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 | | Posted by admin on Friday, December 29, 2006 - 08:18 PM |
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29/12/2006 20:02 - (SA)
Calvin Woodward
Washington - President
George W Bush declared Tuesday a National Day of Mourning for the late
Gerald R Ford, asking people to gather in places of worship to honour
Ford's memory and ordering nonessential government departments to
close.
"I invite the people of the world who share our grief to join us in this solemn observance," said Bush on Thursday.
Ford's state funeral is missing some of the grandeur of the one
for Ronald Reagan two years ago, a reflection of the 38th president's
modest ways and lesser imprint on the United States (US), according to
further planning details released on Thursday. Part of it will be missing Bush, too. The president will not
attend weekend ceremonies including a Capitol Rotunda service, but will
return to Washington from his Texas ranch on Monday, pay respects to
Ford while his remains lie in state at the Capitol, and speak on
Tuesday at services for Ford at the National Cathedral. Ford critical of Bush
Ford created a posthumous buzz with the release of interviews
critical of Bush that he gave to two newspapers on condition they not
be published at the time. He told The Washington Post in 2004 and the New York Daily
News in May that Bush was mistaken in his rationale for going to war
against Iraq. He also said he was "dumbfounded" when he learned of Bush's domestic surveillance programme.
If some of the formalities are toned down, Ford's goodbye is packed with events tied to the touchstones of his life.
A prayer service and public viewing on Friday in Palm Desert,
California, near Ford's retirement haven for 30 years, begins a
five-day chain of ceremonies that includes two funeral services in
Washington; yet another, in Grand Rapids, Michigan, adopted hometown of
the Nebraska native, and additional commemorations in the Capitol. Readying itself in a hurry, the US capital prepared to receive
Ford's remains and honour the memory of the congressional veteran who
achieved the highest office by chance. A riderless horse
The convergence of foreign and US dignitaries, the public and
national symbolism marked the ceremonies as a potential target for
terrorism, prompting the government to designate the funeral a special
security event. That expedites a range of extraordinary measures overseen by the secret service.
Even so, some of the most regal touches of a state funeral -
those most burned in the consciousness of Americans old enough to
remember the clicking hooves and the faces of grief of John F Kennedy's
funeral procession - are being bypassed, by request of his family and,
most likely, according to Ford's own wishes. Barbara Owens, speaking for the military district of
Washington, said on Thursday the family asked for several elements of
the traditional funeral procession to the Capitol to be excluded from
the ceremonies. They are: -The caisson, a converted cannon wagon drawn by six horses of the same colour. Ford's casket will be driven by hearse instead.
-The riderless horse, which follows the caisson, with boots reversed in the stirrups of the empty saddle.
- The flyover of 21 fighter aircraft, with one executing the "missing man" manoeuvre.
The unusual extras
Instead, a flyover will happen in Grand Rapids, where Ford spent
most of his childhood and practiced law before representing the city in
Congress for 25 years. He will be interred there, on a hillside north
of his presidential museum. Ford's casket will travel the length of the Capitol Building
over three days, pausing in front of the House chamber on the way on
Saturday and in front of the senate chamber on the way out. Those unusual extras were designed to honour Ford's service to
both chambers, as a House member and as senate president, by virtue of
his position as vice-president. At the end of the funeral procession from Andrews Air Force
Base on Saturday, a military team will carry the coffin up the steps of
the East Front of the House. It will then lie in repose in front of the House chamber and be carried into the Rotunda for a service and public viewing.
In contrast, Reagan's casket was handed off between three teams
of military personnel up the West Front stairs of the Capitol,
involving three times more steps, and directly into the Rotunda. That was done, according to associate senate historian Don Ritchie, because of construction on the east side.
It was unlikely that Ford's visitations would draw the crowds of
the Reagan funeral, when more than 200 000 people on both coasts paid
their respects to the two-term president. | |
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