Word: jo
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Ehrlichman, a former classmate at U.C.L.A., whom Haldeman enlisted as an advance man in the 1960 campaign. Haldeman was working with Nixon on a fund-raiser in Chicago in 1959 and invited Ehrlichman to come along to "find out what this is all about." In Washington, Haldeman, his wife Jo and their four children are frequent visitors at the Ehrlichmans, and sometimes join them for trips to Key Biscayne and Camp David...
...even more specific on what happened after he surfaced and caught his breath some 30 feet downstream from the car. According to his account, he dived down to the car seven or eight times during a 15-to 20-minute period, trying to reach Mary Jo, then spent another 15 or 20 minutes resting on the bank before starting down the road to the cottage...
Kennedy's companions placed his return to the cottage at 12:15 a.m. Gargan and Markham told almost identical stories of their return to the bridge with Kennedy, and their attempts to bring up Mary Jo. Gargan and Markham insisted that they advised Kennedy repeatedly to report the accident and summon help. By the time the trio reached the Chappaquiddick ferry landing, Kennedy seemed to agree. Believing somehow that a full explanation would send Mary Jo's girl friends down to the bridge in a fruitless?and dangerous ?attempt to dive for her themselves, Kennedy instructed Markham and Gargan...
...moral strength, to call Mrs. Kopechne at 2 in the morning and tell her that her daughter was dead." It was 9 before Kennedy notified the police. It was still later?around 11 a.m.?that Gargan told the five women who had been at the party that Mary Jo was dead. (See the most memorable quotes by Senator Kennedy...
...handling of the case from beginning to end. Police Chief Dominick Arena never asked Kennedy why he had not reported the accident for nine hours. District Attorney Edmund Dinis seemed noticeably reluctant to enter the case at all, then pressed belatedly?and vainly?for court permission to exhume Mary Jo's body so that an autopsy could be performed. His questions throughout the inquest were somewhat less than probing. Justice Boyle's handling of the inquest findings was inconclusive. He was empowered to bring charges, such as negligent driving or perjury, against Kennedy if he felt that they were warranted...