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He said congressional offices should establish a contact with local law enforcement, When lawmakers are home, he said, they should share their schedule with local police. He also pleaded with staff members to fill out an emergency contact form. Amid the mourning, Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., a longtime advocate of gun control, said he would introduce legislation later this month to ban high-capacity ammunition clips. The measure would re-establish a prohibition that lapsed in 2004 on clips that feed more than 10 rounds at a time. "The only reason to have 33 bullets loaded in a handgun is to kill a lot of people very quickly. These high-capacity clips simply should not be on the market," Lautenberg said in a statement. As Washington's agenda adjusted, Obama postponed an economic trip to New York on Tuesday. The first lady, Michelle Obama, scrapped her own Tuesday event with business leaders until a more appropriate time. At 11 a.m. EST Obama and his wife walked out of the White House to the sounding of a bell. They stood in silence, flanked by the collection of advisers, kitchen staff, maintenance workers and clerks who keep the White House running. The scene was reminiscent of the moment of silence held every year on Sept. 11.
At the same time, farther down Pennsylvania Avenue, hundreds of legislative aides stood on the east steps of the Capitol, heads down in silence. And at the Supreme Court, the justices paused to reflect, too, between the two cases they were hearing Monday morning. The White House said Obama had called Gifford's husband, Mark Kelly, and the family of Christina Taylor Green, a 9-year-old girl killed in Saturday's attack, among others. Obama also sought to shift some attention to those who acted with bravery as a horrifying scene unfolded in front of them on Saturday in Tucson. He spoke of a college student who ran into danger to rescue his boss, and a wounded woman who helped keep the suspect from reloading ammunition, and other citizens who wrestled the man to the ground. "Part of what I think that speaks to," Obama said, "is the best of America."
[Associated
Press;
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