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Frank Lautenberg, Senate's Last World War II Vet, Buried At Arlington

ARLINGTON, Va. (CBSNewYork/AP) -- Frank Lautenberg, the last World War II veteran to serve in the U.S. Senate, was buried Friday with military honors in a rain-drenched ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery.

The Democrat from New Jersey served in the Army Signal Corps during the war. He spent nearly three decades in the Senate and was its oldest member when he died Monday at 89, after suffering complications from viral pneumonia.

PHOTOS: Lautenberg's Funeral

Lautenberg was buried on a hillside near the gravesite of President John F. Kennedy. A bugler played "Taps'' and soldiers fired three rifle volleys in his honor.

After serving in the Army, Lautenberg got help from the GI Bill and earned an undergraduate degree from Columbia University.

He ran for the Senate in 1982 after amassing a fortune as a founder of a payroll company, spending $3 million of his own money to beat Republican Rep. Millicent Fenwick in an upset.

Lautenberg's story "was an American story, but in his heart and in his lifetime, he was a man from New Jersey, a kid from Paterson," Sen. Robert Menendez said at Lautenberg's funeral on Wednesday.

Lautenberg was "the living definition of what it means to be a successful man," Vice President Joe Biden said during the service. "He saw (the Senate) as the place he could do more than all the financial successes that he had."

Lautenberg was a strong advocate on issues such as gun control, environmental protections and transportation. He wrote the laws banning smoking on domestic airline flights and setting the national minimum drinking age of 21.

Health problems had forced Lautenberg to miss many votes this year. In April, he returned to the chamber in a wheelchair for votes on gun legislation.

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