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Strategies & Market Trends : Waiting for the big Kahuna

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To: William H Huebl who wrote (49846)1/15/2001 1:57:20 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) of 94695
 

"the world will see there is a very divided United States."


Security for Inauguration to Be Tightest Ever

January 14, 2001

From The New York Times

By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM

WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 — With thousands of demonstrators expected here next Saturday,
the law enforcement authorities are planning the tightest security ever
for a Presidential inauguration.

Police officers will be stationed every few feet along Pennsylvania Avenue.
For the first time, people going to watch the inaugural parade
will have to pass through checkpoints where bags can be searched.
Signs with long handles will be confiscated. And most of the Mall between the Capitol and the Washington Monument will be off limits.

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Others will be protesting what they believe to be faulty election procedures
that led to George W. Bush's victory. Still others will be demonstrating on issues
like the death penalty, the environment, the minimum wage and aid to Israel.

During the swearing-in ceremony, the National Organization for Women
will hold a rally several blocks away at the Navy Memorial on Pennsylvania Avenue.

While the crowd is gathering at the Capitol for Mr. Bush's swearing in,
the Rev. Al Sharpton plans to lead a march nearby, from Stanton Park southeast of Union Station
to the Supreme Court.


At noon, as Mr. Bush is taking the oath of office, Mr. Sharpton will take an oath,
he said, to uphold the Voting Rights Act and to establish uniform voting standards
across the country. Then, while Mr. Bush is delivering his Inaugural Address,
Mr. Sharpton will give his own address.
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These will be the first substantial protests during an inauguration
since antiwar demonstrators protested at Richard M. Nixon's
second inauguration, in 1973.

The National Park police said then that there were 60,000 protesters.
The demonstrations were mostly orderly, with some minor scuffles and a few arrests.

Protest organizers who have come forward said they did not plan
on civil disobedience next week. "We're going to be noisy, we're going to be seen,
but we're not going to try to shut down the event,"
said Adam Eidinger,
an organizer for a coordinating group called the Justice Action Movement.

Brian Becker, co-director of the International Action Center, a New York group
that is organizing buses of protesters on the East Coast, said
: "We don't want to be tear-gassed or create a war zone.
As George Bush proceeds up Pennsylvania Avenue and as the eyes
of the world focus on this, the world will see there is a very divided United States

. We will be all along the parade route."

********************************************************************

For the first time, the inauguration has been designated a "national special security event,"

which means that the Secret Service is in overall charge of security arrangements
. More than a dozen law enforcement agencies will be involved,iincluding the
Capitol police, the Supreme Court police, the National Park police,
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
and police forces from suburban Maryland and Virginia.

nytimes.com
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