Newtown, 
Jan 12: Hundreds of the children who escaped the harrowing attack on 
their elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut, last month head back to classes 
for the first time since a gunman killed 20 of their schoolmates and six staff 
members.
School officials are preparing for droves of anxious parents to 
join the fleet of buses carting children to a disused middle school in the 
neighboring town of Monroe. Chalk Hill Middle School, closed about a year and 
half ago, has been hastily refurbished in the three weeks since the December 14 
attack and renamed Sandy Hook Elementary School.
With their children's 
safety foremost on parents' and officials' minds in the wake of the 
second-deadliest school shooting in U.S. history, the school has been outfitted 
with a new security system. Monroe Police Department officers will patrol the 
grounds, and all outside doorways and sidewalks will be under 
surveillance.
"I think right now we have to make this the safest school 
in America," Monroe Police Lieutenant Keith White said at a press 
conference.
Parents wishing to remain with their kids, ages 5 to 10 in 
kindergarten through grade 4, will be allowed to accompany them to their 
classrooms and afterwards may stay in the school's "lecture room" for as long as 
they like, according to a memo to parents on the school's website. Counseling 
will be available for students and parents at the new school, about 7 miles 
south of the scene of the shooting.
"I'm not sure I'm ready yet to 
totally let them go," Sandy Hook parent Sarah Swansiger said on CNN about her 
trepidation over the return to school.
When the students return, they 
will find all of the belongings they left behind when teachers and police 
evacuated them from Sandy Hook nearly three weeks ago after Adam Lanza burst 
through the school doors and opened fire.
They will be welcomed to a 
building that has been decked out as a "Winter Wonderland" with the help of 
thousands of kids from around the world.
"This does not look like the 
other elementary school," Newtown School Superintendent Janet Robinson said 
emphatically.
In the meantime, no new details have emerged to explain why 
the 20-year-old Lanza, armed with a semi-automatic assault rifle, two other 
firearms and hundreds of rounds of ammunition, targeted the 
school.
Described by family friends as having Asperger's syndrome, a form 
of autism, Lanza shot and killed his mother, Nancy Lanza, at their home about 5 
miles from the school before driving to Sandy Hook and embarking on the 
massacre, police said. He then took his own life as police were arriving at the 
school, which had an enrollment of 456.
Police have offered no firm 
motive for the attack, and state police investigators have said it could be 
months before they finish their report.
The massacre in Newtown, a rural 
New England town of 27,000 residents about 70 miles northeast of New York City, 
stunned the nation, prompting President Barack Obama to call it the worst day of 
his presidency and reigniting an extensive debate on gun control. Obama has 
tasked Vice President Joe Biden with assembling a package of gun-control 
proposals to submit to Congress in the next several weeks.
The National 
Rifle Association, the most powerful gun-rights lobby in the United States, has 
rebuffed calls for more stringent firearms restrictions and instead called for 
armed guards to patrol every public school in the 
country.
Ends
SA/EN
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Sandy Hook kids head to school for first time since attack
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