Ted Kennedy Quotes|Edward Kennedy Quotes

August 26, 2009

Edward Kennedy Quotes | Ted Kennedy | Edward Kennedy | Edward Ted Kennedy | Kennedy

Ted Kennedy Quotes|Edward Kennedy Quotes:For me, a few hours ago, this campaign came to an end. For all those whose cares have been our concern, the work goes on, the cause endures, the hope still lives, and the dream shall never die.

Addressing Democratic National Convention, August 1980.

My brother need not be idealized or enlarged in death beyond what he was in life, to be remembered as a good and decent man, who saw wrong and tried to right it, saw suffering and tried to heal it, saw war and tried to stop it.

Those of us who loved him and who take him to his rest today, pray that what he was to us and what he wished for others will some day come to pass for all the world.

Eulogy for Robert F. Kennedy, June 1968.

With Barack Obama, we will turn the page on the old politics of misrepresentation and distortion. With Barack Obama we will close the book on the old politics of race against race, gender against gender, ethnic group against ethnic group, and straight against gay.

Endorsing Sen. Barack Obama for president, January 2008.

The more our feelings diverge, the more deeply felt they are, the greater is our obligation to grant the sincerity and essential decency of our fellow citizens on the other side. . . .

In short, I hope for an America where neither “fundamentalist” nor “humanist” will be a dirty word, but a fair description of the different ways in which people of good will look at life and into their own souls.

I hope for an America where no president, no public official, no individual will ever be deemed a greater or lesser American because of religious doubt  or religious belief.

I hope for an America where the power of faith will always burn brightly, but where no modern inquisition of any kind will ever light the fires of fear, coercion, or angry division.

I hope for an America where we can all contend freely and vigorously, but where we will treasure and guard those standards of civility which alone make this nation safe for both democracy and diversity.

Speech on “Truth and Tolerance in America,” Oct. 3, 1983, Lynchburg, Va.

Although my doctors informed me that I suffered a cerebral concussion, as well as shock, I do not seek to escape responsibility for my actions by placing the blame either on the physical and emotional trauma brought on by the accident, or on anyone else. I regard as indefensible the fact that I did not report the accident to the police immediately. . . .

It has been seven years since my first election to the Senate. You and I share many memories — some of them have been glorious, some have been very sad. The opportunity to work with you and serve Massachusetts has made my life worthwhile.

for more details: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-naw-ted-kennedy-quotes26-2009aug26,0,3918428.story

Patrick Kennedy,Kara Kennedy

August 26, 2009

Patrick Kennedy,Kara Kennedy:Chief Executive Patrick Kennedy said, “A swing in the year-on-year run of sporting results, a normal occupational hazard for bookmakers, has driven a reduction in our operating profit in the period but we’re happy with the strong underlying performance.”

Basic earnings per share fell 23% to 63.4 cents. Operating profit fell 26% to €33.5 million. The total amount staked rose 8% to €1.15 billion. It announced a 5% increase in the interim dividend to 19.5 cents, citing “confidence” in the underlying performance.

Kennedy Brothers,Kennedy

August 26, 2009

Kennedy Brothers,Kennedy:Edward Moore Kennedy, the last of the Kennedy brothers who profoundly reshaped American politics over the past half-century, died shortly before midnight Tuesday at his home in Hyannisport, Mass.

He was one of history’s most towering senators, a skilled lawmaker who crafted scores of statutes that helped how children learn, how doctors treat the sick and how workers are paid and protected.

He was the Henry Clay of the 20th Century. He got the job done,” said Thomas Whelan, associate professor of social science at Boston University, citing the “Great Compromiser” of the mid-19th Century.

He was 77 years old and had been battling brain cancer for more than a year.

Kennedy’s life was in many ways the story of American politics over two generations.

He was the youngest child of Joseph and Rose Kennedy, last in line behind brothers groomed for the presidency. He lacked the polished charm of his brother John, who won the presidency in 1960, or the grit and fire of brother Bobby, who pursued the White House in 1968.

He virtually inherited John’s Senate seat upon turning 30 in 1962, and he rose fast. His first Senate speech announced his passionate support of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, and he was instrumental in pushing an overhaul of immigration law through the chamber a year later.

When Robert was assassinated in 1968, Ted became the heir to the family legacy. In January 1969, he upset veteran Sen. Russell Long of Louisiana to become majority whip, the Senate’s second-ranking position.

The close vote was a statement by the party’s liberal wing that Kennedy, who’d opposed the Vietnam War since 1967, was its undisputed leader and the frontrunner to challenge Richard Nixon for the presidency in 1972.

That scenario was shattered shortly after midnight on July 19, 1969, when the car he was driving sailed off a bridge and sank in a pond on Chappaquiddick Island, off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts.

Former Robert Kennedy campaign worker Mary Jo Kopechne died in the accident. Edward Kennedy did not report the incident for nine hours, and six days later pleaded guilty to leaving the scene. He got a two-month suspended sentence, the minimum penalty, and went on national television to explain the series of events.

His true punishment was the damage to his career. In an era when the “silent majority” was holding “decency rallies” protesting the erosion of moral values in American life, Kennedy was a vivid symbol to many of all that had gone wrong.

There was a sense he always got special treatment, and Chappaquiddick was part of that,” said Michael Franc, vice president for government relations at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative research group. “Conservatives have this sense that he’s always held to a different standard.

At the same time, Kennedy was quietly building a reputation in the Senate as someone who made the system work, negotiating, often successfully, with the Nixon administration on key domestic initiatives.

for more details:http://www.mcclatchydc.com/100/story/74347.html?storylink=omni_popular

Ronnie Spector

August 26, 2009

Caroline Kennedy | Ted Kennedy | Edward Kennedy | Jackie Kennedy | John | John Kennedy

Ronnie Spector:The “original bad girl of rock and roll” from the Ronettes.

In a music industry where an artist’s life expectancy is often measured by their fleeting time in the spotlight, Ronnie Spector’s influence truly precedes her: it’s evident and immediate from the second that unforgettable drum intro to the Ronettes’ 1963 smash “Be My Baby” kicks in, and she hasn’t even started singing yet. No matter who you are, what you’ve heard before or what you will hear in the future, there’s little that can compare to hearing “Be My Baby” for the first—or even the millionth—time. Ask artists as varied as the Beatles, Bruce Springsteen, the New York Dolls, the Ramones or even Billy Joel, whose “Say Goodbye To Hollywood” was written for her.

But don’t just stop there, look to Beach Boy Brian Wilson, who was so taken with “Be My Baby” that he penned the nearly-as-great “Don’t Worry Baby” in response to it. Even Madonna once famously stated, “I want to look the way Ronnie Spector sounds.”

Spector didn’t just shift the musical landscape, she shook it up with earthquake intensity, defining careers right and left with “Be My Baby,” “The Best Part of Breaking Up,” “Baby I Love You,” “He Did It” and unforgettable renditions of Christmas classics like ‘Frosty The Snowman.”

To quote the lady’s website, because we couldn’t say it better ourselves: “Only a few artists in history have been capable of defining an entire era in pop music. Ronnie Spector is one of those artists: the embodiment of the heart, soul and passion of female rock ‘n’ roll in the 1960s. And to this day, no one has ever surpassed Ronnie’s powerful trademark vocals, her gutsy attitude, or her innocent but knowing sexuality.”

The truth, plain and simple. From her slit skirts to her sensual voice, there’s never been anything ordinary about her. Born Veronica Bennett to a white father and half-Cherokee half-black mother, Spector grew up in Spanish Harlem during the heart of the doo-wop era. Her earliest influence and lifelong idol, Frankie Lyman, lived just blocks away, and Spector would often go out of her way to pass his house on 165th Street. Cutting her teeth at the Apollo Theater’s infamous amateur nights, she formed the Ronettes with sister Estelle and cousin Nedra while still in her teens. After a stint at the Peppermint Lounge, they were soon performing at DJ Murray the K’s notorious Brooklyn Fox rock ‘n’ roll package shows.

Signed to the Colpix label, their first records included standouts like the aforementioned “He Did It” and “You Bet I Would,” written by Jackie DeShannon and Carole King respectively. In 1963 the Ronettes hooked up with The Tycoon of Teen himself, Phil Spector, resulting in the worldwide smash “Be My Baby,” followed by a tour of England with the Rolling Stones and Yardbirds as opening acts. The next few years found them turning in a hysteria-inducing performance on the Tami TNT Show and taking front and center on the legendary Phil Spector’s Christmas Album.

In 1966 the Beatles personally requested the Ronettes to open for them on their final tour, then signed Ronnie to their Apple imprint in 1970 for the George Harrison-penned single “Try Some, Buy Some,” where she was backed by two-thirds of the Fab Four.

Inducted into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall Of Fame, Ronnie has remained a rocker to the very core, often commenting on the lack of passion in modern music. Her latest release, the tellingly titled (and excellent) Last Of The Rock Stars, features a smattering of friends and fans who range from veterans Keith Richards and Patti Smith to young Cincinnati garage rockers the Greenhornes. Never forgetting where she came from, it contains a great version of the tin-pan alley ballad-cum-R&B hit made famous by Frankie Lyman, “Out In The Cold Again.”

Caroline Kennedy..Victoria Reggie Kennedy

August 26, 2009

Caroline Kennedy..Victoria Reggie Kennedy: He is the last of the Kennedy brothers who rode across the national stage to shape American leadership in the 20th Century. Now Ted Kennedy is dead, at 77.

Edward Moore Kennedy, the Lion of the Senate, was the youngest brother of President John F. Kennedy, assassinated in 1963, and New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, assassinated in 1968. A fourth son, Joseph Kennedy Jr., anointed as the family’s chosen envoy to the political world, died during World War II.

GET FILES-FRANCE-US-KENNEDY They were Joe Kennedy’s sons, tethered to pride in power and money, and they were Rose Kennedy’s sons, brought up to respect church and public service. Ted Kennedy, after a youth of fast cars and carousing, became a passionate and serious defender of the have-nots. For his fervent commitment to his brothers’ agenda — civil rights, educational improvement, health care reform — they called him The Lion of the Senate.

for more details: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/washington/2009/08/obama-on-ted-kennedy-an-important-chapter-in-our-history-has-come-to-an-end.html

Robert Kennedy

August 26, 2009

Robert Kennedy:Joseph Kennedy, the millionaire businessman and one-time ambassador to Great Britain, and his wife, Rose, had nine children. Three became senators and one a president.

Joseph Kennedy died in 1969 at age 81 and Rose died in 1995 at 104.

Their children:

JOSEPH P. KENNEDY JR., 1915-1944

A Navy pilot, died when an explosives-laden bomber he was piloting on a secret World War II mission exploded. Awarded the Navy Cross and the Air Medal.

JOHN F. KENNEDY, 1917-1963

A U.S. senator from Massachusetts before he was elected the 35th president of the United States in 1960. Assassinated in Dallas, 1963. Married Jacqueline Bouvier in 1953.

ROSEMARY KENNEDY, 1918-2005

Institutionalized through most of her life because of mental disability and a failed lobotomy.

KATHLEEN KENNEDY, 1920-1948

Married to William John Robert Cavendish, the Marquess of Hartington. Died in a plane crash; her husband had been killed in World War II.

EUNICE KENNEDY SHRIVER, 1921-2009

Founder of the Special Olympics. Married to R. Sargent Shriver Jr., former Peace Corps director and unsuccessful candidate for president in 1976 and vice president in 1972.

PATRICIA KENNEDY LAWFORD, 1924-2006

Married and divorced from actor Peter Lawford.

ROBERT F. KENNEDY, 1925-1968

Former U.S. attorney general, a U.S. senator from New York and a presidential candidate in 1968. Assassinated in Los Angeles, 1968. Married in 1950 to Ethel Skakel. They had 11 children.

JEAN KENNEDY SMITH, 1928-

Served five years as ambassador to Ireland in the Clinton administration. Married Stephen Edward Smith in 1956; he died in 1990.

EDWARD MOORE KENNEDY, 1932-2009

U.S. senator from Massachusetts since 1962. Married Virginia Joan Bennett 1958; divorced 1983. Married Victoria Reggie in 1992.

source:http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iUA18_e1CUwRG8o_XglTcnWW7JzwD9AAGA680

Mary Jo Kopechne

August 26, 2009

Chappaquiddick | Ted Kennedy | Ted Kennedy Chappaquiddick | Edward Kennedy | Kennedy

Mary Jo Kopechne:Every person’s life is like a kaleidoscope. Some pick up another’s life, hold it to the light and all the glass chips fall this way or that. And the person sighting through the cylinder puts it down and turns away, saying they’ve seen it all, when in fact, they’ve only seen one facet, one pattern in another’s life. Thus some remember only one thing or two about the life of another long lived.

But there are other ways to see most of a life in depth, that is, to keep turning the kaleidoscope, letting the glass shards open and reveal, shade and hide, depending on the turn of the scope. Adding up all the patterns, keeping the sum of the brilliant and the dark turns: that’s a view in depth of the life of another.

I’d just lay out a few turns of the kaleidoscope of Ted Kennedy’s life here, a lost story:

Some of the glass shards part, and we see in paradoxically jeweled light that Ted Kennedy was born to a brutally ambitious father, Joe Kennedy, and his mother Rose, was a good Catholic girl, demure and subservient to her wealthy, bellowing husband.

Joe Kennedy true to his obsessive nature, kept his wife pregnant for most of sixteen years, she giving birth, not including miscarriages, to nine children in that time. Ted was the youngest born in 1932.

Ted would be eventually groomed and glossed, and also pressed to follow his father’s example… the ill and clearcut way the older Kennedy conducted himself politically and personally: teaching his male children that Kennedys’ get what they want when they want it how they want it for no other reason that they want it… and it is alright to use most any means to get it.

Another father, with different values, might have pressed an entire set of young Kennedy male offspring, to grow far more seated in heart and soul and clearcut ethics, far sooner.

As a young man, Ted, sent to the top school, Harvard, got kicked out for cheating. He was readmitted, but though some might say he cheated because of laziness, it may also be that his lack of studying and rousting about was his finger flapping in the face of his immensely overbearing father… yet Ted may have tried to fake the grade still fearing his old man.

Ted had reason to fear his father. Being the youngest child in the family, Ted was close to his sisters, and was doted on by Rosemary who was 14 years old when he was born. They laughed together and delighted in each other, and yet when Rosemary began displaying too wild a behavior by her father’s lights… showing interest in sex and sensuality… being too wild for her father’s hyper hypocritical tastes– he himself rumored to have many affairs..

for more details: http://themoderatevoice.com/44426/ted-kennedy-and-mary-jo-kopechne/

Chappaquiddick|Ted Kennedy

August 26, 2009

Ted kennedy | Mary Jo Kopechne | Ted Kennedy Chappaquiddick | Edward Kennedy | Kennedy

Chappaquiddick|Ted Kennedy

Senator Edward Kennedy makes a testament on the events that lead to the death of Mary Jo Kopechne.

She was a passenger in his car when he drove off Dyke Bridge into the channel between Chappaquiddick Island and Martha’s Vineyard in 1969.

The Senator swam to safety, but Kopechne drowned. He did not report the accident until the following day.

He pleaded guilty to leaving a scene of crime and received a two-month suspended sentence.

Senator Kennedy Died

August 26, 2009

Senator Edward Kennedy | Ted Kennedy | Senator Ted Kennedy | Edward Kennedy | Edward Kennedy Dead

Senator Kennedy Died:U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy, a towering figure in the Democratic Party who took the helm of one of America’s most fabled political families after two older brothers were assassinated, has died, his family said. He was 77.

Edward M. Kennedy, the husband, father, grandfather, brother and uncle we loved so deeply, died late Tuesday night at home in Hyannis Port (Massachusetts),” the Kennedy family said in a statement.

One of the most influential and longest-serving senators in U.S. history — a liberal standard-bearer who was also known as a consummate congressional dealmaker — Kennedy had been battling brain cancer, which was diagnosed in May 2008.

We’ve lost the irreplaceable center of our family and joyous light in our lives, but the inspiration of his faith, optimism, and perseverance will live on in our hearts forever,” the family statement said.

Senator Kennedy DiedHe loved this country and devoted his life to serving it. He always believed that our best days were still ahead, but it’s hard to imagine any of them without him,” the family added.

His death marked the twilight of a political dynasty and dealt a blow to Democrats as they seek to answer President Barack Obama’s call for an overhaul of the healthcare system. Kennedy had made healthcare reform his signature cause.

Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid said in a statement the Kennedy family and Senate “have together lost our patriarch.”

“As we mourn his loss, we rededicate ourselves to the causes for which he so dutifully dedicated his life.”

Known as “Teddy,” he was the brother of President John Kennedy, assassinated in 1963, Senator Robert Kennedy, fatally shot while campaigning for the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination, and Joe Kennedy, a pilot killed in World War Two.

for more details:http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090826/us_nm/us_kennedy

Ted Kennedy

August 26, 2009

Ted Kennedy:Those of us who live in Massachusetts always had a different relationship with the late Ted Kennedy than did the rest of the country – and, for that matter, the world.

Depending on your point of view, Kennedy was either an icon of progressivism or an avatar of evil. What he was not, except to those of us who were fortunate enough to be his constituents, was a regular guy who went about the mundane business of representing his state in the US Senate with diligence, seriousness and joy. For us, Kennedy was not a symbol. He was a real-life human being.

The final stage of Kennedy’s home-state career – that of the eccentric but beloved uncle – goes back to 1994, when he faced the most serious challenge of his political life. After years of highly publicised debauchery, Kennedy staggered into his re-election campaign against a clean-cut, clean-living, dauntingly well-financed Republican businessman named Mitt Romney. The ever-pliable Romney ran as a liberal that year. And Kennedy found himself tied with Romney in the polls with less than two months to go.

for more  details :http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2009/aug/24/ted-kennedy-massachusetts-senate

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