Blogs ·  Liveblogs ·  Capture Kansas ·  Widgets ·  Desktop Alert ·  In the Community ·  My Rewards ·  Contact Us
Home  ·   Local  ·   U.S. & World  ·   Weather  ·   Sports  ·   Political  ·   Money/Stocks  ·   Blogs  ·   Meet the Team  ·   Jobs  ·  
Mr. Food Recipes · KS Prep Zone · Shopping Plaza · Classifieds · Coupons · Programming · 13 On Your Cell
WIBW

$$$$$$$$
Blogs



Weather
Sports
Web Features
On-Air Programs
Capture Kansas
Send us your photos
13 On Your Cell
Wherever
you go
Desktop Alert
Up to the minute
WIBW Widgets
Put 'em anywhere
RSS Feeds
The latest headlines
Family, Admirers Prepare to Lay Helms to Rest Save Email Print
Posted: 12:43 PM Jul 8, 2008
Last Updated: 12:43 PM Jul 8, 2008

A | A | A

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- Jesse Helms' family prepared Tuesday to lay the five-term U.S. senator to rest, gathering with a group of mourners that was expected to include national figures and home-state admirers.

Helms, 86, died July 4 after years of declining health. The funeral will be held at Hayes-Barton Baptist Church in Raleigh, where Helms worshipped for decades and was a deacon.

Several hundred people paid respects to Helms at a closed-casket visitation at the church Monday. Attendance was steady during the day and picked up in the early evening when Helms' family greeted visitors at the front of the sanctuary.

"If you were going to look at three things that are important from the family perspective, it would be his family, his faith and his flag. That was the cornerstone of who Uncle Jesse was," said nephew Paul Coble, a Wake County commissioner and former Raleigh mayor.

Vice President Dick Cheney planned to attend the funeral, according to Cheney spokeswoman Megan Mitchell. A delegation of U.S. senators also planned to attend, along with state political figures and average admirers of the conservative Republican icon, who inspired both love and disdain for his strong views.

Raleigh resident Wallace Holloway, 68, waited outside the church for about an hour before the doors were to open. He said Helms will be greatly missed, in part because he believed there's no longer anyone in Congress with his conviction.

"We need more men like Jesse Helms," Halloway said. "He's an icon - a Southern gentlemen. He'll be remembered for integrity and truth."

Among the senators expected to attend was Sen. Elizabeth Dole, who took Helms' seat when he chose not to seek re-election in 2002. All Senate votes Tuesday were postponed for a day because of the funeral.

The coffin of Helms, who served in the Senate from 1973 to 2003, was covered with a U.S. flag and flanked by two state Highway Patrol troopers. The front of the sanctuary was decorated with flowers sent by U.S. senators and a painting of Helms at work. Dole and her husband, former Kansas Sen. Bob Dole, also sent flowers.

Helms won his first election in 1972 after a career in newspapers, radio and television commentaries and rose to become a powerful committee chairman.

He never lost a political race, but his margin of victory was never large, reflecting his image as a polarizing figure both at home and in Washington. In the Senate, he forced roll-call votes that required Democrats to take politically difficult votes on cultural issues, such as federal funding for art he deemed pornographic, school busing and flag-burning.

He also ran racially tinged campaigns in his last two runs for Senate, defeating former Charlotte Mayor Harvey Gantt, who is black, in 1990 and 1996.

More Stories
Sex abuse allegations against evangelist detailed

Man accused of tossing Christmas tree at his dad

Obama Seeks to Assure Nervous Governors

Stocks Rebound After Steep Selloff

Ford Tells Congress It May Be Able to Go It Alone

Deer Gets Revenge After Hunter Shoots Him

Man, 80, Gets Birthday Card From Former Teacher

Coffee Stop Leads Ark. Police To Cocaine Arrest

Post Your Comments
First Name:
Location:
Enter Comments: characters left
Email (optional):
Email will not be displayed on site. For station contact purpose only.
Most Commented
Online Poll
What's your prediction for the KC Chiefs at Oakland game Sunday?

Chiefs win
Raiders win
Tie


CBS News
  • Automakers Make Their Bailout Pitches
    Detroit's automakers appealed to Congress with a retooled case for a huge bailout, pledging to slash workers, car lines and executive pay in return for federal aid. GM said it wouldn't last till New Year's without an immediate $4 billion.
  • Saxby Chambliss Wins Georgia Senate Runoff
    Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss defeated Democrat Jim Martin in Georgia's U.S. Senate runoff Tuesday in a battle that attracted light voter turnout despite the contest's high stakes on the balance of power in Washington.
  • Giants Suspend Burress Over Shooting
    The Giants fined and suspended Plaxico Burress on Tuesday after he accidentally shot himself in the right thigh over the weekend at a Manhattan nightclub.
  • Obama Vows To Help Struggling States
    President-elect Barack Obama promised swift action Tuesday on an economic plan "to solve this crisis and to ease the burden on our states," and he cast governors as his partners in crafting a recession-rebound strategy.