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LIVE THREAD--Reagan National Funeral Ceremony: National Cathedral (6/11/04)
C-SPAN | 6.11.04

Posted on 06/11/2004 2:48:04 AM PDT by ambrose

LIVE THREAD--Reagan State Funeral Ceremony: Lying in State at the Rotunda (6/11/04)


TOPICS: Breaking News; News/Current Events; US: California; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: gipper; godblessronaldreagan; greatestprezever; livethread; reagan; reaganfuneral; ronaldreagan; win14gipper
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Precious Lord, take my hand.
Lead me on, let me stand.
I am tired, I am weak, and worn.
Through the storm, through the night,
Lead me on to the light.
Take my hand, precious Lord,
Lead me home.

I just realized I was humming.

2,881 posted on 06/11/2004 10:31:37 AM PDT by lainie
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To: PleaseNoMore

Not only is your son smart, but he appears to be wise beyond his years. We need more young people like him! You've done well, mom!


2,882 posted on 06/11/2004 10:31:40 AM PDT by twigs
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To: Peach

Well, I have 11 IE windows open.

Trying to follow any of the others while this was is going on is another matter. :)


2,883 posted on 06/11/2004 10:31:50 AM PDT by Fawnn (Canteen wOOhOO Consultant and CookingWithPam.com person)
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To: kabar

Try here:

http://web.infinito.it/utenti/i/interface/Mansions.mp3


2,884 posted on 06/11/2004 10:32:03 AM PDT by TenthAmendmentChampion (Freepmail me if you'd like to read one of my Christian historical romance novels!)
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To: the Deejay

One of the AF 1s taxiing on the runway. What a magnificent plane worthy of its task today.


2,885 posted on 06/11/2004 10:32:03 AM PDT by xp38
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To: OldFriend

Yea, me too!!!! For all to know. The recording is from the FOX Channel. I hope they don't mind!!!!


2,886 posted on 06/11/2004 10:32:52 AM PDT by ktw (kakkate koi)
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To: Ciexyz

Remember.....The Clintons are all about them. Sad. He's probably wrapped up with intense jealously that so many in this nation and the world will never have the same respect and admiration for him as we do for Ronald Wilson Reagan.


2,887 posted on 06/11/2004 10:33:08 AM PDT by RSmithOpt (Liberalism: Highway to Hell)
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To: Terriergal

Brit Hume said that Fox News would have streaming video of the service. I don't know what their plans are for the rest of the day.


2,888 posted on 06/11/2004 10:33:15 AM PDT by mass55th
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To: bert

Jimmy Carter never understand the importance of the pomp and circumstance. He never understood the traditions of America. And it showed.


2,889 posted on 06/11/2004 10:33:17 AM PDT by OldFriend (LOSERS quit when they are tired/WINNERS quit when they have won)
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To: NYCVirago
If your cable comes back on tonight, CPAN is rerunning the ceremony at 7:30 pm EDT

I don't see that on today's C-SPAN schedule: C-SPAN.org

Schedule says: Motorcade to Private Service at Reagan Library at 8pm EDT. Perhaps it will be run on C-SPAN2? (8:05pm EDT is "TBA")

2,890 posted on 06/11/2004 10:33:20 AM PDT by nutmeg (God bless President Ronald Reagan)
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To: don-o

i THINK, FEEL, BELIEVE you are right.

I was wrong.


2,891 posted on 06/11/2004 10:33:20 AM PDT by Quix (Choose this day whom U will serve: Shrillery & demonic goons or The King of Kings and Lord of Lords)
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To: All

MSNBC Poll on whether or not to put Reagan on Mt. Rushmore:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5144264/

****

President George W. Bush's Eulogy:

June 11, 2004 — A transcript of President George W. Bush's tribute to former President Ronald Reagan:

Mrs. Reagan, Patti, Michael and Ron, members of the Reagan family, distinguished guests, including our presidents and first ladies, Reverend Danforth, fellow citizens:

We lost Ronald Reagan only days ago but we have missed him for a long time. We have missed his kindly presence, that reassuring voice and the happy ending we had wished for him.

It has been 10 years since he said his own farewell, yet it is still very sad and hard to let him go. Ronald Reagan belongs to the ages now, but we preferred it when he belonged to us.

In a life of good fortune, he valued above all the gracious gift of his wife, Nancy. During his career, Ronald Reagan passed through a thousand crowded places, but there was only one person, he said, who could make him lonely by just leaving the room.

America honors you, Nancy, for the loyalty and love you gave this man on a wonderful journey and to that journey's end. Today, our whole nation grieves with you and your family.

When the sun sets tonight off the coast of California and we lay to rest our 40th president, a great American story will close.

The second son of Nell and Jack Reagan first knew the world as a place of open plains, quiet streets, gas-lit rooms and carriages drawn by horse.

If you could go back to the Dixon, Illinois, of 1922, you'd find a boy of 11 reading adventure stories at the public library or running with his brother Neil along Rock River, and coming home to a little house on Hennepin Avenue.

That town was the kind of place he remembered where you prayed side by side with your neighbors. And if things were going wrong for them, you prayed for them and knew they'd pray for you if things went wrong for you.

The Reagan family would see its share of hardship, struggle and uncertainty. And out of that circumstance came a young man of steadiness, calm and a cheerful confidence that life would bring good things.

The qualities all of us have seen in Ronald Reagan were first spotted 70 and 80 years ago. As the lifeguard in Lowell Park, he was the protector, keeping an eye out for trouble. As a sports announcer on the radio, he was the friendly voice that made you see the game as he did. As an actor he was the handsome, all-American good guy, which in his case required knowing his lines and being himself. Along the way certain convictions were formed and fixed in the man.

Ronald Reagan believed that everything happens for a reason and that we should strive to know and do the will of God. He believed that the gentleman always does the kindest thing. He believed that people were basically good and had the right to be free. He believed that bigotry and prejudice were the worst things a person could be guilty of.

He believed in the golden rule and in the power of prayer. He believed that America was not just a place in the world, but the hope of the world. And he believed in taking a break now and then, because, as we said, there's nothing better for the inside of a man than the outside of a horse.

Ronald Reagan spent decades in the film industry and in politics, fields known on occasion to change a man. But not this man. From Dixon to Des Moines to Hollywood to Sacramento to Washington, D.C., all who met him remembered the same sincere, honest, upright fellow.

Ronald Reagan's deepest beliefs never had much to do with fashion or convenience. His convictions were always politely stated, affably argued, and as firm and straight as the columns of this cathedral.

There came a point in Ronald Reagan's film career when people started seeing a future beyond the movies. The actor Robert Cummings recalled one occasion: "I was sitting around the set with all these people and we were listening to Ronnie, quite absorbed. I said, 'Ron, have you ever considered someday becoming president?' He said, 'President of what?' 'President of the United States,' I said. And he said, 'What's the matter? Don't you like my acting either?'"

The clarity and intensity of Ronald Reagan's convictions led to speaking engagements around the country, and a new following he did not seek or expect.

He often began his speeches by saying, "I'm going to talk about controversial things." And then he spoke of communist rulers as slave masters, of a government in Washington that had far overstepped its proper limits, of a time for choosing that was drawing near. In the space of a few years, he took ideas and principles that were mainly found in journals and books and turned them into a broad, hopeful movement ready to govern.

As soon as Ronald Reagan became California's governor, observers saw a star in the west, tanned, well-tailored, in command and on his way. In the 1960s his friend Bill Buckley wrote, "Reagan is indisputably a part of America and he may become a part of American history."

Ronald Reagan's moment arrived in 1980. He came out ahead of some very good men, including one from Plains and one from Houston. What followed was one of the decisive decades of the century as the convictions that shaped the president began to shape the times.

He came to office with great hopes for America. And more than hopes. Like the president he had revered and once saw in person, Franklin Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan matched an optimistic temperament with bold, persistent action.

President Reagan was optimistic about the great promise of economic reform, and he acted to restore the rewards and spirit of enterprise. He was optimistic that a strong America could advance the peace, and he acted to build the strength that mission required.

He was optimistic that liberty would thrive wherever it was planted, and he acted to defend liberty wherever it was threatened. And Ronald Reagan believed in the power of truth in the conduct of world affairs. When he saw evil camped across the horizon he called that evil by its name.

There were no doubters in the prisons and gulags, where dissidents spread the news, tapping to each other in code what the American president had dared to say. There were no doubters in the shipyards and churches and secret labor meetings where brave men and women began to hear the creaking and rumbling of a collapsing empire. And there were no doubters among those who swung hammers at the hated wall that the first and hardest blow had been struck by President Ronald Reagan.

The ideology he opposed throughout his political life insisted that history was moved by impersonal tides and unalterable fates. Ronald Reagan believed instead in the courage and triumph of free men and we believe it all the more because we saw that courage in him.

As he showed what a president should be, he also showed us what a man should be.

Ronald Reagan carried himself, even in the most powerful office, with the decency and attention to small kindnesses that also define a good life. He was a courtly, gentle and considerate man, never known to slight or embarrass others.

Many people across the country cherish letters he wrote in his own hand to family members on important occasions, to old friends dealing with sickness and loss, to strangers with questions about his days in Hollywood.

A boy once wrote to him requesting federal assistance to help clean up his bedroom. The president replied that, unfortunately, funds are dangerously low. He continued: "I'm sure your mother was fully justified in proclaiming your room a disaster ... therefore you are in an excellent position to launch another volunteer program in our nation. Congratulations."

See, our 40th president wore his title lightly, and it fit like a white Stetson.

In the end, through his belief in our country and his love for our country, he became an enduring symbol of our country.

We think of the steady stride, that tilt of the head and snap of the salute, the big-screen smile, and the glint in his Irish eyes when a story came to mind.

We think of a man advancing in years with the sweetness and sincerity of a scout saying the pledge. We think of that grave expression that sometimes came over his face, the seriousness of a man angered by injustice and frightened by nothing.

We know, as he always said, that America's best days are ahead of us. But with Ronald Reagan's passing, some very fine days are behind us. And that is worth our tears.

Americans saw death approach Ronald Reagan twice, in a moment of violence and then in the years of departing light. He met both with courage and grace. In these trials, he showed how a man so enchanted by life can be at peace with life's end.

And where does that strength come from? Where is that courage learned? It is the faith of a boy who read the Bible with his mom. It is the faith of a man lying in an operating room who prayed for the one who shot him before he prayed for himself. It is the faith of a man with a fearful illness who waited on the Lord to call him home.

Now death has done all that death can do, and as Ronald Wilson Reagan goes his way, we are left with the joyful hope he shared. In his last years he saw through a glass darkly. Now he sees his savior face to face.

And we look for that fine day when we will see him again, all weariness gone, clear of mind, strong and sure and smiling again, and the sorrow of this parting gone forever.

May God bless Ronald Reagan and the country he loved.


2,892 posted on 06/11/2004 10:33:41 AM PDT by bholaway
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To: Clara Lou
>>"stoned look" for most people who get stoned.

Never saw it in a mirror. Never been stoned in my life. Unfortunately I've seen that look in others, over the years, up close and personal---and sooner or later, tragic.

It's unmistakeable. Clinton was not snoozing there.

2,893 posted on 06/11/2004 10:33:46 AM PDT by Graymatter (Let's issue a new $40 bill to honor our 40th president)
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To: DoctorMichael
After the tolling of the tenor bell, they began ringing a peal - I believe they have a ring of ten bells, and there is a change-ringing society at the Cathedral. If they ring a full peal, they will be busy for hours.

Change Ringing in North America

2,894 posted on 06/11/2004 10:34:11 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of Venery (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: the Deejay

But it was not your father who died. Give these people a break will you!


2,895 posted on 06/11/2004 10:34:13 AM PDT by Ima Lurker
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To: Terriergal

It appears as though the song is recent. Hmm! It sounds like something I've heard for years and years!


2,896 posted on 06/11/2004 10:34:27 AM PDT by Terriergal (Ps27:5 "For in the day of trouble he will keep me safe in His dwelling;")
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To: nutmeg

The plane is to land at Pt. Mugu at 5:15 PDT, last I saw.


2,897 posted on 06/11/2004 10:34:41 AM PDT by lainie
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To: CounterCounterCulture
All the eulogies were very well done. I missed part of Lady Thatcher's and will have to watch a replay later. I admired the elder Bush's candor and you could tell that he had steeled himself to get through it without crying. President GW Bush also did very well.

It is nice to have the gauze of liberal revisionism lifted off of Reagan's legacy by such stirring testimonials. The media will scrambling to put the mosquito netting back in place and obscure his achievements, but we can't let them. Reagan was much more than a genial grandpa. He was a brilliant American conservative statesman.

2,898 posted on 06/11/2004 10:34:53 AM PDT by Puddleglum (Kerry is Al Gore with a Boston accent— vote Bush!)
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To: TattooedUSAFConservative

The Mansions of the Lord? http://www.angelfire.com/ny5/ItisPeke/VDay.html

It is a site titled To our Veterans and though it may take a moment to play the song..It plays the song..just beautifully sung. I can't link but copied it accurately I believe.


2,899 posted on 06/11/2004 10:34:54 AM PDT by MEG33 (John Kerry's been AWOL for two decades on issues of National Security)
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To: ktw

Please put me on your list for copies! Thanks.


2,900 posted on 06/11/2004 10:35:18 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of Venery (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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