Boisterous welcome to 2012 in NY
THRONGS of revelers in and around New York's Times Square gave a boisterous welcome to 2012 yesterday amid tight security, sending off a year marked by the grim 10th anniversary of the September 11 attacks on the city.
Fireworks filled the sky at midnight and confetti dropped on celebrants in the famed Midtown Manhattan square after a large lighted crystal ball descended for the last minute of the old year - a tradition started in 1907.
The light-studded ball was raised six hours before the drop, and police who closed off streets around Times Square also prohibited celebrants from bringing alcohol, backpacks, large bags or packages into the area.
The raucous celebration, which had been expected to draw a million revelers, included a line-up of televised performances by pop stars Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber.
Unusually mild temperatures of about 10 degrees celsius encouraged the celebrants to fill the streets stretching an expected 20 blocks from Times Square toward Central Park, said Tim Tompkins, president of the Times Square Alliance.
Several hundred anti-Wall Street protesters also streamed into Manhattan's Zuccotti Park, video footage showed, returning to the birthplace of the national Occupy movement against economic inequality that has seen its momentum falter as cities closed tent camps around the country.
At one minute before midnight, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Lady Gaga pressed the button that signals the start of a 60-second descent of the Waterford crystal ball.
"I thought I was going to freeze, but it's not that bad at all," said a young woman who identified herself as Alexis and came from Virginia with a friend to see Bieber and "because it's fun, and it's cool, and I've never been to New York."
Police spokesman Paul Browne said bomb squad teams were conducting sweeps of hotels, theaters, construction sites and parking garages, but were not aware of any specific security threats to the city.
"New York City is always at the top of the terrorists' target list and we treat most large gatherings, especially high profile, iconic ones like New Year's Eve, as potential targets," Browne said in an email. "However, there are no known threats on the city coinciding with New Year's Eve."
Fireworks filled the sky at midnight and confetti dropped on celebrants in the famed Midtown Manhattan square after a large lighted crystal ball descended for the last minute of the old year - a tradition started in 1907.
The light-studded ball was raised six hours before the drop, and police who closed off streets around Times Square also prohibited celebrants from bringing alcohol, backpacks, large bags or packages into the area.
The raucous celebration, which had been expected to draw a million revelers, included a line-up of televised performances by pop stars Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber.
Unusually mild temperatures of about 10 degrees celsius encouraged the celebrants to fill the streets stretching an expected 20 blocks from Times Square toward Central Park, said Tim Tompkins, president of the Times Square Alliance.
Several hundred anti-Wall Street protesters also streamed into Manhattan's Zuccotti Park, video footage showed, returning to the birthplace of the national Occupy movement against economic inequality that has seen its momentum falter as cities closed tent camps around the country.
At one minute before midnight, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Lady Gaga pressed the button that signals the start of a 60-second descent of the Waterford crystal ball.
"I thought I was going to freeze, but it's not that bad at all," said a young woman who identified herself as Alexis and came from Virginia with a friend to see Bieber and "because it's fun, and it's cool, and I've never been to New York."
Police spokesman Paul Browne said bomb squad teams were conducting sweeps of hotels, theaters, construction sites and parking garages, but were not aware of any specific security threats to the city.
"New York City is always at the top of the terrorists' target list and we treat most large gatherings, especially high profile, iconic ones like New Year's Eve, as potential targets," Browne said in an email. "However, there are no known threats on the city coinciding with New Year's Eve."
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