R. Sargent Shriver, Peace Corps Leader, Dies at 95
By ROBERT D. McFADDEN
Published: January 18, 2011


R. Sargent Shriver, the Kennedy in-law who became the founding
director of the Peace Corps, the architect of President Lyndon B.
Johnson’s war on poverty, a United States ambassador to France and the
Democratic candidate for vice president in 1972, died on Tuesday in
Bethesda, Md. He was 95.

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R. Sargent Shriver, left, and Eunice Kennedy Shriver greeted the crowd
during a swearing-in ceremony for Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2003. More
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His family announced his death in a statement.

Mr. Shriver was found to have Alzheimer’s disease in 2003 and on
Sunday was admitted to Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, where he died.
He had been in hospice care in recent months after his estate in
Potomac, Md., was sold last year.

White-haired and elegantly attired, he attended the inauguration of
his son-in-law, Arnold Schwarzenegger, as the Republican governor of
California in the fall of 2003. Mr. Schwarzenegger is married to Maria
Shriver, a former NBC News correspondent.

But in recent years, as his condition deteriorated, Mr. Shriver was
seldom seen in public. He emerged in one instance to attend the
funeral of his wife of 56 years, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, a sister of
John F. Kennedy; she died in 2009 in Hyannis, Mass., at the age of 88.

As a Kennedy brother-in-law, Mr. Shriver was bound inextricably to one
of the nation’s most powerful political dynasties. It was an
association with enormous advantages, thrusting him to prominence in a
series of seemingly altruistic missions. But it came with handicaps,
relegating him to the political background and to a subordinate role
in the family history.

“Shriver’s relationship with the Kennedys was complex,” Scott Stossel
wrote in “Sarge: The Life and Times of Sargent Shriver,” a 2004
biography. “They buoyed him up to heights and achievements he would
never otherwise have attained — and they held him back, thwarting his
political advancement.”

The book, as well as reports in The New York Times, The Washington
Post and other publications, suggested that Mr. Shriver’s hopes to run
for governor of Illinois in 1960 and vice president in 1964 and 1968
were abandoned to help promote, or at least not compete with, Kennedy
aspirations. Mr. Shriver’s vice-presidential race in 1972, on a ticket
with Senator George S. McGovern, and a brief primary run for president
in 1976 were crushed by the voters.

Mr. Shriver was never elected to any national office. To political
insiders, his calls for public service in the 1960s seemed quixotic at
a time when America was caught up in a war in Vietnam, a cold war with
the Soviet Union and civil rights struggles and urban riots at home.
But when the fogs of war and chaos cleared years later, he was
remembered by many as a last vestige of Kennedy-era idealism.

“Sarge came to embody the idea of public service,” President Obama
said in a statement.

Mr. Shriver’s impact on American life was significant. On the stage of
social change for decades, he brought President Kennedy’s proposal for
the Peace Corps to fruition in 1961 and served as the organization’s
director until 1966. He tapped into a spirit of volunteerism, and
within a few years thousands of young Americans were teaching and
working on public health and development projects in poorer countries
around the world.

After the president’s assassination in 1963, Mr. Shriver’s decision to
remain in the Johnson administration alienated many of the Kennedys,
especially Robert, who remained as the United States attorney general
for months but whose animus toward his brother’s successor was
profound. Mr. Shriver’s responsibilities deepened, however. In 1964,
Johnson persuaded him to take on the administration’s war on poverty,
a campaign embodied in a vast new bureaucracy, the Office of Economic
Opportunity.

>From 1965 to 1968, Mr. Shriver, who disdained bureaucracies as
wasteful and inefficient, was director of that agency, a post he held
simultaneously with his Peace Corps job until 1966. The agency created
antipoverty programs like Head Start, the Job Corps, Volunteers in
Service to America, the Community Action Program and Legal Services
for the Poor. (The Office of Economic Opportunity was dismantled in
1973, but many of its programs survived in other agencies.)

In 1968, Johnson named Mr. Shriver ambassador to France. It was a time
of strained relations. President Charles de Gaulle had recognized
Communist China, withdrawn French forces from NATO’s integrated
military command and denounced American involvement in Indochina. But
Mr. Shriver established a working rapport with de Gaulle and was
credited with helping to improve relations.

Mr. Shriver returned to the United States in 1970 to work for
Democrats in the midterm elections and to reassess his own political
prospects. His long-awaited break came two years later when Senator
McGovern, the Democratic presidential nominee, picked him as his
running mate. Mr. McGovern’s first choice, Senator Thomas F. Eagleton,
was dropped after revelations that he had received electroshock
therapy for depression.

The McGovern-Shriver ticket lost in a landslide to the incumbent
Republicans, Richard M. Nixon and Spiro T. Agnew. Four years later,
Mr. Shriver ran for the Democratic presidential nomination, pledging a
renewal of ethics after the Watergate scandal that drove Nixon from
the White House. But Mr. Shriver was knocked out in the primaries and
ended his political career.

In later years, he was a rainmaker for an international law firm,
Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson, retiring in 1986. He was
also active in the Special Olympics, founded by his wife for mentally
disabled athletes, and he continued his work with the Sargent Shriver
National Center on Poverty Law, an advocacy organization he founded in
Chicago in 1967 as the National Clearinghouse for Legal Services.

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In 1994, President Bill Clinton awarded Mr. Shriver the Presidential
Medal of Freedom. Ten years earlier, President Ronald Reagan conferred
the same award on Eunice Shriver. They were the only husband and wife
to win the nation’s highest civilian honor individually.

In 2008, PBS broadcast a documentary, “American Idealist: The Story of
Sargent Shriver.” A children’s book by Maria Shriver, “What’s
Happening to Grandpa?,” was published in 2004, explaining the effects
of Alzheimer’s disease. In May 2009, HBO presented a four-part
documentary on Alzheimer’s. Ms. Shriver was the executive producer of
one segment, “Grandpa, Do You Know Who I Am?”

Robert Sargent Shriver Jr., known as Sarge from childhood, was born in
Westminster, Md., on Nov. 9, 1915, the son of his namesake, a banker,
and Hilda Shriver. His forebears, called Schreiber, immigrated from
Germany in 1721. One ancestor, David Shriver, was a signer of
Maryland’s 1776 Constitution. The Shrivers, like the Kennedys, were
Roman Catholics and socially prominent, but not especially affluent.

On scholarships, he attended Canterbury, a Catholic boarding prep
school in New Milford, Conn. — John F. Kennedy was briefly a
schoolmate — and Yale University, graduating with honors in 1938. He
earned a Yale law degree in 1941 and joined the Navy shortly before
the attack on Pearl Harbor, becoming an officer on battleships and
submarines in the Atlantic and the Pacific and winning a Purple Heart
for wounds he sustained at Guadalcanal.

After the war, he joined Newsweek as an editor. He met Eunice Kennedy
at a dinner party, and she introduced him to her father, Joseph P.
Kennedy. In 1946, Joseph Kennedy hired him to help manage his recently
acquired Merchandise Mart in Chicago, then the world’s largest
commercial building. In Chicago, Mr. Shriver not only turned a profit
for the mart but also plunged into Democratic politics.

After a seven-year courtship, Mr. Shriver and Ms. Kennedy were married
by Cardinal Francis Spellman at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York in
1953.

In addition to his daughter, Maria, Mr. Shriver’s survivors include
four sons, Robert Sargent Shriver III of Santa Monica, Calif.;
Timothy, of Chevy Chase, Md.; Mark, of Bethesda, Md.; and Anthony, of
Miami; and 19 grandchildren.

Mr. Shriver’s relationships with the Kennedys were widely analyzed by
the news media, not least because of his own political potential. He
looked like a movie star, with a flashing smile, dark hair going gray
and the kind of muscled, breezy athleticism that went with tennis
courts and sailboats. Like the Kennedys, he was charming but not
self-revealing, a quick study but not reflective. Associates said he
could be imperious, but his knightly public image became indelible.

He took root in Chicago. In 1954, he was appointed to the city’s Board
of Education, and a year later became its president. In 1955, he also
became president of the Catholic Interracial Council, which fought
discrimination in housing, education and other aspects of city life.
By 1959, he had become so prominent in civic affairs that he was being
touted as a Democratic candidate for governor of Illinois in 1960.

Mr. Shriver did nothing to discourage reports that he was considering
a run. But with the rest of the Kennedy clan, he joined John F.
Kennedy’s 1960 presidential campaign. As he and other family members
acknowledged later, the patriarch, Joseph Kennedy, had told him that a
separate Shriver race that year would be a distraction. So he resigned
from the Chicago school board and became a campaign coordinator in
Wisconsin and West Virginia and a principal contact with minorities.

As the election approached, the campaign learned that the Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. had been sentenced in Georgia to four months of
hard labor for what amounted to a minor traffic violation. Mr. Shriver
suggested that Senator Kennedy call a distraught Coretta Scott King,
who was terrified that her husband might be killed in prison. His
reassuring call, and another by Robert F. Kennedy to a judge in
Georgia that led to Dr. King’s release, helped produce a windfall of
black support for Kennedy.

Senator Kennedy broached the idea for a volunteer corps in a speech at
the University of Michigan and crystallized it as the Peace Corps in
an appearance in San Francisco. Mr. Shriver, who as a young man had
guided American students on work-and-learn programs in Europe, seemed
a natural to initiate it.

After the inauguration, Mr. Shriver, who scouted talent for the
incoming administration — people who came to be known as “the best and
the brightest” — was assigned to the task of designing the Peace
Corps, which was established by executive order in March 1961.

As director, he laid the foundations for what arguably became the most
lasting accomplishment of the Kennedy presidency. As the Peace Corps
approaches its 50th anniversary this year, more than 200,000 Americans
have served as corps volunteers in 139 countries.

Break mirrors, Mr. Shriver advised graduating students at Yale in
1994. “Yes, indeed,” he said. “Shatter the glass. In our society that
is so self-absorbed, begin to look less at yourself and more at each
other. Learn more about the face of your neighbor and less about your
own.”

More:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/19/us/politics/19shriver.html?pagewanted=2&partner=rss&emc=rss

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Tommy

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