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RICHARD NIXON: 1913-1994 : National, World Figures Top Guest List : Dignitaries: Diplomats from 86 nations, plus Clinton and all four ex-Presidents, will attend.

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TIMES STAFF WRITERS

Diplomats from 86 nations will attend today’s funeral for former President Richard Nixon, joined by a host of government leaders past and present in mourning a man who played a central role in American politics for five decades, officials announced Tuesday.

For some who served under Nixon in an administration that was cut short by Watergate, the solemn occasion at the site of Nixon’s birthplace will mark a reunion of sorts.

“I’m looking forward to seeing a lot of old friends,” said Robert H. Finch, a former California lieutenant governor who served under Nixon as Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. “It’ll be a chance to share war stories.”

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There will be no shortage of luminaries.

President Clinton will be there, along with all four of his living predecessors--Gerald R. Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and George Bush.

Henry Kissinger, Sen. Robert Dole and Gov. Pete Wilson will all deliver eulogies, and a planeload of current and former Administration leaders will descend on Orange County as well. Among the more well-known figures from the Nixon era who are expected to attend: Spiro Agnew, Caspar Weinberger, Alexander M. Haig Jr., George P. Shultz and Patrick Buchanan.

So wide is the political mix among the guests that a White House briefing in Washington on Tuesday quickly turned to speculation about whether Air Force One, which will carry both Nixon’s old crew and current Administration officials, will have to be divided.

“The Republicans on the right, Democrats on the left?” one reporter asked jokingly.

“This will be an integrated trip,” quipped White House spokeswoman Dee Dee Myers.

One reporter then wondered aloud whether there would be a seat reserved for “Deep Throat,” the source that Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein made famous in “All the President’s Men,” their book on the Watergate scandal.

Officials at the Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace have been promising to make public a list of guests since the weekend, but nothing had been released as of late Tuesday.

Instead, names have been trickling out from around the country. In Washington, officials on Tuesday announced the 86 countries that are expected to send representatives--from Angola to Zambia. The European Union and the United Nations will also send representatives.

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Among the most prominent foreign diplomats expected to attend are former Prime Minister Edward Heath of Great Britain, former President Chaim Herzog of Israel, and former Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa of Japan.

No current heads of state are known to be attending, a reflection, in part, of the fact that the service is being held in Orange County rather than Washington. Nixon made it known before his death that he did not want to lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda, in a city that he felt had abandoned him during Watergate. That effectively eliminated the chance for foreign dignitaries to combine the trip with diplomatic issues, officials said.

Many of the guests from around the United States and the world began arriving Tuesday.

At the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Dana Point, hotel officials said they had five to 10 rooms reserved for government officials who are attending the funeral.

Most of the dignitaries stayed away from the library Tuesday as thousands of people withstood rain and hail for the former President’s public viewing.

But Gov. Wilson and his wife, Gayle, made a late-afternoon appearance, leaving a wreath of yellow roses near the casket as they stood in silent prayer for a few moments.

“He was a friend for more than 30 years,” said Wilson, who served as an aide to Nixon when the former President ran unsuccessfully for California governor in 1962.

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Wilson’s potential opponent in November, state Treasurer Kathleen Brown, will also attend.

But it won’t be all politicians at the funeral. Orange County fast-food baron Carl N. Karcher, who met Nixon in the 1940s when he was campaigning for a seat in Congress, said he, too, plans to attend today’s event.

Karcher recalled Tuesday that Pat and Richard Nixon used to send his family a holiday wreath each year to decorate the front door of their Anaheim home. Last fall, when Karcher was forced out as chairman of the Carl’s Jr. restaurant chain, Nixon wrote him a personal letter.

“He wished me success. . . . He was a warm person, a person you could talk to very comfortably,” he said.

Karcher said it’s fitting for Nixon to be buried at the side of his wife, Pat. “I know that after her burial he wanted to be alone (at the grave site) for a while,” Karcher said. “Now he can be with her for eternity.”

Who’s Coming to Yorba Linda

President Clinton, four former Presidents and dignitaries from 86 countries are among the guests expected to attend Richard Nixon’s funeral today. Among the invitees:

PRESIDENTS

* President Bill Clinton

* Former President George Bush

* Former President Jimmy Carter

* Former President Gerald Ford

* Former President Ronald Reagan

NIXON’S ADMINISTRATION MEMBERS

* Spiro Agnew, former Vice President

* Henry Kissinger, former Secretary of State, and Nancy Kissinger

* Peter Brennan, former Secretary of Labor

* Frederick Dent, former Secretary of Commerce

* James Lynn, former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development

* Elliott Richardson, former Attorney General

* William Rogers, former Secretary of State, and Adele Rogers

* William Saxbe, former Attorney General

* James Schlesinger, former Secretary of Defense

* Alexander M. Haig, former White House Chief of Staff, and Patricia Haig

* Robert Strauss, former Ambassador to Russia

* Brent Scowcroft, former Deputy Assistant to President for National Security Affairs

* Herbert Stein, former Chairman, President’s Council of Economic Advisers

* Robert H. Finch, former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare

* George Shultz, former Secretary of Labor

* Patrick Buchanan, former Nixon speech writer

* Charles Colson, former Nixon Aide

* Myles Ambrose, former Customs Commissioner

FOREIGN DIGNITARIES CONFIRMED

* Edward Heath, former Prime Minister of England

* Morihiro Hosokawa, former Prime Minister of Japan

* Chaim Herzog, former President of Israel

OTHER COUNTRIES REPRESENTED

(Names of representatives were not yet available)

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Angola, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bahamas, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brunei, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, Chile, China, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Egypt, Ethiopia, Fiji, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Guatemala, Honduras, Hungary, Indonesia, India, Ireland, Israel, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Korea, Latvia, Lebanon, Liberia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Maldives, Monaco, Morocco, Mozambique, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Paraguay, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Romania, Russia, Senegal, Seychelles, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Suriname, Syria, Taiwan, Thailand, Tanzania, Togo, Tunisia, Turkey, Uruguay, Venezuela, Yemen, Zambia, United Nations

CLINTON ADMINISTRATION, U.S. CONGRESS, OTHER LAWMAKERS

* Sen. Robert Dole

* William Perry, Secretary of Defense

* Gen. John Shalikashvili, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff

* Strobe Talbott, Ambassador to Russia

* Carol Browner, EPA Administrator

* Thomas Foley, Speaker of the House

* Sen. George Mitchell

* Sen. Daniel Moynihan

* Rep. Richard Gephardt

* Rep. Newt Gingrich

* Mack McLarty, White House Chief of Staff

* Sen. Charles Robb and Lynda Johnson Robb

* Phil Lader, Deputy White House Chief of Staff

* Bruce Lindsey, Clinton Senior Adviser

* David Gergen, Counselor to the President

* Anthony Lake, National Security Adviser

* Mark Gearan, Assistant to the President for Communications

* Dee Dee Myers, White House press secretary

* Pat Griffin, Senior White House Aide

* Winston Lord, Assistant Secretary of State

OTHER GUESTS

* Gov. Pete Wilson

* Carl Karcher, founder of Karcher Enterprises

* Vernon Jordan, former head of Urban League

* Jo Horton Haldeman, widow of H.R. Haldeman

* Caspar Weinberger, former Secretary of Defense

* Mark Hatfield, former Oregon senator

* George McGovern, former senator of South Dakota

* Dwayne Andreas, former Ambassador to People’s Republic of China

* Ken Duberstein, former White House Chief of Staff

Source: Los Angeles Times

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