WASHINGTON (AFP) — Ten people will be rubbing shoulders with
dignitaries and stars at US president-elect Barack Obama's swearing-in
next month if they win a contest launched Tuesday by the presidential
inaugural committee."You and a guest could be flown to
Washington DC, put up in a hotel and be part of this once-in-a-lifetime
event," in exchange for submitting an essay about the meaning to them
of the inauguration, an announcement on the inaugural committee's
website says.Contestants have to be US citizens or permanent
residents aged 18 or older, and the essays have to be submitted
electronically by January 8 on the website of the inaugural committee
-- www.pic2009.org/tickettohistory.
It was unclear where the winners of the contest would stay within walking distance of the Capitol, where the swearing-in ceremony will be held, but if they do, they would be spared the "crush-level" crowds that officials have predicted will pack Washington's public transportation system on January 20."DC's subway system ... is expecting 'crush-level' crowds" for the inauguration, inaugural officials said in a statement issued late Monday."Be prepared to wait for space on a train for long periods of time, during which you will have to stand in close proximity to several thousand people," the statement said, suggesting walking as the best way to get to the ceremony for those staying near the Capitol.The lucky contest winners will not have to brave the crowds on the National Mall because they will be part of an elite 240,000 guests with coveted tickets for seats for the swearing-in ceremony that will take place on the west-facing side of the Capitol.Inauguration organizers said Monday they expect "a million or more people to view the inauguration from the National Mall ... along with hundreds of thousands of others who plan on watching the inaugural parade down Pennsylvania Avenue."Officials initially put the numbers of inauguration day visitors to Washington as high as five million, but have since scaled back their estimates.Security officials have ensured that they are ready to handle crowds of any size.Entrants to the essay contest are asked to make a donation to the inaugural fund, even if doing so will not affect their chances of winning, according to the small print at the bottom of the website.The inauguration organizing committee says Obama's swearing-in ceremony and the balls and other events that will take place around it will be funded by individuals, not by lobbyists, corporations, political action committees or labor unions, as has been the case for past inaugurations.That, they say, is a first, as is the unprecedented transparency of listing all donations in excess of 200 dollars on the official inauguration website.Individual donations have been capped at 50,000 dollars and bundled donations -- where one donor gathers contributions from many individuals in a corporation or community -- at 300,000 dollars.People from all walks of life and all ethnicities are bucking the trend to pinch pennies as the United States weathers its worst economic slump since the Great Depression in the 1930s and donating to the inaugural fund for Obama, the first African-American elected to the White House.According to media reports, individuals have donated 21 million dollars to defray the costs of the inauguration.Hollywood actress Halle Berry and director Steven Spielberg have each given the maximum 50,000 dollars, and AIDS activist and former basketball star Earvin "Magic" Johnson has donated 25,000 dollars, the list of individual contributors shows. CONTINUE READING...