richard lowrey, "weekly standard" founding editor william crystal and neal freeman, the moderator of "firing line." this is an hour, 10 minutes. >> all right, we're about to begin. this panel is called, buckley's legacy, how would the patron saint turbo charge conservatism, and it's a very apt question to be asking about bill, because bill's concern from the beginning of his career, it had to do with his own performances, it had to do with his own writing, but much, much more importantly, it had to do with helping to shape the direction of the country. as various people have remarked so far, he didn't use the word "conservative" of himself as a young man. terms like "radical" and "individualist" were the terms he favored, but that soon changed when he started -- when he and billy schlum started thinking about this new magazine of theirs. it wasn't meant to be another "time magazine" like henry luce's. this was going to be a magazine that would shape a movement, the conservative movement, and he started using that word, conservative. he specifically did not want to gather only people