<P>WHo organized the march out onto the Drive?
<P> <B><I>LouPaulsen <LouPaulsen@attbi.com></I></B> wrote:
<BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">This Indymedia account is pretty accurate as far as it goes:<BR>http://www.chicago.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=21853&group=webcast<BR><BR>One thing it doesn't adequately go into, I think, is the positive reaction<BR>we got from the people whose traffic we were snarling: honking, smiling,<BR>peace signs, taking leaflets, etc. The people on the roads were<BR>overwhelmingly anti-war and were mainly not pissed at us for what we were<BR>doing.<BR><BR>My estimate would be about 1000 arrests, on the basis of the info below.<BR>When we came back on Chicago Ave. to Michigan, between the French embassy<BR>(!) and the pumping station, the police sealed off Chicago at Michigan with<BR>a massive double line of police. There was a standoff there from about 8:30<BR>to 9:00, during which time some of us left. There were about 2000 of us<BR>left occupying the block of Chicago Ave. east of Michi
gan.<BR><BR>Around 9:00 pm I tried to leave going east, but ran into another line of<BR>police. I was told by the police I couldn't go that way, only to the west.<BR>The police at the western blockade said I couldn't go that way, only to the<BR>east. It was soon pretty obvious that they had sealed us in and were giving<BR>us deliberate bullshit and they weren't going to let anyone out. Not even<BR>some 'innocent shoppers' who were also trapped in there.<BR><BR>The understanding of this started to work its way through the crowd.<BR>Meanwhile they were massively reinforcing both the eastern and western<BR>blockades, so there were about 150 cops at least at each end of the block,<BR>with riot helmets. Then they distributed clubs to all the police in the<BR>front lines; an officer came by with a handful of clubs and gave them out to<BR>cops who didn't have one. They also distributed those noose-like white<BR>plastic<BR>cord things for tying your hands when they arrest you.<BR><B
R>There was chanting and drumming going on all this time, and !
since people<BR>couldn't go anywhere, about half of the people in Chicago Ave. sat down in<BR>the street; of course the sidewalks and muddy planted areas north and south<BR>of the road were also packed with people. Then the cops made a move from<BR>the west on the people who were sitting there. A few went limp and took<BR>busts, but they grabbed some who didn't intend it; people jumped up and<BR>remained standing from this time on.<BR><BR>During this time people were on their cell phones trying to explain to<BR>people how they were probably going to be arrested for the crime of being on<BR>this block at this particular time, they were not being allowed to leave the<BR>area or disperse, etc. A woman next to me said, "The Superintendent's<BR>office is just lying. They say the police are begging people to leave but<BR>they won't."<BR><BR>For the next hour or so they pressed the lines in from the east and west,<BR>cramming us standing up into a smaller and smaller area, and ducki
ng into<BR>the crowd and picking us out to be arrested in ones and twos, without any<BR>pattern that I could see. Except I think they were less likely to get you<BR>if you were on the sidewalk. But there was no way everyone could have stood<BR>on the sidewalk at that point. Up until about 10:30 they whittled our<BR>numbers down to about half, which is why I think there were 1,000 arrests.<BR>Then, they stopped making arrests, and they began to let the remainder of us<BR>out through the eastern barricade, spaced out at maybe 10 or 15 per minute.<BR>I got out at maybe 11:00 pm.<BR><BR>LP<BR><BR><BR><BR></BLOCKQUOTE><p><br><hr size=1>Do you Yahoo!?<br>
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