Americans are celebrating
their country's birthday Tuesday with big-time fireworks, small-town parades
and the quirky spectacle of competitive hot dog eating, marking a day of shared
traditions in a nation that has grappled with divides this past year.
Associated
Press report continues:
In
New York, throngs are expected to watch the annual Macy's fireworks blowout and
the Nathan's Famous frankfurter-chomping contest on Coney Island on July
Fourth. In Washington, President Donald Trump is observing his first
Independence Day in office by hosting a White House picnic for military
families, followed by a fireworks viewing event for military families and
staffers.
In
Boston, one of 14 original copies of the Declaration of Independence will be
displayed at a museum, and hundreds of thousands of people are expected at the
city's fireworks show. Organizers of Chicago's Independence Day celebration are
expecting such large crowds that the city's Navy Pier is opening at 10 a.m.,
nearly 12 hours before fireworks begin.
Meanwhile,
more than 15,000 new citizens will be sworn in during more than 65 Independence
Day-themed naturalization ceremonies across the country.
For
all the pomp and celebration, July 4 arrives with Americans deeply split over
the nation's direction, after last year's presidential election and political
clashes over immigration, health care and other issues in the early months of
Trump's Republican administration. And in an era of concerns about security,
the Independence Day celebrations are mixed with precautions.
The
New York Police Department planned to station 100 vehicles to block
intersections and 20 sand-filled sanitation trucks to fortify viewing areas for
the Macy's fireworks show. Heavily armed counterterrorism units will mingle
among spectators, officers will have portable radiation detection devices and
bomb-sniffing dogs, and officers will be stationed on rooftops to look out for
any sign of trouble.
Boston
police also plan to put trucks and other heavy equipment near the celebration
there. Police in both cities say there are no confirmed threats.
In
a somber observance of the toll of terror, small American flags will be placed
by all the nearly 3,000 names on the National Sept. 11 Memorial in New York.
Meanwhile, residents of Laconia, New Hampshire, might not have had a Fourth of July parade if a resident hadn't stepped in to organize it after learning it was facing cancellation for lack of interest. Some 25 organizations have since signed up to provide floats or marchers.
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