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Revelers mob Times Square to top a century of celebrations


By COLLEEN LONG, AP
Wednesday, January 2, 2008 0:00 am


    

NEW YORK –– More than a million revelers in Times Square cheered as the giant crystal ba

ll made its 100th drop and a ton of confetti rained down on the urban canyon, ushering in the new year.

University of North Carolina junior Reid Medlin, 21, attended the celebration with his friends Rachel Rand, 20, and Jeremy Crouthamel, 20. They were in the city for the first time and planned to stay up all night because they had no hotel.

“I think the best part is being here with friends,” Medlin said as confetti floated down on him and people kissed around him. “This was beautiful. It makes you appreciate everything.”

Rand said it did not matter that they did not have a place to sleep.

“I‘m too happy to go to bed,” she exclaimed.

The Times Square new year‘s ball tradition began a century ago with a 700-pound (317.5-kilogram) ball of wood and iron, lit with 100 25-watt incandescent bulbs. This year‘s event featured an energy-efficient sphere clad in Waterford crystals, with 9,576 light-emitting diodes that generated a kaleidoscope of colors.

Organizers said well over a million people attended the festivities.

They were treated to an entertainment lineup that included Dick Clark and Ryan Seacrest handling the countdown to 2008 and musical performances by Carrie Underwood, Miley Cyrus and other acts. Even New York Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez showed up, shaking hands and posing for photos as he waited for midnight.

The Times Square Alliance, the business group running the event, handed out thousands of balloons and mittens to the crowd, which waited for hours in chilly winter weather for the main event. The confetti included pieces of paper with the new year‘s wishes and resolutions of people who submitted them in advance.

Diana and David Sutton, of Fort Myers, Florida, and their three young children had been waiting for the ball drop since 10 a.m. They bought plastic chairs at a nearby Toys “R” Us and bundled up with Spider-Man hats as they waited.

“It‘s such an experience,” David Sutton said. “The kids are behaving; they‘re loving this. They‘ve never seen snow before, and they got to see that, too, earlier this week.”

There were strict rules for revelers: no alcohol, large bags or backpacks — and no re-entry after leaving the viewing area. The few public restrooms were closed by the afternoon.

Chase Pellegrin, 18, his sister Chandler, 13, and their parents were steps away from their hotel but did not want to lose their viewing spots.

“I‘m just not drinking anything. No water, nothing. I don‘t want to worry about it,” said Chase Pellegrin, of Covington, Louisiana, located on the opposite side of Lake Ponchartrain from New Orleans. The first celebration in the area, in 1904, was held by New York Times owner Adolph Ochs, who was building a new headquarters in the neighborhood.

The city had just renamed the oddly shaped square in the newspaper‘s honor, and at midnight Ochs had pyrotechnists illuminate his building at 1 Times Square with fireworks shot from street level. Three years later, when the city banned fireworks, Ochs brought in the iron and wooden ball, to be lowered from the building‘s flagpole at midnight.

A different sort of light show was set in Brooksville, Florida, where the ball that was dropped was a 200-pound (90-kilogram) fiberglass tangerine, with light bulbs inside.

Authorities in several cities including Phoenix, Dallas and Detroit pleaded with residents not to ring in the new year by shooting bullets skyward.

The Chicago Transit Authority continued its New Year‘s Eve tradition of offering penny fares on buses and trains as thousands headed to the city‘s fireworks shows on Navy Pier.


      

Revelers mob Times Square to top a century of celebrations
A Happy New Year hat, confetti and other debris lie in the street in New York’s Times Square early New Year’s Day.








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