Some 200 demonstrators, chanting "Banks got bailed out, we got sold out," marched from the Hennepin County Government Center plaza to Wells Fargo Bank in downtown Minneapolis over the noon hour today and rallied in the bank's lobby, before continuing their march past the TCF Bank and back to the plaza.Many of the protesters belonged to TakeAction Minnesota, a coalition of groups including several labor unions.The march had been planned weeks before the "occupation" of the plaza had been conceived, said Dan McGrath, TakeAction's executive director. "Any effort that puts wind our sails, we want to be part of," he said. Protests against the banks are scheduled locally all week, culminating with a big action set for Friday, called a "March and Rally to Save the American Dream," at 3 p.m., starting at Peavy Plaza in downtown Minneapolis, McGrath said.That march is sponsored by Minnesotans for a Fair Economy.As the demonstrators were marching, some downtown workers took photos with their cell phone cameras. "I think it's fabulous," said a 60 year-old Wayzata woman, who asked that her name not be used. She said she worked in the back office of an investments firm in Minneapolis. She said that workers at the firm "see the inequities all the time."Dan Olson, 29, who works at an accounting firm, snapped pictures of the protesters in the Wells Fargo lobby. "I think we need to break up the banks," he said. "They are too big to fail. During the economic crisis, they held us hostage."Today's march was led through the streets by police, some in T3 Motion stand-up scooters. Sgt. Jesse Garcia was following in a SUV police vehicle. He pulled over when he saw a protester, Ilo Madden, 73, of St. Louis Park, who appeared to have trouble standing up. The woman said she was having difficulty breathing and protesters had gathered around her to help.Garcia offered to give her a ride back to the plaza, and protesters helped her into the back seat of the SUV. Garcia put her walker in the back of the vehicle. Madden said she had difficulty chanting, walking and breathing at the same time."I wanted to do this (march) since the 1960s when the three civil rights workers were murdered," Madden said. Kristi Hughes, 24, of South St. Paul, a volunteer street medic and a certified nursing assistant, hopped into Garcia's SUV to accompany Madden.Today at 5 p.m. another rally is planned, starting at the plaza and targeting TCF Bank which the protesters allege was giving money to an organization that funded contributions to "pro-corporate politicians."Also today, Minnesota AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Steve Hunter and unemployed Minnesotans planned to hold a news conference in front of U.S. Bancorp Center in Minneapolis to present "new data on Minnesota's largest banks." A news release said he would be calling on the banks to do more to create jobs. The release said Wells Fargo, US Bank and TCF "received billions of dollars in bailouts from taxpayers in 2008."An organizer of the Occupy Minnesota action on the government plaza met for more than an hour this morning with Hennepin County Commissioner Gail Dorfman to ask Dorfman if she could do anything to restore electricity on the plaza, so that protesters could recharge their cell phones and laptops. The organizer, Diana Turner, also asked if the county would turn on water at the plaza so protesters could refill their water bottles and reverse the county policy so that tents, or at least canopies, would be allowed on the plaza to protect demonstrators, who are sleeping there overnight, from the rain.Dorfman said she would see what she could do. She told me after the meeting that the commissioners did not set those plaza policies regarding the demonstrators, but that they were made by the county administration, after discussions with the sheriff's office.Dorfman praised the protest and its nonviolent spirit and said it reflected many concerns from seniors to college students.