The strands of Sen. Ted Kennedy's political and personal life will be knitted together during a Friday night tribute at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, with the final speaker Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of the slain president. Meanwhile, the family is keeping the public up to date on Kennedy's farewell on a Twitter account.
On Friday, the public continued to stream past Kennedy's flag-draped casket at the JFK Memorial. As I write this, at 10 a.m., a Kennedy twitter (@kennedynews) has recently noted, "Mass. Treasurer Tim Cahill in line. State house and senate arrive together at 11."
Doors at the library remained open until 2 a.m. on Friday morning because of the outpouring of mourners, who were greeted by various members of the extended Kennedy clan. Kennedy will lie in repose until 3 p.m. Friday.
From the Kennedy twitter, about seven hours ago: "Estimating 25,000 people paid their respects to Sen. Kennedy tonight. We could not be more grateful for the amazing support. Thank you."
Kennedy, 77, died Tuesday night after a 15-month battle with brain cancer.
Friday night's two-hour program, from 7 to 9 p.m. Eastern time, is billed as a "Celebration of Life" and includes a Ken Burns movie. Four senators -- two Democrats and two Republicans -- are included, a balance intended to vividly demonstrate Kennedy's history of working across the aisle even though he was an unabashed liberal who never ran away from the label.
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PD toolbar!"The memorial is a way for the people closest to Senator Kennedy to celebrate his life -- with his love of music, laughter and stories with friends and family he adored," the family said on the Kennedy memorial Web site.
The program, in order of the speakers:
- Paul Kirk Jr., chairman of the board of directors of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation
- Father Gerry Creedon, S.J., opening prayer
- "God Bless America," Boston Community Chorus
- Former Rep. Joseph Kennedy II, eldest son of the slain Sen. Robert Kennedy
- Sen. Christopher Dodd, one of Kennedy's closest friends in the Senate
- Nick Littlefield, a former top Senate staffer
- Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick
- Sen. John McCain, the Arizona Republican. He was the ideological opposite of Kennedy on many issues but was his bipartisan partner on measures where they could agree, such as immigration reform.
- Video tribute, directed by Ken Burns and Mark Herzog
- Sen. John Kerry, senator from Massachusetts and 2004 presidential candidate
- Sen. Orrin Hatch, a Utah Republican who was a bipartisan Kennedy partner
- "The Impossible Dream," sung by Brian Stokes Mitchell
- Boston Mayor Thomas Menino
- Former Sen. John Culver. The former Iowa Democratic lawmaker is the chairman of Harvard University's Institute of Politics Senior Advisory Committee
- "Just a Closer Walk with Thee," Boston Community Chorus
- Vice President Joseph Biden
- Caroline Kennedy
On Saturday, President Obama will deliver a eulogy at Kennedy's funeral Mass at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica in Roxbury. Kennedy grew close to the church when he prayed there while his daughter, Kara, was battling lung cancer at a nearby hospital.
White House Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton on Friday said Obama and his speechwriters are working on his remarks.
"I don't have any preview of what the president is going to have to say on Saturday," Burton said, "but it is something that he obviously takes very seriously. He's been working on it. . . . He's obviously got a great team of speechwriters who he works with, but this is going to be a very personal statement that he makes on Saturday."
After the funeral, Kennedy will be flown to Andrews Air Force Base, arriving at about 3 p.m. From there, a motorcade will drive by the Senate steps around 4:30 p.m. for a brief prayer service and final salute from Kennedy's Senate staff and others who worked with him during his decades in the chamber.
From there, the motorcade heads to Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, where he will be buried with his two slain brothers.
Ted Kennedy's final journey started on Thursday, when a motorcade carrying his body traveled some 70 miles from his home in Hyannis Port, Mass., through Boston, to his late brother's presidential library and museum, where mourners lined up to say goodbye to a man known as the Lion of the Senate.
Some 85 members of the storied Kennedy family -- covering several generations of the nation's most famous political clan -- gathered for a private Mass at the Cape Cod family compound. Kennedy's widow, Victoria, stood at the front of the assembled family, with Jean Kennedy Smith, the last surviving sibling, nearby, according to a pool report.
As I finish this wrap-up on Kenney's three days of rites, a recent post on the family's twitter feed indicates at least 1,100 people have lined up to view the casket. And two groups have been sitting vigil:
"7-8am, John and Diddy Cullinane (family friends), John Scarin (frmr senate staffer), Kathleen Scarin (wife of John) Sitting vigil: 6-7 am, Charlie and Dororthy Baker, Tom Keady (family friends), Jay Heimbach and Jeanine Kedas (frmr senate staffers)"Follow PoliticsDaily On Facebook and Twitter,
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