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Old 01-21-2005, 04:58 AM
LTA4 LTA4 is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: New York, NY
Posts: 50
by the numbers...

A look at this week's festivities by the numbers:

$40 million: Cost of Bush inaugural ball festivities, not counting
security costs.

$2,000: Amount FDR spent on the inaugural in 1945…about $20,000 in
today's dollars.

$20,000: Cost of yellow roses purchased for inaugural festivities by
D.C.'s Ritz Carlton.

200: Number of Humvees outfitted with top-of-the-line armor for troops
in Iraq that could have been purchased with the amount of money blown
on the inauguration.

$10,000: Price of an inaugural package at the Fairmont Hotel, which
includes a Beluga caviar and Dom Perignon reception, a chauffeured
Rolls Royce and two actors posing as "faux" Secret Service agents,
complete with black sunglasses and cufflink walkie-talkies.

400: Pounds of lobster provided for "inaugural feeding frenzy" at the
exclusive Mandarin Oriental hotel.

3,000: Number of "Laura Bush Cowboy cookies" provided for "inaugural
feeding frenzy" at the Mandarin hotel.

$1: Amount per guest President Carter spent on snacks for guests at his
inaugural parties. To stick to a tight budget, he served pretzels,
peanuts, crackers and cheese and had cash bars.

22 million: Number of children in regions devastated by the tsunami who
could have received vaccinations and preventive health care with the
amount of money spent on the inauguration.

1,160,000: Number of girls who could be sent to school for a year in
Afghanistan with the amount of money lavished on the inauguration.

$15,000: The down payment to rent a fur coat paid by one gala attendee
who didn't want the hassle of schlepping her own through the airport.

$200,500: Price of a room package at D.C.'s Mandarin Oriental,
including presidential suite, chauffeured Mercedes limo and outfits
from Neiman Marcus.

2,500: Number of U.S. troops used to stand guard as President Bush
takes his oath of office

26,000: Number of Kevlar vests for U.S. soldiers in Iraq and
Afghanistan that could be purchased for $40 million.

$290: Bonus that could go to each American solider serving in Iraq, if
inauguration funds were used for that purpose.

$6.3 million: Amount contributed by the finance and investment
industry, which works out to be 25 percent of all the money collected.

$17 million: Amount of money the White House is forcing the
cash-strapped city of Washington, D.C., to pony up for inauguration
security.

9: Percentage of D.C. residents who voted for Bush in 2004.

66: Percentage of Americans who think this over-the-top inauguration
should have been scaled back.