The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Biden, others emotional in tribute to John Glenn

2,500 at celebratio­n of life of late space hero, ex-senator.

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS, OHIO — Vice President Joe Biden and a retired Marine Corps general were among the dignitarie­s, family members and other mourners who choked up Saturday during a memorial tribute to the late space hero and U.S. Sen. John Glenn.

Roughly 2,500 people gathered at Mershon Auditorium on the Ohio State University campus for “a celebratio­n of life” for the former fighter pilot and history-making astronaut from small-town Ohio. He was remembered not only for bravery, but for his thoughtful considerat­ion for others, his integrity and his patriotic optimism.

“I think John defined what it meant to be an American, what we were about, just by how we acted,” said Vice President Joe Biden, a former colleague of Glenn, a fellow Democrat, in the U.S. Senate. “It was always about the promise. We were a country of possibilit­y, opportunit­y, always a belief in tomorrow.”

Retired Marine Gen. John Dailey said Glenn was “never in it for himself,” but always acted for the nation’s greater good. Like many others, he recalled Glenn’s humility and basic kindness.

“We had John for 95 great years and it still wasn’t enough,” Dailey said.

Glenn died Dec. 8 at age 95. He became the first American to orbit the Earth in 1962, and then in 1998, at age 77, set the record for the oldest person to fly in space.

Thousands of people, including Secretary of State John Kerry, visited the Ohio Statehouse on Friday as Glenn lay in stater. A solemn funeral procession through the center of the capital city carried his casket past mourners willing to withstand cold and ice.

Ethel Kennedy, widow of close Glenn ally Robert F. Kennedy, and their son, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., were among the mourners present, along with a bipartisan representa­tion of Ohio political leaders including Gov. John Kasich and former Govs. Ted Strickland and Richard Celeste.

The service was preceded by recordings of hymns, arias and popular songs. Some — including Nat King Cole’s “Smile” and Susan Boyle’s version of “Impossible Dream” — nodded to Glenn’s trademark optimism. Others, including “You Are My Sunshine,” “Moon River” and Shirley Jones singing “Goodnight, My Someone” — recalled Glenn’s long love affair with wife, Annie, who survives him.

Their marriage was cited frequently as a source of Glenn’s strength and an inspiratio­n to those who have known and watched the couple for 73 years.

U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, a fellow Democrat who first met Glenn when he was a teenage Eagle Scout, called Glenn “an FDR Democrat” who believed in the power of government and the importance of public service — through his military and space career and his tenure in the Senate.

“He was a work horse, never a show horse,” Brown said. “He labored over the details of non-proliferat­ion and environmen­tal cleanup of nuclear disposal sites, grunt work to some, but John was content to spend his time not on collecting instant headlines but achieving lasting results that would leave the world better than he had found it.”

NASA Administra­tor Charles Bolden Jr. said the U.S. space program remains indebted to Glenn.

“It was courage, grace and humility John displayed throughout his life that lifted him above the stars,” Bolden said.

Taps was played as Glenn was carried from the auditorium. He will be buried at Arlington Cemetery near Washington, D.C., in a private ceremony this spring.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? John Glenn’s casket is carried by Marines into his funeral ceremony at Ohio State University on Saturday in Columbus, Ohio. Glenn, the famed astronaut, died Dec. 8 at age 95.
JOHN MINCHILLO / ASSOCIATED PRESS John Glenn’s casket is carried by Marines into his funeral ceremony at Ohio State University on Saturday in Columbus, Ohio. Glenn, the famed astronaut, died Dec. 8 at age 95.

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