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(23 Jul 2001) 1. Exterior of the National Cathedral 2. Wide shot inside the National Cathedral 3. U.S lawmakers walking into Cathedral 4. Senator John McCain and other Senators walking into Cathedral 5. Bill and Hillary Clinton walking into Cathedral 6. Wide shot of Cathedral interior shortly before funeral services 7. Bill and Hillary Clinton standing in front of Alan Greenspan and Andrea Mitchell 8. Pallbearers walking casket down aisle 9. Pallbearers bringing casket to front of Cathedral 10. Cutaway of a stained glass window 11. Wide shot of crowd being seated 12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Henry Kissinger, Former US Secretary of State "The Washington Post had been a relentless critic of many aspects of the administrations in which I served. This paradox was overwhelmed by the admiration and affection I felt for Kay as a person." 13. Cutaway of crowd 14. Wide shot of Arthur Schlesinger speaking 15. SOUNDBITE (English): Arthur Schlesinger, Historian "She was a quiet revolutionary on behalf of all women, brought up to expect a life of marriage and motherhood. She helped transform the expectations that so long had cramped and confined her sex. From ending the archaic Washington ritual of separation of the sexes after dinner, to breaking into a business that men regarded as their private property and showing that women can beat men and their own game, she encouraged and emboldened other women to enter hither to forbidden fields." 16. Wide shot of funeral service 17. Cutaway of Microsoft's Bill Gates in audience 18. SOUNDBITE (English): Donald Graham, Katharine Graham's Son "She favored fairness, daring, digging, honesty, non-partisanship. She loved a good story and burst with pride at the people who wrote them and did any other key job well." 19. Pull out from medium shot of the crowd to extreme wide shot STORYLINE: Thousands paid tribute on Monday to Katharine Graham, former publisher of Washington Post. Graham, 84, died last week from head injuries suffered during a fall. Power players from all circles filled Washington's National Cathedral, where former President Bill Clinton and Vice President Dick Cheney shared a pew. Microsoft chairman Bill Gates traveled across the country while senators left the Capitol together in a blue-and-white striped bus to attend the funeral. Friends and family recounted memories of a gallant lady who befriended U-S presidents and a brave businesswoman who longed for news stories that gave her a "piece of the action." Historian Arthur Schlesinger remembered Graham as trailblazer, who made enormous strides in helping to change the role of women in American society and the media. And he said she's left a lasting mark on American history. But despite her power in Washington circles, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger recalled Mrs. Graham as "matter of factly loyal to her friends and deeply devoted to her family." Kissinger noted his friendship with Graham grew despite the fact that the Post under her stewardship often was a relentless critic of the administrations in which he served. Graham's former executive editor, Ben Bradlee, called Graham "a spectacular dame" and told how she jumped out of the shower for a phone call from former President Ronald Reagan and took notes. The son who succeeded her as publisher of the Washington Post newspaper said his mother was a steadying hand in journalism during the tumultuous publishing of the Pentagon Papers and the Watergate scandal that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon. Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...