On a sunny summer day in 1967, I encountered a cheerful young Senator as he spoke to other young people who were working, as I was then, on Capitol Hill. My most enduring memory of him was not his speech, which included a stirring appeal for universal health care, but how happy and carefree he seemed.
He was only 36 years old then. The world lay before him and it must have looked like his oyster. I saw him as he waved good luck to a few of us outside the Capitol and then watched as he climbed into his green Chevrolet and drove off.
As we all know, Teddy Kennedy had money, good looks a great name, and many talents. Back then, the traits of his that were most underestimated were his remarkable skill and endurance as a legislator and his passionate commitment to one big issue: health care.
With all that has been written and spoken the last few days about the late Senator there is one particular way to honor him that exceeds all others. Teddy said often and eloquently that universal health care was "the cause of my life."
If our country's leaders really honor the Senator as much as they say they do, a majority of them will see to it that the poor and under-insured will finally receive what Kennedy said was a right, not a privilege: quality health care.
Can you think of a better way to honor this last of the Kennedy brothers than that?
-Erie Chapman
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