AP Photo/Doug Mills
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WASHINGTON, D.C.: Bill Clinton had given a
lot of thought to the fact that he was about to give not just his own
celebratory second Inauguration speech, but the final such address of
the millennium. Looking for a way to invoke the kind of Big Ideas that
millennial thinking seems to demand, he scribbled revisions in his text
right down to the wire. After attending a church service with his
family, and basking in the oratory of Jesse Jackson, the President
headed down to the ceremony on a frigid and overcast morning. As if on
cue, the winter sun broke through the clouds just moments before the
President raised his right hand, placed his left on a well-worn family
Bible held by his wife, and took the oath of office. In his 25-minute
speech, Clinton brushed over specifics, touching on inspirational
themes. He called on Americans to transcend their differences and to
open the doors of education and opportunity to all in what he called a
new era and a new land. Cannon fire punctuated the applause that
followed as some 250,000 people withstood near-freezing temperatures on
the Mall to witness this celebration of American self-government. Though
this Inauguration was a smaller, less lavish affair than Clinton's
Hollywood-style blowout in 1993, the crowd seemed jubilant, buoyed by
the gospel choir, Jessye Norman's powerful rendition of "America the
Beautiful," and the verse of Arkansas poet Miller Williams. During the
day that is set aside every four years to celebrate Democracy's peaceful
transition of power, tensions that have plagued Washington momentarily
disappeared. Speaker Gingrich led a delegation of GOP leaders in helping
escort Clinton to the podium, then praised him good-naturedly in the
President's traditional post-Inauguration visit to the Hill. Along the
frigid parade route late in the afternoon, the mood of celebration was
infectious. The crowd sang along as the Tennessee band marched by
playing "It's a Grand Old Flag," like thousands of others up and down
Pennsylvania Avenue waving flags of their own. A woman who admitted that
she was a Republican who loathes Clinton said well of course she had
come to take in the day's celebration: "no matter who it is, it's still
the Inauguration." Soon enough tomorrow to take up those swords again.
By Jenifer Mattos
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