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The Capitol's north wing became a protester service center. Donated food laid out on tables fuels the villagers. The morning begins with breakfast cereals and bagels. Later in the day, tables are stocked with tortilla chips, specialty breads and vegan bakery items from a coffee shop. Gallons of soup and chili arrive from a cafe, cheese spreads from several sources and thousands of slices of pizza from a restaurant. "We teach at the high school and work in community farms and with small businesses," said Mermaid Cafe owner David McKercher. "When the teachers are in trouble and the health profession is in trouble, those are our associates, so we jump in there." Between empty pizza boxes and steaming teakettles is a makeshift day care center. Kids play and use markers to draw murals on butcher paper. Parents are told volunteers can look after the kids for 15 minutes if they need to use restrooms or get supplies. At the medical center, street medics and the occasional doctor or specialist
-- identified by their red-masking-taped-crosses -- tend to cuts and bruises. The biggest focus is hygiene, with boxes of deodorant, mouthwash, toothpaste and hand purifier lining the walls. Protesters who don't stay in the Capitol have plenty of options. Paul Adler, who arrived from Washington, D.C., said he didn't know exactly where he was going to stay. But he had enough offers that he could choose accommodations based on proximity to the Capitol. Capitol police have allowed protesters to stay 24 hours a day and hundreds do most nights. But police plan to end the sleepover at 4 p.m. Sunday, setting up a potential showdown in what has been a relatively incident-free protest. "I'm pretty sure there will be people unwilling to leave the building on their own two feet," Rowan said.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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