Obama working on final farewell for Kennedy

OAK BLUFFS, Mass. -- The passing of a political era from one generation to another will be complete this weekend when Sen. Edward Kennedy is eulogized by the man he helped elect president.

President Obama plans to leave Martha's Vineyard tonight for Boston. He will be the only non-family member to speak at Saturday's funeral Mass at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica. Kennedy, 77, succumbed to brain cancer late Tuesday.

The president was working on his speech Thursday between vacation excursions with his family. "This is going to be a very personal statement," White House deputy press secretary Bill Burton said. Kennedy, he said, "was a giant to the United States but also in President Obama's life."

For the second day, thousands of mourners are expected to pay their final respects to Kennedy on Friday as his body lies in repose at the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum in Boston.

The facility was scheduled to open at 8 a.m., but opened early to accommodate the hundreds of people who had lined up well before then. Closing is scheduled for 3 p.m.

White House senior adviser David Axelrod said the eulogy "will be much more about Ted Kennedy the man, and the warm and loving human being. ... The president was so fond of him as a person."

Kennedy had a big impact on Obama's meteoric political career, taking him under his wing in 2005 and counseling him in the rear of the Senate chamber. "Obama was pressing Kennedy for lessons on how to operate," recalls Jim Manley, spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

Kennedy's endorsement of Obama's long-shot presidential candidacy exactly 19 months ago "was a passing of the torch of leadership," Axelrod said. It helped Obama overcome Hillary Rodham Clinton, the favorite to win the Democratic nomination.

The endorsement was "immeasurable in some ways," Burton said, because it provided a timely "cannon burst for the campaign."

The relationship extended to their personal lives in ways that will endure: Bo, the Obamas' Portuguese water dog, was a gift from Kennedy four months ago. In July, Obama delivered a letter from Kennedy to Pope Benedict XVI.

Three days of mourning for the senator began Thursday with a private Mass for family members at their Hyannis Port compound. Kennedy's flag-draped casket was driven past thousands of spectators on a 70-mile sojourn to Boston for two days of public viewing and a memorial service tonight at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library.

At least 40 senators will attend the funeral. Former presidents George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter also have said they will be there.

A spokesman for former president George H. W. Bush said Friday that he and his wife, Barbara, decided not to attend Kennedy's funeral after learning their son would attend.

Jim McGrath says the 85-year-old Bush feels his son's presence would "amply and well represent" the family Saturday.

Bush released a condolence statement on behalf of him and his son immediately after Kennedy's death. It was part of a stream of fond remembrances issued by Republicans.

That will be followed by a flight to Virginia, where Kennedy will be buried next to his slain brothers, John and Robert, at Arlington National Cemetery.

Kiely reported from Washington. Contributing: The Associated Press