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  1. On July 10, 2021, John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site honored Eunice Kennedy Shriver on the 100 th anniversary of her birth with a filmed presentation that celebrated her life and legacy. The program included Shriver family members, biographers, disabilities rights advocates, and an award-winning Special Olympics athlete, among others.

  2. Feb 22, 2019 · Shriver had the foresight to realize that children might have distinct medical needs, said McNamara. So one sunny day in 1961, Shriver took her brother, President John F. Kennedy, sailing on Nantucket Sound and suggested that perhaps Jacqueline Kennedy’s recent miscarriage and a stillborn birth in 1956 had medical causes.

  3. Eunice Kennedy Shriver, 1921-2009. After her brother, John Kennedy, was elected President in 1960, Eunice Kennedy Shriver publicly revealed that they had a sister with mental retardation who had been institutionalized. At a time when developmental disability was virtually unmentionable and shrouded in fear, Shriver’s decision to come out was ...

  4. Eunice Kennedy Shriver speaks at the 1987 Special Olympics World Summer Games in South Bend, Indiana, USA. More than 4,000 athletes with intellectual disabilities from more than 70 countries took part in these Games.

  5. Profile: Eunice Kennedy Shriver. A fast-paced overview of Eunice's life and pioneering accomplishments, told by her family, a Special Olympics athlete and Nobel Peace Prize winner Nelson Mandela. A fast-paced overview of Eunice's life and pioneering accomplishments, told by her family, a Special Olympics athlete and Nobel Peace Prize winner ...

  6. A Wikimédia Commons tartalmaz Eunice Kennedy Shriver témájú médiaállományokat. Eunice Kennedy Shriver ( Brookline, Massachusetts, 1921. július 10. – Hyannis, Massachusetts, 2009. augusztus 11.) a legendás Kennedy család tagja, John Fitzgerald Kennedy elnök húga, politikusnő, polgárjogi aktivista, producer.

  7. The Safe to Sleep ® campaign, led by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) in collaboration with other agencies and organizations, educates parents and caregivers about ways to protect babies during sleep by reducing the risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) and other sleep-related deaths.