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Inauguration Day different than in 2009, but weight of history still felt by attendees

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“There has never been anything false about hope,” one read.

“No corn subsidies,” said another.

Vice President Joe Biden and his wife, Jill Biden, also worked the crowd. Biden, known to be considering a future presidential run, shook hands and relished chants of “Joe! Joe!”

The day was a rare opportunity to see the Obama family interact — with some rarer unguarded moments. First daughters Malia, 14, and Sasha, 11, could be seen bouncing in the cold and fussing with their dresses. Sasha was caught on camera yawning during her father’s speech. The girls snapped photos during the inaugural parade, while the president vigorously chomped on gum.

As always, the celebration was also an opportunity for commerce.

Souvenir hawkers staked out prime spots. Obama’s visage was plastered on buttons, hats, even the official Metro ticket. One entrepreneur charged a dollar for a photo next to an Obama cardboard cutout. Another tried rather unsuccessfully to sell Obama inaugural commemorative condoms.

Octavius Glenn, 35, of Brooklyn, peddled cologne he insisted was a presidential favorite. “Get your Obama oil! Only here! Obama oil!” he shouted. “This stuff is the real deal.”

As the sun went down, the party moved inside to a slew of balls tailored to every state and interest group. The Obamas had only two appearances on their dance card, compared to 10 last year: the Commander-in-Chief ball hosted for military families and the official inaugural ball.

Officials were expecting 30,000 people to attend the latter affair, held in a cavernous convention hall. In keeping with the lower-key tone, the decor was minimal and the vibe democratic. Tables covered in red-and-yellow tablecloths held massive bowls of pretzels, mixed nuts and Cheez-Its.

Obama arrived first at the Commander-in-Chief ball where he delivered a tribute to the military and spoke by video with troops in Kandahar, Afghanistan. At both balls, Obama danced with the first lady to “Let’s Stay Together.” Al Green made the song famous, Obama made it presidential, when he sang to a crowd at the Apollo Theater in New York. On Monday, Jennifer Hudson did the honors.

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(Staff writers Brian Bennett, Matea Gold, Don Lee, Noam N. Levey, Wesley Lowery, Lisa Mascaro, Michael A. Memoli, Christi Parsons, Jim Puzzanghera, Richard Simon, and Joseph Tanfani contributed to this report.)

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