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Miller Williams, a 66-year-old poet from Arkansas, has given public readings of his work many times. Once, at Oberlin College in Ohio, 12 people showed up; on another occasion, the crowd actually reached 2,500. But nothing he has ever done could have prepared Williams for the performance on his schedule for a week from tomorrow, when he will recite about 40 lines of metered verse at President Clinton's second inaugurationto a television audience of 200 million. As of Friday, Williams still wasn't exactly sure about which 40 lines of his straightforward, accessible poetry he'll be readingfor the very good reason that he hadn't written them yet. He also wasn't exactly sure what the subject would be."It's a sweet and daunting challenge, and you might say I'm still nailing down the boards," he said, rolling out some well-formed phrases in a telephone interview from his office at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, Ark. "I guess the first goal is not to embarrass my friends," he said, "and the second is to say something meaningful about who Americans are and who they have been and who they might hope to become. I'd like it to be something that any Americans who might be reading it in 35 or 50 years would feel it was written to them."A professor of English and foreign languages at the university and director of the University of Arkansas Press, he is the author of more than 20 books and the recipient of many honors, including the 1995 Academy Award in Literature of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Amy Lowell Award in Poetry. He said he's not really a friend of the President, but he does know him. "He was on the faculty here, teaching law, in 1975," he said. "Whenever he's in town for one reason or another, a reception or whatever, he would always speak to me and my wife, Jordan." Williams says he's looking forward to Inauguration Day with more pleasure than pressure. "They told me to bring a heavy overcoat and a black tie for at least one ball," he said.
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The table was set for dinner at Ladder Co. 127, but the men gathered around it yesterday tasted only the tears running down their soot-coated faces. The aroma of a holiday turkey dinner, begun at dawn, filled the firehouse on Hillside Ave., but the kitchen table was crowded with firefighters crying. Holiday decorations, a Santa Claus and wreaths were prematurely stripped away and replaced with black bunting. "Fifteen guys are blubbering at the kitchen table," said Firefighter Frederic k Fuchs. "Believe me, you don't see that often on this job." The holiday celebration that should have been taking place was replaced by grief counselors who hurried to comfort the firefighters who were with Lt. John Clancy when he died. "The counselors came and encouraged everyone to speak," Fuchs said. "Everyone who spoke started bawling. We spoke about the futility of the situation. These guys were right there and reached out and couldn't get him." The tragedy was particularly hard on a young firefighter who others would not name, calling him "the kid." The rookie was right behind Clancy when he fell into the basement, tried to reach down to save him, but was forced back by the flames roaring in his face. "Nobody can be faulted for what happened," Fuchs said. Fuchs was Clancy's chauffeur yesterday. They could see the smoke from the fire as they approached. He said Clancy was calm and professional and had no idea how treacherous the fire was going to be. "He said, 'It looks like a lot of smoke. Maybe it's a car fire,' " Fuchs recalled.Firefighter Jim O'Shea said, "You have no idea what it's like. I spoke to the guy last night and now he's gone. It just sucks." Many of the firefighters also knew Firefighter Peter McLaughlin of Rescue 4, who died Oct. 8. The two companies often worked fires together. It was Rescue 4 team members who rushed into the basement to recover Clancy's body. In the afternoon, Rescue 4 was among a stream of visitors to the firehouse to console the stricken company. "This is just becoming too common," O'Shea said. "We're all sad, but there's a lot of work to be done," he continued. "We've got to plan for the funeral and see what can be done for the family. Their needs come first." The company was taken out of service, but nobody went home. "It's like we can't move. Nobody can do anything," Fuchs said.
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Immigrants have poured into New York City in such large numbers during the 1990s that the population has increased slightly, even though more than 1 million people moved out during that time, new census figures show. The city's population grew by more than 20,000 between 1990 and 1997, while the state population, also powered by immigration, rose 146,000. "If you didn't have international immigration, New York would be like Pennsylvania," said Census Bureau analyst Marc Perry. "They're experiencing a population decrease." Absent an influx of foreign-born workers, city planners said, neighborhoods might have suffered widespread abandonment of their aging buildings. New York also would suffer a greater loss of political clout. The state already stands to lose two of its 31 House seats after the 2000 census as the population balance of power shifts to the South and the West. The cut would be even deeper without the immigrant tide. "What's different now is we are more dependent than ever on immigrants," said Joseph Salvo, a senior city planner. Tong Leung is the face of the changing New York. He is Chinese, the city's third-largest immigrant group during the 1990s after newcomers from the Dominican Republic and the former Soviet Union. Leung, 51, came to the city in 1990 from Hong Kong with a friend. "I came here because I wanted to improve my economic situation. I felt I could make more money here," Leung said yesterday. He has held a variety of jobs, including waiter, garment factory worker and moving company laborer. As Leung and hundreds of thousands of fellow immigrants settled in the five boroughs, more than 1 million people left the city during 1990-97, and more than 500,000 died. The influx of immigrants, combined with more than 900,000 births, resulted in a 20,072 population jump, to 7.3 million people. Immigration also influenced the city's birth rate because the newcomers, particularly Hispanic immigrants, generally have higher birth rates than other New Yorkers, Salvo said.
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