¡.U— Page A4 July 21,1999 <£tiv fta rila ttb <0bsm>er WORLD NEWS Chronology of The Kennedys: Continued CONTINUED FROM FRONT PAGE 1948 Just 28, Kathleen Kennedy, daughter o f Joseph and Rose Kennedy, dies with her lover in the crash of a small plane in the south o f France. K athleen Kennedy’s first husband had died in World War II. 1963 Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, the second son bom to John F and Jacqueline Kennedy, is bom nearly six weeks premature on Aug. 7. He dies two days later of respira­ tory ailments. 1963 JohnF. Kennedy, the 35th Presi­ dent of the United States, is assas­ sinated in Dallas on November 22 1968 Robert F. Kennedy, attorney general under his older brother President John F. Kennedy and elected to the Senate in 1964, is assassinated in Los Angeles while running for president at age 42. 1969 Edward M. Kennedy’s dreams of a presidential bid are dashed when he drives a car off a bridge on M assachusetts’ Chappaquiddick Island July 18 after a party. Aide Mary Jo Kopechne is later found dead in the submerged car. 1984 David Anthony Kennedy son of Robert F. Kennedy, battles drug and alcohol problems all his short life. He dies o f a heroin overdose in a hotel near a family vacation home in Palm Beach, Fla. 1986 Two-term U S. Representative Patrick Joseph Kennedy, son of Ed­ ward and Virginia Kennedy, seeks treatment for cocaine addiction as a teen-ager. 1991 1973 Joseph Patrick Kennedy II, one of seven sons of Robert and Ethel Kennedy, is involved in a car acci­ dent that leaves a female passenger paralyzed for life. 1964 Massachusetts Senator Edward M. Kennedy, brother o f John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy, is critically injured in a June plane crash. riers for the physically and men­ tally disabled.) William Kennedy Smith, son of Jean Kennedy and Stephen Smith, is accused of raping a woman at the family’s Palm Beach estate. He is acquitted later that year. 1973 1997 Edward Moore Kennedy, Jr., son o f Edw ard and V irg in ia Kennedy, has his right leg ampu­ tated as a child because of bone cancer. (Later, in 1985 he founds Facing the Challenge, a non-profit group devoted to eliminating bar- Michael LeMoyne Kennedy (son of Robert F. and Ethel Kennedy), who was accused ofhaving an affair with his family’s teen-age baby sit­ ter, was killed on December 31 in a skiing accident at Aspen Colorado. He was 39 years old. JFK Jr Presumed Dead in Plane Crash: Continued CONTINUED FROM FRONT PAGE Plane-maker New Piper Aircraft Inc. and engine-maker Textron Inc. will participate in the inquiry. Hall said. ‘Suffered Much, Given More’ In Washington, President Bill Clinton asked Americans to sup­ port the families. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of John Kennedy, and Carolyn and Lauren Bessette,’’ he said today. “For more than 40 years now the Kennedy family has inspired Am ericans to public service, strengthened our faith in the fu­ ture and moved our nation for­ ward,” Clinton said last night. “They have suffered much and given more.” Kennedy founded and edited George, a politics magazine pub­ lished by F ra n c e ’s H achette Filipacchi Medias SA. Lauren Bessette is a principal in Morgan Stanley’s investment banking de­ partment, a company spokesman, J. W esley M cDade, said. He wouldn’t elaborate. Kennedy and his w ife had Ex-SLA Member Pleads Innocent rent,” Fidler said. “It is the terror­ ist weapon o f choice. It has no discretion.” Ms. Soliah’s daughters wept in their father’s arms after the five- hour hearing. “Her family is very worried that she won’t make bail,” said de­ fense lawyer Susan Jordan. “A million dollars is a lot of money, (but) w e’re optimistic that it can be raised.” Ms. Soliah was a fugitive be­ fore FBI agents acting on a tip from the TV show “America’s Most Wanted” captured her last month in St. Paul, Minn. She was extradited on Tuesday. A 1976 grand jury indictment unsealed Wednesday accused her of placing pipe bombs filled with nails under two Los Angeles police cars in retaliation for a 1974 shootout with police in which six members of the SLA were killed. One bomb malfunctioned and the other was found before it could go off. Ms. Soliah, charged with con­ spiracy to commit murder and other crimes, faces a maximum sentence of life in prison. The bail hearing also revealed B t ROBERT JABLON O T he A sso ciated P ress LOS ANGELES (AP) - An ac­ cused terrorist-turned-housewife has pleaded innocent to planting bombs under police cars in 1975. Kathleen Ann Soliah, 52, a sus­ pected Symbionese Liberation Army member who fled to Minne­ sota and became a doctor’s wife and mother o f three, entered the plea Wednesday. She was ordered held on $1 million bail. The defense argued for a lower bail, saying the woman who called herself as Sara Jane Olson is a dif­ ferent person from the one who fled California in the turbulent 1970s and is no longer a flight risk. Witnesses portrayed her as a carin g ch u rch g o er who gave Christmas parties, acted in local theater, helped immigrants leam English and served meals to the homeless. But Judge Larry Fidler said prosecutors have accused her of an act that could have killed police officers and innocent bystanders. “There is something about the use of a bomb that 1 find ... abhor­ that in 1986, Ms. Soliah tried to reach a plea bargain that fell through when prosecutors declined to guarantee that she would not receive jail time. Prosecutor Michael Latin said there was circumstantial evidence linking Ms. Soliah to the bombing attem pts, including statem ents made by Patty Hearst, who was kidnapped and held by the SLA in 1974 and later convicted o f taking part in a bank holdup with SLA members. Ms. Hearst, now a mother of two living in Connecticut, told the TV show “ R ivera L ive” on Wednesday that the government had destroyed the case against Ms. Soliah by convicting her. “I’m a convicted felon now. A bank robber. My credibility is zero,” Ms. Hearst said. “How can they convict her, if I’m the only witness?” “I resent this all being dredged up. It is ancient history at this point,” she added. As for Ms. Soliah, Ms. Hearst said: “I’m sorry for her children ... she’s got a lot of explaining to do.” Kennedy Concerns Cited H eym ann told Adam s that Kennedy had told him over the phone that he preferred to fly straight to Hyannis but his wife wanted him to drop her sister off on M artha’s Vineyard first. “This means I have to land twice. I’m really not that experienced a pi- lot,” Kennedy told Heymann, ac- Jesse Jackson Exhorts lack America B> PAUL SHEPARD O T he A sso ciated P ress NEW YORK (AP) - Jesse Jack- son beseeched black America to look beyond issues of race and help lead a crusade to “save the nation” with a renewed commit­ ment to ending poverty. “We can’t just save the black room in a house if the whole house is on fire. We must save the nation and stop just reacting to the race gap between us,” Jackson told 2,500 NAACP members at the © T he A s so c ia t e d P resa DENVER (AP) - Secretary of State Victoria Buckley, who be­ came the nation’s highest-ranking black female Republican in a state­ wide office, has died o f cardiac arrest. She was 51. Ms. Buckley, who had been hos­ pitalized in January for an irregu­ lar heartbeat, suffered severe brain damage with no chance o f recov­ ery, said her cardiologist Dr. Jeb Burchenal. She died Wednesday. “She overcame many challenges in life and achieved high office in our state through determination and hard work,” GOP Gov. Bill Owens said. Congressman Mark Udall agreed. “She was tenacious and dis­ played courage in dealing with tough issues. Vikki will be greatly missed,” Udall, a Colorado Demo­ crat, said. Bom in Denver in 1947, Ms. Buckley graduated from East High School, and attended both the Uni­ versity of Colorado at Denver and Metropolitan State College. She was a deputy in the secre­ tary of state’s elections division for 20 years before taking the top post in 1994, becoming the first black woman in Colorado to hold a statewide office. At the time, Ms. Buckley was a single mother on welfare. Among her accomplishments was returning $9 million to the state treasury from office fees. “She was a dedicated public servant who put the needs o f oth­ ers ahead of her own, and her sen­ sitivity on local and national is­ sues will be sorely missed,” Rep. J. C. Watts Jr., R-Okla., said in a T he P o r t la n d O b ser ver statement. “This is not just a tragic loss for Colorado, but for all of America.” Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell called her rise heroic and evidence the American dream still works. “Her story is a model for those wanting to climb out of poverty and improve their lives,” the Colo­ rado Republican said. Ms. Buckley’s two terms were not without controversy. She won re-election in Novem­ ber following a bitter battle over complaints that her office was in disarray because of ballot disputes. And on Monday, a Legislative committee decided it would not challenge her for hiring a former campaign manager and close friend as a $250-an-hour consultant. Ms. Buckley’s survivors include her parents, sister and three sons. Funeral services are pending. w ants you TO KNOW W HAT IS H A P P E N IN G IN YO UR N E IG H B O R H O O D ... ...A n d a r o u n d the w o r ld ! » » * ,» * 9 terrupted by standing ovations. Jackson praised the leadership of NAACP President Kweisi Mftime. saying, “You have lifted this orga­ nization where it belongs.” Jackson called for greater inclu­ sion o f minorities and women in America’s economic mainstream and cited the recent victory o f the U S. Women’s Soccer team in the World Cup as a civil rights victory. “Without Title IX and without affirmative action, those women would not have been on the field,” Jackson said. group’s annual national conven­ tion Wednesday. Jackson’s message was that poverty and hopelessness aren’t just black issues. He said a recent fact-finding trip on which he ac­ companied President Clinton to Appalachia and elsewhere was co­ ordinated to “help deracialize the debate" on poverty. For Jackson, the appearance at the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People was akin to a homecoming. His speech was frequently in- Why Advertise In The Spanish Yellow Pages? BECAUSE... 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Kennedy brought the pilot to help him work the Piper Saratoga’s pedals on a flight to Toronto last Monday, the newspaper reported, citing Keith Stein, a vice president at Magna International Inc., a Ca­ nadian auto-parts maker. Kennedy traveled to Toronto to discuss selling a stake in his maga­ zine to a group of investors led by Stein, the Star reported. Last week the New York Post reported that Hachette’s president and chief executive, Jack Kliger, was less enthusiastic about the magazine than his predecessor, David Pecker. Hachette spokes­ man Keith Estabrook said Hachette was developing a strategy with the publication ahead of the year-end expiration of its contract with Kennedy, the Post reported. planned to attend the wedding of his cousin Rory, daughter o f the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy. The wedding was postponed. R adar records show ed the plane’s last location at approxi­ m ately 17 miles southwest o f Martha's Vineyard. In 29 seconds, the plane dropped from 2,500 feet to 1,800 feet, which officials said was within the plane’s capabilities. Kennedy, a licensed pilot, ex­ pressed misgivings last week about making the flight to the Vineyard, the New York Post reported to­ d ay, c itin g co lu m n ist C indy Adams’s interview with Kennedy biographer C. David Heymann. Your ad will not be lost in the cluttered mainstream of Yellow Page Directories NEED MORE REASONS? Call us at 503-284-4444 e 11 <> " 503-528-0189 Fax w w w .s y p o r e g o n .c o m • e -m a il: I’ a g e s HISPANIC B IIIC T O IT 0 1 OHIOW a c o re g o n .c o m