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The Daily Nightly began on May 31, 2005. As Brian wrote in his first post it aims to provide a narrative of the broadcast day and a window into the editorial process at NBC Nightly News. Brian weighs in every weekday and NBC News correspondents and producers post regularly.

Brian Williams became the seventh anchor and managing editor in the history of NBC Nightly News on December 2, 2004. Read his full biography.

A rare day in Washington

Politics were subordinate to the personal and the historic in this city today. Under the vaulted ceiling of the National Cathedral, Jimmy Carter was seated next to Lynne Cheney, Rosalyn Carter beside Nancy Reagan. Honorary pallbearers included Brent Scowcroft and Jim Baker, both critics of the Iraq invasion, and Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, the war's chief architects. On this day, at Gerald Ford's funeral service, there was no partisan divide. Sitting in the nave, I looked out at the former presidents and their wives and thought about the inescapable sweep of American history.  Here were former combatants and their successors, victors and vanquished, now considerably older, and presumably wiser.  Over the decades, adversaries had become friends. How else can you explain Ford asking Jimmy Carter to speak at his burial in Grand Rapids?

The eulogies reflected other facets of Gerald Ford's life. George Herbert Walker Bush served with him in Congress and was then sent by Ford to China, and finally to the CIA. Being sent to Langley briefly took Bush out of politics, causing resentment in the Bush camp at the time. Today, the elder Bush instead recalled Jerry Ford's decency and sense of humor.  Bush (perhaps identifying as a fellow victim of comic barbs) recalled Chevy Chase's satires of Ford and was even inspired to imitate Dana Carvey imitating him: "But it wouldn't be prudent."

Our own Tom Brokaw perfectly captured Citizen Ford: the man who, like so many of his generation, returned from the war to serve his country again by running for office. Ford, Brokaw said, had "no demons, no hidden agenda, no hit list or acts of vengeance." It was so typical of Ford to include a journalist among his eulogists: Ford was the only president I ever knew who actually liked reporters. In retirement, he even returned to Washington each year to personally award a journalism prize to a selected correspondent. Sure, he occasionally resented the criticism, but he never held grudges, not even against the press corps. A photo in the Washington Post this week was illustrative: Jerry Ford, laughing as he ran toward Air Force One, clearly amused at a question being posed by CBS White House correspondent Phil Jones, while a youthful Helen Thomas and the rest of the White House press corps ran alongside.

There were also solid achievements. At the funeral today, Ford's former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger recounted how in only 29 months - 896 days - the Ford administration negotiated the landmark Helsinki Accords on human rights, and the first political agreement between Israel and Egypt. Without, Kissinger said, ever losing the virtues of small-town America -- "sincerity, serenity and integrity."

Jerry Ford was a religious man, but he kept that mostly to himself. He even rejected the advice of some aides to use faith as another reason to justify pardoning Richard Nixon. Ford did not want to wear his religion on his sleeve. But his longtime pastor, the Reverend Robert Certain, knew Jerry Ford's faith ran deep. Ford also cared deeply about the well-being of the church. In his homily today, Dr. Certain -- a former Air Force pilot and prisoner of war in Vietnam -- recounted how Ford called him last summer. At the time, Dr. Certain was preparing to leave for the General Convention of the Episcopal Church.  The church was facing a schism over the role of human sexuality and women's leadership. Ford told him there shouldn't be divisions among those who lived by the Great Commandments to love God and neighbor -- and asked him to work for reconciliation. Nothing could be more revealing of Jerry Ford's character. To the end, he was the great healer.

Under the Gothic ceiling of the National Cathedral, the mourners' spirits were lifted by the choirs and the soaring soprano of Denyce Graves. But for all its majesty, the service was as simple as could be designed for a former President -- no caisson, no flyovers in Washington. On one level, it was a simple celebration of a life lived well -- a time for a family heartbroken by grief to say goodbye to the man they all -- including Betty -- lovingly called "Dad." The family have been consoled in recent days by the thousands of people who lined the streets of Alexandria, Va., Washington, D.C., and Grand Rapids, Mich., to wave farewell. Betty and the children went to the Rotunda to say "thank you" to those who were streaming by to see the casket. It was an unprecedented, personal touch by the family of a former President from Main Street, U.S.A.  It was a gesture Gerald Ford would have understood.

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COMMENTS

Andrea,

Watching you on Bill O's program last night I could feel your frustration on his attacks to you and your fellow NBC newscasters.
Where does this man get off with his biased opinions. To say Fox News is not slanted to the conservative right is ridiculous.
Apparently Fox News and Bill O do not adhere to the rules he so strongly critisized you and your collegues on.
I listen to MSNBC all of the time and do not find their comments or views slanted to the 'liberal' side. They are honest in their reporting and look at both sides of each issue.
Keep up your excellent work!

Mary, G.R. Michigan

Andrea,
We missed seeing you on the coverage today (but certainly understand that you were at the service) and appreciate your posting on the blog. You do an excellent job, and your NBC team has done superior work covering this story, about which you and others there clearly care passionately. Thank you.

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Gerald Ford Epitomizes America, But What About China? I grew up 45 minutes from Grand Rapids, Michigan, which city will always be associated with our 38th President, Gerald R. Ford. Everyone I ever knew from Grand Rapids (and there are plenty of those people) would talk about having

Posted on Jan 3, 2007 12:55:45 AM at: China Law Blog