Showing posts with label New Year. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Year. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

The Times Square Tradition

If you watch the countdown to the new year from Times Square via television tonight, you'll be observing a traditional ritual that began more than a century ago.

The first New Year's Eve celebration in Times Square was held on Dec. 31, 1904. It wasn't known as Times Square in those days. In 1904, it was known as Longacre Square.

I don't know if the celebration has been held every year since then. But, if it has, there may have been some conflict in New York on New Year's Eve five years later. On Dec. 31, 1909, Manhattan Bridge opened.

Of course, I suppose the opening of the bridge was held during daylight hours — presumably leaving plenty of time to get to Longacre Square or wherever one planned to be at midnight 99 years ago.

Some important people began their lives on New Year's Eve.
  • Henri Matisse (1869)

  • George C. Marshall (1880)

  • Simon Wiesenthal (1908)

  • Odetta (1930)

  • Anthony Hopkins (1937)

  • Ben Kingsley (1943)
And legendary country singer Hank Williams Sr. died on New Year's Eve 1952. He was 29.

End of the Old Year, Start of the New

The mind is torn as 2008 draws to a close.

What should be our resolutions as the new year begins? And which ones must be dealt with immediately? There is no consensus.

Our nation faces many challenges — how to put America back to work, how to reduce our dependence on foreign oil, how to make health care affordable for every American.

Columnists are far from being in agreement over which issue requires the new government's most urgent attention. And everyone makes a good case. It can be overwhelming. Yes, there are many things that have been neglected and need attention. Which one must be addressed first?

It may have to be enough to leave it up to common sense — and hope the decision makers have plenty of it.

On an individual level, most people, as David Harsanyi writes in the Denver Post, will "embark on the futile task of pledging to eliminate one toxic activity or another from their lives" as their resolutions.

Whether that's a good thing or a bad thing depends on which "activity" is being eliminated and how much toxicity it causes. Eliminating any excessive behavior probably is something to be desired. And making a general pledge to act in moderation is probably a good rule to live by.

On the emotional level, we think of those who saw the arrival of '08 but did not make it to the start of '09. I thought of this yesterday as I was watching a video tribute on Turner Classic Movies to those in the film industry who died in 2008.

Be they friends, relatives or movie stars, they influenced our lives, and their absence will be felt, particularly in the new year when the loss is still fresh.

I guess there is no particular resolution you can make because someone important in your life has passed away — except to resolve to remember the life lessons that person taught you.

The new year brings all kinds of uncertainty. There are no guarantees for anyone.

And yet, almost all of us start the year by taking an automatic leap of faith — the assumption that we'll all be here to make resolutions on the final day of 2009.

Of course, we all won't make it to the end of the year. Inevitably, some will pass away before the year is over. But, as long as there is life, it is said, there is hope.

With that spirit of optimism, perhaps we'll succeed in achieving the big goals.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Predictions for the New Year

As we approach 2008, it is traditional to predict what will happen in the new year.

If the respondents to the Gallup Poll are correct, you might prefer to stay in 2007.

According to the Gallup Poll, Americans expect a recession in 2008, gas selling for $4 a gallon, an increase in unemployment, rising out-of-pocket health care costs and falling housing prices.

What do you think will happen in 2008? Will any of it be good?