Anonymous ID: d0667a Aug. 31, 2020, 9:43 a.m. No.10483819   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10483728

>>10483811

Paths diverge

 

After the summer, Servaas and Rodham's paths diverged.

 

Rodham went off to Yale Law School. Over the next year she worked on the editorial board of the Yale Review of Law and Social Action, with abused children and in legal aid, doing research on migratory labor and on a senate campaign in Connecticut. Servaas headed off to Japan, where she taught English and earned a black belt in judo.

 

When she returned home, she worked for a time as an editor at Holiday magazine before joining the staff of a historical preservation organization now known as Indiana Landmarks, said executive director Tina Connor.

 

People remember Servaas as a singular presence: She played competitive squash, drove a red convertible and restored a historic house on her own.

 

In September 1975, Servaas was visiting an aunt and uncle in Vista, California, north of San Diego. A few days after she arrived, Servaas' aunt and uncle arrived home from dinner and found their niece dead, the victim of a homicide. A 1975 Associated Press article said her uncle found her beaten to death with a blunt object. In 2002 the Servaas-family-owned Saturday Evening Post said she was "ambushed in the foyer with a crowbar and pickax," in an article announcing a scholarship in her name.

 

https://www.adn.com/politics/2016/10/05/the-untold-story-of-hillary-clintons-1969-summer-in-alaska/