The first shout-out Monday at former Gov. Wendell Anderson's memorial service went to two of his favorites: "East-Siders and the University of Minnesota old-timers."
Anderson, who graduated from St. Paul's Johnson High School and played hockey at the U, died of pneumonia July 17 at 83. Friends, family and colleagues gathered at Mount Olivet Lutheran Church in southwest Minneapolis for a public send-off that paid tribute to his commitment to public education, state parks, hockey, Minnesota and all things Swedish.
Of an estimated 300 mourners, many were recognizable figures in state politics from the past 50 years, including former Vice President Walter Mondale, who sat up front. With the exception of Gov. Jesse Ventura, every living former governor attended, along with scores of others who would like to have held the office.
During the 75-minute ceremony, the governor was remembered by Gov. Mark Dayton, former Senate Majority Leader Roger Moe, former university Board of Regents member David Lebedoff, and his son, Brett Anderson, a food writer for the New Orleans Times-Picayune.
Each of the politicians referred to the late governor as "Wendy." Speakers blended the humorous and poignant, the golden moments and darker times that ranged from an Olympic silver medal in hockey to his early exile from Minnesota politics due to his own misstep.
Lebedoff said Anderson insisted on starting every speech with a joke regardless of the occasion, and Dayton did so. The current governor got the first of many laughs in the speeches when he said that if central casting came looking for a "quintessential" Minnesota governor, "You'd pick Wendy and send everyone else home" because he was tall, handsome, had a beautiful family and "a last name that ends in 'son.' "
Like Moe and Lebedoff, Dayton touched on the legislative victories known as the "Minnesota Miracle," where in his six years in office Anderson oversaw the equalizing of school funding between rich and poor districts along with the shifting of the tax burden from property taxes to income taxes.
Elected in 1970 at age 37, the DFLer was a telegenic star with policy gravitas and a dedication to making lives better, and the extraordinary political skill to bring together political parties, the rich and poor to get it done.