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Several hundred protesters briefly marched through the Wall Street neighborhood Monday evening, honking horns and chanting. "The banks got bailed out, we got sold out!" went one chant. "All day, all week, occupy Wall Street," went another. Police walked alongside the marchers as they traveled down Broadway, through Wall Street, down Beaver Street and up Broad Street. In Boston, hundreds of college students marched through downtown Monday and gathered on Boston Common, holding signs that read "Fund education, not corporations." The protesters said they're angry with an education system they say mimics what they call the "irresponsible, unaccountable, and unethical financial practices" of Wall Street. Early Tuesday morning, more than 50 members of Occupy Boston were arrested for trespassing after they refused to move from a site across the street from their encampment. In New York, officers from the city's First Precinct are patrolling the area near Wall Street, and other squads help out as necessary, depending on the size and movement of the demonstrators. If the crowd seems to be growing on a particular day, the NYPD dispatches more officers to the area, Kelly said. "We are down 6,000 police officers from where we were 10 years ago, so it's difficult to do any type of protracted operation with people who are working in their regular tour of duty," Kelly said.
[Associated
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