Viewing hours extended
By 6 a.m. today, more than 40,000 people had filed past the coffin.
SIMI VALLEY, Calif. (AP) -- Californians by the tens of thousands paid their respects to former President Reagan, backing up traffic on a freeway and forcing surprised organizers to extend the viewing period today by four hours.
Some came in their Sunday best, while others looked ready to hit the beach in shorts and flip-flops. All fell silent at the first glimpse of Reagan's flag-draped coffin.
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library announced today that it had extended the end of viewing hours from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. "due to the overwhelming response for those showing respect for President Reagan."
People must be in line for shuttle buses, which take viewers from a gathering point at a nearby college to the library itself, by 3 p.m.
"Reagan was truly the people's president and you can see it here," said Maura Ripsen of Anaheim Hills, who came to the library Monday with her husband, Steve, son Sean, 6, and daughter Katherine, 23 months.
By 6 a.m. today, more than 40,000 people had gone through the library, said Duke Blackwood, the library's executive director.
"We knew it was going to be high, but quite honestly we didn't know it was going to be this high," said Gary Foster, a Reagan family spokesman.
Traffic tie-ups
The demand caused traffic to grind to a halt overnight on the Ronald Reagan Freeway, with delays of up to four hours, said Mary Clark, a California Highway Patrol dispatcher. Mourners who made it through the traffic reported waiting up to eight hours for a shuttle bus at Moorpark College, even though the number of buses was doubled to nearly 50.
Foster said by one estimate, 17,000 people were waiting in the staging area. All had their belongings searched and passed through metal detectors before being allowed to board.
Reagan died Saturday at 93 after nearly a decade battling Alzheimer's disease.
On Wednesday, his body is to be flown to Washington, D.C., where there will be a ceremony that night in the Capitol Rotunda. The body will then lie in state.
Friday will be a national day of mourning, with all federal offices and major financial markets closed. The state funeral will be held at Washington National Cathedral, with President Bush delivering a eulogy.
The body will then be returned to the Reagan library for burial Friday evening.
All walks of life
Those passing by the former president's coffin were a cross-section of America: retirees, business people, families, veterans.
"How blessed the whole world is that he held office for as long as he did," said Navy Ensign Laurie Zimmet, 40, of Los Angeles. "As far as I'm concerned, he's the greatest president of the 20th century."
The public expression of sympathy began after Reagan's body, accompanied by wife Nancy Reagan, 82, and his children, was brought Monday from a Santa Monica mortuary by motorcade to the library in the Ventura County hills northwest of Los Angeles.
In a simple service, the Rev. Michael Wenning told the Reagan family, "As we were in procession, I couldn't help but think of the love and the outpouring that has begun in the nation for a great president, a great world leader and a faithful servant of almighty God."
After the service, Mrs. Reagan walked to the coffin and placed her left cheek to it. Her daughter, Patti Davis, hugged her tightly, and other family members joined them around the coffin.
The library then opened to throngs who were bused about five miles from the college, which closed to provide parking.
Paying their respects
Among the first were Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and wife Maria Shriver, who stood silently, crossed themselves and left. But most of those who came were regular folks.
Patricia Roccaforte, 61, of Tustin, said Reagan had made her feel safe.
"I was praying the whole time he was alive we would live up to all he thought we could do," she said. "He was so optimistic about us. He's in the hands of God now -- as he always has been."
A man in cowboy boots and jeans held his hat over his heart.
"On my way out, I saluted him -- both of us did," said Don Procter, 83, a former Marine who came from Altadena with his wife, Lorraine.
Though brief, the time in the library was enough for Scotia Alves, 51, of Camarillo, who said she and her husband started a car stereo company in their garage at the beginning of Reagan's presidency.
"Reaganomics was good for business. ... I felt gratitude to him," she said.
Charles Shelton, 38, a Los Angeles lawyer, was struck by the range of people.
"It's a testament, how broad his appeal was," said Shelton, who voted for Green Party candidate Ralph Nader in 2000 and plans to vote for Democrat John Kerry but called himself a "Reagan Republican."
"He's a different type of Republican ...," Shelton said. "He was tough, yet graceful."
Salvador Ayala, 74, came from Simi Valley with three other veterans. "He won the Cold War without firing a shot. He was the greatest president that we ever had, and I'm a Democrat," said Ayala, who served in the Korean War.
Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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