Pubdate: Fri, 29 Aug 2008 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2008 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Karen Auge, The Denver Post and Greg Mellen, MediaNews Group Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) ECLECTIC PROTESTERS STAGE ONE LAST MARCH At least 500 marchers, ranging from young adults to aged hippies, from medical marijuana proponents to anti-war activists, and from the thoroughly committed to the mildly interested, paraded along West Colfax Avenue from Lincoln Park to Invesco Field at Mile High in a raucous but peaceful procession Thursday afternoon. In a show of demonstrator unity the politicians inside the stadium would do well to emulate, the last major march of the 2008 Democratic National Convention left the park at 2:43 p.m. and along the way gathered up participants of just about every protester persuasion. Trailing a police vehicle with the now-familiar electric sign flashing, "Welcome to Denver, follow us," the crowd, led by medical marijuana proponents and with Code Pink bringing up the rear, wended its way to Federal Boulevard on the west side of the stadium, where the march concluded. Along the way, marchers chanted slogans from the amusing to the profane and carried banners supporting their causes. Jack Dunphy of The World Can't Wait hoisted a tall sign protesting the war on several poles tied to his waist. A group of marijuana supporters held signs that read "Free our weed" in a kind of street-graffiti style. When a reporter asked what it said, a man calling himself Wayward Amerika said, "You should have gotten stoned; then you could read it." Susan Squibb, 33, of Boulder had an unusual plan for getting to Invesco Field. "I'm hula-hooping for marijuana," she said as she swiveled her hips and tried not to run into anyone. Along Colfax, the marchers and those heading to attend Barack Obama's acceptance speech walked side by side, with the marchers taking up the street and event-goers crammed along the sidewalk. Occasionally, the groups interacted. Max Dovala, 16, of Superior, who was on his way to hear Obama, said: "I guess they have the right to speak. I just don't get their point." After walking -- or hula-hooping, as the case may be -- for about 45 minutes, the marchers stopped as close to the stadium as they were allowed and began screaming "Marijuana saves lives," hoping people inside could hear them. Then, a handful of them went to the fenced protest zone and settled in. At precisely 4:20 -- the weed world's version of happy hour -- the 15 or so people in the cage lit up. Then the crowd smoked their cigarettes and went home. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake