennedy, who turns 50 at the end of the month, read a letter she had written (or most likely dictated) to Santa in December 1962 in which she requested silver skates, one of those horse wagons with lucky dips, Susie Smart, Candy Fashion dolls and "interesting planes or bumpy thing he can ride in or some noisy thing or something he can push or pull for John."
Apparently her pony, Macaroni, needed a friend. Because she also asked for a real pet reindeer.
One child asked if she ever got everything she asked for.
"No, I never got everything I wanted," said Kennedy, who has three children of her own. "But I thought I might as well ask."
She also read from her book a letter written by her father to a Michigan girl, Michelle Rochon of Marine City, which began:
"Dear Michelle: I was glad to get your letter about trying to stop the Russians from bombing the North Pole and risking the life of Santa Claus."
He ended with: "However, you must not worry about Santa Claus. I talked with him yesterday and he is fine. He will be making his rounds this Christmas."
"I thought that was pretty nice of him to write back," she said, sounding like a proud daughter.
"Is your dad still president?" asked one of the children.
"No, you can only be president for eight years," she said. "He was only president for three. But that was a long time ago."
She signed copies of her book for the children, who were then treated to a Border's shopping spree.
Customers were already in line when the store opened Thursday morning to buy the book and get a bracelet that assured them of an autograph later. By 7 p.m., the line wound throughout the second floor.
"They feel it's an opportunity not to be missed," said bookseller Merrie Atlas, who said about 200 books were purchased by 2:30 p.m.
Carol Osterling of Saline took a chair and blanket and got in line two hours before the store opened. She said she wasn't willing to take a chance on not getting her books autographed later.
"We were thrilled to death when we heard she was coming to Ann Arbor," said Karen Kostamo of Ann Arbor, who had been waiting in line an hour when the store opened at 9.
Debbie Kwicinski of Grass Lake was second in line, and bought four books for Kennedy to sign. She said John Kennedy was so charismatic, it's hard to imagine feeling that way about any other president and family.
Wearing a triple strand of pearls just like the ones Jackie Kennedy often wore, Pam Zauel, 39, of Ann Arbor, said she enjoyed Kennedy's collection of her mother's favorite poems, "The Best Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis," and figured this compilation would be just as interesting to read to her three daughters.
After getting her books signed, Zauel said Kennedy had been very nice, and laughed when she'd pointed out the pearls.
Charlene Poulos of Ann Arbor said she was on those Michigan Union steps when John F. Kennedy gave his impassioned Peace Corps speech.
"At the time, we didn't know what a big person he'd become," she said. "I always hoped his son would be president. Today I came to meet the daughter."
Kennedy said this was her first visit to Ann Arbor. She continues the tour today in Lansing.
 
Crains NY Business:

Schools fund fulfills obligation to NYC kids
Winning private money helps meet societal challenge of improving education

December 15. 2007 4:46PMBy:

Caroline Kennedy is the public face of an unprecedented effort to raise private dollars for city schools. Through the Department of Education-affiliated Fund for Public Schools, she has helped raise $201 million over the past five years—a campaign so successful that other cities are looking to duplicate it. Ms. Kennedy, vice chair of the fund, spoke with Crain's contributing editor Elizabeth MacBride about her work.

Q: There are so many causes in the world. Why should the New York City public schools be at the top of the list?

A: I live here. So this is my city, my community. At many of the [contributing] companies, people live and work here. This is home. We have a responsibility to the kids here in this city. Maybe we have a responsibility beyond that, but it starts close to home.

Education is really the long-term challenge we face in a globalized society. New York has huge advantages. We have kids here from all over the world who speak every different language, who are connected to the entire world through their families and through their own cultural traditions. We need to harness that creativity and that energy.

Q: What have been some successes?

A: What I really wanted to do was broaden awareness and outreach. If you reach out, maybe other people will get ideas and want to be part of it. To me, that really seems to be the way that we're going to make change.

We did the Concert in the Park with Dave Matthews. Then people called up afterward. Rosie O'Donnell called up the next day and gave us $1 million.

The Shop for Class program that we started with small retailers around the city came from that concert, too. Julie Gaines, [co-owner] of Fishs Eddy, came forward with the idea. That's now four years running, and we want to grow that. [This year,] we had 60 retailers all donating a portion of their proceeds to the Fund for Public Schools for literacy programs and libraries.

Q: What's the next big idea that you're taking on?

A: The decline in reading for pleasure among kids is a huge issue. ... I'm working on arts education and reading and literacy now. Continuing with initiatives to create small schools. Seeing through a lot of the reforms we've started. We're seeing graduation rates improving.

It's really about staying with these reforms. But this is going to take a while. Our schools have been through a long period of neglect.

Q: What do you find companies want to see in return for their donations?

A: At the beginning, they were eager to support the new structure with mayoral control. Then they understood it would take a little time to see data. Now, those figures are starting to come in, so people have a lot of confidence the reforms are working.

They do want to see results. Everybody is very obviously interested in outcomes, and measurable outcomes.

Q: Where do you take potential donors, to show them what's needed?

A: We visit schools. Visiting schools that don't have libraries, or where the libraries are very decrepit and out-of-date—obviously, that's very dramatic.

[In 2004,] I joined Phil Purcell of Morgan Stanley on his visit to the NYC Leadership Academy, [which recruits and trains school principals]. Morgan Stanley's donation of $1 million had been critical to launching the Leadership Academy. We joined part of the training to experience it firsthand. We role-played about how to get groups of people to school on time using mass transit.
 
actustar.com

Old french article from 2000:

Apparition publique pour Caroline Kennedy

Le 20/07/2000 à 00h00
NBC a diffusé dans ses news une information importante révélant que Caroline Kennedy Schossberg (fille de JFK et de Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy) allait prendre publiquement la parole en faveur du candidat à la succession de Bill Clinton, Al Gore.
Caroline interviendra au nom du candidat lors d'une convention du parti démocratique qui se tiendra à Los Angeles, le mois prochain. Nul doute que cette intervention devrait avoir un impact positif sur cette campagne présidentielle, compte tenu du nom prestigieux des Kennedy. John Kennedy, le président assassiné, demeure un des présidents les plus aimés de l'histoire des Etats-Unis.
Toujours selon NBC, le discours se tiendra en première partie de la seconde soirée et Caroline sera accompagnée de son oncle, Edward Kennedy, sénateur du Massachussetts. Tous les deux prendront toutefois la parole à des moments différents.
Caroline d'ordinaire si réservée a accepté de participer à cet événement public uniquement parce que son père, John Kennedy, avait été nommé président des Etats-Unis à Los Angeles en 1960.
 
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jfklibrary.org

Caroline Kennedy, President


</IMG> Caroline Kennedy is an attorney and the editor of the New York Times best selling A Patriot’s Handbook; The Best-Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis; A Family of Poems - My Favorite Poetry for Children; and Profiles in Courage for Our Time, and the co-author of The Right to Privacy and In Our Defense: The Bill of Rights in Action.
From 2002-2004, Ms. Kennedy served as chief executive for the Office of Strategic Partnerships for the New York City Department of Education where she helped raise more than $65 million in private support for the city’s public schools. She currently serves as the Vice Chair of The Fund for Public Schools.
Ms. Kennedy is the President of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation and a member of the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award Committee. She is a Director of the Commission on Presidential Debates, and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, and serves as Honorary Chairman of the American Ballet Theatre.
Ms. Kennedy was born on November 27, 1957. She is a graduate of Harvard University and Columbia Law School. She lives in New York City with her husband Edwin Arthur Schlossberg, president of Edwin Schlossberg Inc., a multi-disciplinary design company that specializes in interactive exhibit design and museum master-planning. Kennedy and Schlossberg were married on July 19, 1986. They have three children.
 
mcnbc.com

Caroline Kennedy’s favorite Christmas memories

The famous American compiles new anthology of holiday literature


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NBC News video

javascript:vPlayer('21688661','cf39eb4e-658d-4f70-a7a5-a8897d7a911c') Caroline Kennedy on the holidays
Nov. 8: The author tells TODAY anchor Meredith Vieira about her new book, “A Family Christmas,” and shares her favorite childhood moments celebrating the festive spirit.
Today Show Books


Books on
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James Patterson: The Book's Always Better...
Interview with Sonia Manzana ("Maria" from Sesame Street)
Celeb Chef Steve Chiappetti Reveals a Secret Recipe!
The 2008 Golden Globes
Try a "less is more" Christmas







TODAY
updated 10:35 a.m. ET Nov. 8, 2007

Best-selling author Caroline Kennedy has compiled a book of Christmas memories from a variety of sources: letters, lyrics, poems, sermons, famous authors, celebrities, politicians and many more. It's called “A Family Christmas.” Here's an excerpt:

Introduction
Christmas is a holiday of hope. As children, we wait all year for the chance to wish for whatever we want most. Frequently, these wishes take the form of toys, but often we ask for more profound gifts, such as a reunited family or a world at peace. Children possess a spiritual curiosity that is sometimes underestimated or overlooked in the holiday hustle and bustle. Yet children ponder the mysteries of life and of faith that Christmas makes real. Later on, as parents, we reconnect with our own childhood sense of hope, reaffirm our faith, and recognize the power of love and family ….
This book has been a gift to me. I hope it will give other families the chance to reflect on their own personal observances, as well as our shared heritage, and that they too will enjoy the chance to “keep Christmas” all year long.
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Letter to Tommy, World War II
Lt. Col. Ralph Noonan
Solomon Islands

December 25, 1943
Dear Tommy:
This is the second Christmas that I have had to be away from you and mother and I don’t like it, Tommy. More than anything else in the world I would like to be with you and mother today. But I know that it is impossible. Let’s hope that there will be lots of other Christmas Days when we can be together, when we can decorate your Christmas tree and set up a nice, big electric train right in the middle of the living room floor. Mother won’t approve of the idea at first, but wait and see! In a short time she will be playing with our trains, too. Christmas this year will be celebrated in many strange lands by men who only a few years ago were little boys like you and under the palm trees of the Solomons, American boys will be celebrating Christmas ....
It is a strange background for an American Christmas; yet it is no stranger than the background of the very first Christmas .... Sometimes I think that one of the reasons why we are fighting this war is because we want to save Christmas; because we want to play on the floor with electric trains; because we want to be free to live as we want to. But Christmas should be more than just external things, Tommy. Christmas should be something that guides your life just like the Star of Bethlehem guided the shepherds that first Christmas morning. If you always make mother happy, if you help other people whenever you can, if you live so that you are always a credit to mother, your country and your god, then you can be part of the real Christmas every day of the year. Anybody who keeps the real Christmas inside of him every day can’t help but be a good boy, Tommy. And good boys make good American men. Give mother a big kiss for me. Tell her that you and I love her lots. Let’s all of us pray hard that we can be together again for next Christmas.
Bye, Tommy
Daddy
***
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Is There a Santa Claus?
(“Yes, Virginia”)
Francis P. Church,
Editor, The New York Sun
September 21, 1897
We take pleasure in answering at once and thus prominently the communication below, expressing at the same time our great gratification that its faithful author is numbered among the friends of THE SUN:
“Dear Editor: I am 8 years old.
“Some of my little friends say there is no Santa Claus.
“Papa says ‘If you see it in THE SUN it’s so.’
“Please tell me the truth: is there a Santa Claus?
“Virginia O’Hanlon.
“115 West Ninety-fifth Street.”
Virginia, your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except they see. They think that nothing can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds. All minds, Virginia, whether they be men’s or children’s, are little. In this great universe of ours man is a mere insect, an ant, in his intellect, as compared with the boundless world about him, as measured by the intelligence capable of grasping the whole of truth and knowledge.
Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas! how dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus. It would be as dreary as if there were no Virginias. There would be no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance to make tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment, except in sense and sight. The external light with which childhood fills the world would be extinguished.
Not believe in Santa Claus! You might as well not believe in fairies! You might get your papa to hire men to watch in all the chimneys on Christmas Eve to catch Santa Claus, but even if they did not see Santa Claus coming down, what would that prove! Nobody sees Santa Claus, but that is no sign that there is no Santa Claus. The most real things in the world are those that neither children nor men can see. Did you ever see fairies dancing on the lawn? Of course not, but that’s no proof that they are not there. Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders there are unseen and unseeable in the world.
You may tear apart the baby’s rattle and see what makes the noise inside, but there is a veil covering the unseen world which not the strongest man, nor even the united strength of all the strongest men that ever lived, could tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, love, romance, can push aside that curtain and view and picture the supernal beauty and glory beyond. Is it all real? Ah, Virginia, in all this world, there is nothing else real and abiding.

No Santa Claus! Thank God! he lives, and he lives forever. A thousand years from now, Virginia, nay, ten times ten thousand years from now, he will continue to make glad the heart of childhood. Excerpted from A FAMILY CHRISTMAS by Caroline Kennedy. All Rights Reserved. Letter to Tommy, World War II, by Lt. Col. Ralph Noonan. Is There a Santa Claus? (“Yes, Virginia”), by Francis P. Church. Published by Hyperion. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
 

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