Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Inga_ArvadInga Arvad - Wikipedia

    Inga Marie Arvad Petersen (6 October 1913 – 12 December 1973) was a Danish-American journalist who was a guest of Adolf Hitler at the 1936 Summer Olympics and also had a romantic relationship with John F. Kennedy in 1941 and 1942. The juxtaposition of these facts led to suspicions during World War II that she was a Nazi spy.

  2. 4. Okt. 2017 · On January 17, 1942, F.B.I. Assistant Director Milton Ladd reported to Hoover that there was nothing yet substantial to the rumors that Arvad was, in fact, a Nazi agent. But her F.B.I. was still 1,200 pages long and when it came to the suspicions that she was a Nazi spy, Inga Arvad was her own worst enemy.

    • John Kuroski
  3. 6. Juli 2020 · Dear Inga, Love Jack. Danish beauty Inga Arvad was a scoop-driven journalist courted by royalty, the Nazis, and a young John F. Kennedy—before finding peace in the West. An unlikely tale of reinvention, redemption, and enduring love. John F. Kennedy, as a navy lieutenant junior grade, during the time of his romance with Inga Arvad, circa 1942.

    • inga arvad girlfriend1
    • inga arvad girlfriend2
    • inga arvad girlfriend3
    • inga arvad girlfriend4
  4. They were women of polar-opposite description — a Danish working-girl beauty, and an American blue-blood heiress — and the relationships didn’t last, but they would end up having an outsized effect...

  5. 23. Jan. 2017 · By Steven Watts. Thomas Dunne 415 pp. US$29.99. Two decades before John F. Kennedy became president, he met a suspected Nazi spy at a Charleston, S.C., hotel. Her name was Inga Arvad, and they...

  6. 3. Feb. 2023 · The famously promiscuous president had no shortage of well-documented romantic dalliances, but perhaps Kennedy's most scandalous affair was his relationship with Inga Arvad, which began when he was only 24. The couple met in 1941 through Kennedy's sister, Kathleen, who worked alongside Arvad at the Washington Times-Herald newspaper.

  7. 12. Apr. 2016 · On Nov. 27, 1941, noted Washington Times Herald writer Inga Arvad introduced a 24-year-old John F. Kennedy to readers as "a boy with a future." By the time those words hit the press, the future...