It might sound trite and silly these days, but Walter Cronkite was a rock for

Americans in his day.

It would not be overstating things much to say that Americans leaned on him

in some ways. He was trusted like no one before him and certainly no one since.

He was like the nation's favorite old uncle, the bearer of our news and history

who somehow came to embody wisdom, patience, dignity and strength.

__IMAGE1__He was an anchor and an anchorman — reliable, steady, calm, optimistic — and

if he ever wasn't, he kept it pretty much to himself.

Except on very rare occasions.

In 2002, Cronkite came to Salt Lake City to serve as narrator for the annual

Mormon Tabernacle Choir Christmas concert. Like other guest performers, he was

given an audience with the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of

Latter-day Saints — President Gordon B. Hinckley and his counselors, President

Thomas S. Monson and President James E. Faust. In that room, there was the

collected wisdom of the ages — 335 years in all that day.

"It was like sitting in a forest of giant oaks who had weathered many

storms," says Craig Jessop, director of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir at the time

and witness to that meeting.

President Hinckley and Cronkite did most of the talking.

"How old are you?" Cronkite asked at one point.

"Older than you," President Hinckley said with a wink.

They continued to chat, and then Cronkite turned serious. Here it was, the

moment when America's anchor — the rock of the country, the man who reported and

saw us through the John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King assassinations and

Vietnam and Civil Rights Movement and the tumultuous '70s — finally let down his

guard and revealed his creeping fear and skepticism.

"I've always been a man of optimism," he began. "I have always thought that

ultimately things would get better and better, but I must say I am beginning to

have my doubts."

President Hinckley slammed his left hand on the giant walnut table in front

of them and declared, "I have not! I have not lost my faith in goodness. I

believe in the ultimate triumph of good over evil and that ultimately all will

be well."

As Jessop recalls, "Mr. Cronkite kind of melted in assurance. It was like the

weight of the world was taken off his shoulders. He looked at President Hinckley

from under those bushy eyebrows as if he believed him, as if he were comforted.

It was very moving."

It was indicative of the universal love and respect for Cronkite that the

choir invited him to participate in its Christmas concert. Choir president Mac

Christensen proposed the idea, and Jessop, who had worked with Cronkite in 1989

on another project while directing the Air Force Band in Europe, made the phone

call.

"I spoke to his special assistant, Marlene," recalls Jessop. "She took the

idea to him, and within hours she called back. She said he was very

interested.

"Then she said, 'You know he loves to conduct. He conducted the Marine Corps

Band and the New York Philharmonic and Boston Pops. If you threw that in, you

got him."

"Then by all means!" said Jessop. "We'll plan on it."

Cronkite narrated a true story about German and American soldiers calling a

brief truce during World War I to celebrate Christmas Eve together. His steady

baritone was like another instrument that evening.

Then he took the baton and conducted the night's climactic musical

performance. Looking back now, Jessop says, "One of the top experiences in my

professional life was standing in the wings watching Walter Cronkite conduct the

Hallelujah chorus. He was beaming like a child."

The nation is mourning the passing of Cronkite, who died last week at 92. It

is a measure of his aura that he was still widely loved and respected some 28

years after he retired as America's anchorman. When Cronkite passed, Jessop

recalled another moment he shared with the man in 2002.

The day after Cronkite met with the First Presidency, he attended a luncheon

held in his honor at the Joseph Smith Memorial Building. During the luncheon,

Cronkite was presented a gift from the church — a book of his family genealogy

that was nearly a foot thick.

"Tears came to his eyes," says Jessop. "He was very touched."

At one point during the luncheon, Cronkite turned to Jessop, who was seated

immediately to his left, and revealed a little more of himself.

"Mr. Jessop," he said, "I'm not a religious man in the traditional sense of

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the word. I don't attend church on Sunday, although I grew up a Methodist in

Missouri. But I have felt closer to my God this weekend than I have ever felt.

There is something quite remarkable here."


E-mail: drob@desnews.com

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