Jan 1, 2009 12:01 am US/Pacific
California, U.S. Ring In 2009
NEW YORK (CBS13/AP) ―
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Revelers gather in Times Square to celebrate New Year's Eve Dec. 31, 2008, in New York City. The Times Square Alliance estimates that one million people will attend the festivities in Times Square.
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People look at the New Years Eve Ball during a test of it Dec. 30, 2008, in New York City.
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Paris and Nicky Hilton arrives for "The Bongo Virus," the "world's biggest on-line New Year's Eve party" at Trademark on Dec. 31, 2008, in Sydney, Australia.
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A worker hangs up lanterns on New Year's Eve on Dec. 31, 2008, in Chongqing, China. China is getting decked out for the New Year holiday.
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Revelers enjoy a mass party for New Year in the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong on Jan. 1, 2009. Hundreds of thousands took to the streets all over the territory where the skyline was lit up in a pyrotechnic display.
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Some 500 people take part in a traditional sea bath during the New Year's Day celebrations on Dec. 31, 2008, in Dinard, northwestern France.
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Police constable Lee Dingsdale receives a kiss from Aiden Cooper as revellers take to Princes Street to celebrate New Year on Dec. 31, 2008, in Edinburgh, Scotland.
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South Koreans watch firework during New Year's Eve on January 1, 2009 in downtown Seoul. Hundreds of thousands people celebrate the New Year.
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Fireworks light up the sky near the Malaysia's landmark Patronas Twin Towers during New Year's Eve on Jan. 1, 2009.
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Muslims pray at an Indonesian mosque to celebrate New Year's Eve in Jakarta late Dec. 31, 2008.
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People celebrate the festivities during the Highlife New Years Experience at Matakana Country Park on Dec. 31, 2008, in Matakana, New Zealand.
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A couple share a kiss at the stroke of midnight during the Highlife New Years Experience at Matakana Country park on Jan. 1, 2009, in Matakana, New Zealand.
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Revelers take to Princes Street to celebrate New Year on Dec. 31, 2008, in Edinburgh, Scotland.
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Pope Benedict XVI celebrates the Vespers and Te Deum prayer in St Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on Dec. 31, 2008.
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French paratroopers from the third Marine Infantry Regiment (RPIMA) sing Polynesian songs at the Tora Forward Operating Base (FOB) in Afghanistan to celebrate the new year on Dec. 31, 2008.
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People gather to wath fireworks launched from Hong Kong's skyskyscrapers on Jan. 1, 2009.
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The annual New Year's Eve midnight fireworks display is seen from below the Sky Tower as New Year is welcomed on Dec. 31, 2008, in Auckland, New Zealand.
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The pre-midnight New Year's Eve fireworks based on the Aboriginal theme 'Creation Storm' explodes over Sydney Harbour Bridge and the Opera House on December 31, 2008.
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Thousands celebrated at parties in Old Sacramento and downtown as the clock struck midnight and fireworks lit up the skyline, ending the tumultuous year of 2008.
Mayor Kevin Johnson hosted the downtown event, which featured the first Sacramento party to feature a New York-style ball drop. A dense fog advisory didn't deter partygoers in Old Sacramento, who witnessed two fireworks shows along the waterfront.
Authorities were out in force to take drunk drivers off the road, setting up DUI checkpoints at various roadways throughout the Sacramento area, hoping to reduce the number of deadly accidents in the valley. According to a study by Allstate, Sacramento is the ninth most deadly city in the country for teen drivers on New Years Eve and New Years Day.
One taxi dispatcher, Yellow Cab, says they typically triple their business over the New Year holiday.
Hundreds of thousands of revelers rang in 2009 from frigid Times Square as the famous Waterford crystal ball dropped. As the clock struck midnight, a ton of confetti rained down while the partygoers hugged and kissed.
Josh Torres and his girlfriend, Sarah Manganello, both 21, screamed and cheered as they watched the ball drop. Manganello had advice for people in the new year: "Learn from what you've done and move forward."
The wind chill made it feel like 1 degree in the area, but that didn't stop the throngs bundled in fur hats, heavy coats and sleeping bags from attending the event.
Former President Bill Clinton and Sen. Hillary Clinton helped Mayor Michael Bloomberg lower the ball atop 1 Times Square for the 60-second countdown to midnight. Last year, Hillary Clinton was in Iowa campaigning for the presidency, and now she's expecting to be secretary of state in President-elect Barack Obama's administration.
Many other New Year's Eve traditions around the country were in place, but some festivities fell victim to hard times, and those that remained felt somewhat subdued. The nation's economic troubles made many people less interested in giving 2008 an expensive send-off. Public celebrations were canceled in communities from Louisville, Ky., to Reno, Nev., and promoters in Miami Beach, Fla., reported slower ticket sales than expected for celebrity-studded parties that they say would have sold out in past years.
But New York's celebration was still going strong. Five minutes before midnight, 1,000 balloons with the words "Joy," "Hope" and "2009" were released from rooftops in the area. The Waterford crystal ball -- 12 feet in diameter and weighing nearly 12,000 pounds -- dropped as the crowd erupted in cheers.
Sam Tenorio and his family drove to New York from Orlando, Fla., so his teenage daughter Brianna could see the Jonas Brothers perform live in Times Square.
"The economy is what it is. It's going to turn around. You just have to be positive," Tenorio said. "That's what we're doing, otherwise we wouldn't be here. I think that's why most people are here tonight: optimism."
Along with the Jonas Brothers, Lionel Richie and the Pussycat Dolls performed. Dick Clark made several TV appearances from inside a studio, and Ryan Seacrest hosted the event.
Las Vegas casinos put on a midnight fireworks display and daredevil acts, including a 200-foot jump over the refurbished volcano at The Mirage hotel-casino by Robbie Knievel, son of the late Evel Knievel.
Others weren't so lucky. Windy weather and rough harbor waters caused Baltimore officials to postpone a New Year's Eve fireworks celebration. In Reno, officials canceled their fireworks show for the first time since 2000.
"With the downturn in the economy, with people getting laid off and with the tightening of budgets all over town, we just didn't think it was right to spend $20,000 or $30,000 on something that goes up in smoke," Mayor Bob Cashell said.
Louisville Mayor Jerry Abramson expected to save $33,000 by canceling a New Year's Eve party he traditionally throws.
Elkhart, Ind., planned a party at its outdoor skating rink, with volunteers leading some games, instead of a $5,000 event with fireworks. The city hadn't gotten any complaints about the scaled-back celebration, said Arvis Dawson, executive assistant to the mayor.
"I think most people understand," he said.
Philadelphia planned to celebrate New Year's Day with its more than century-old Mummers Parade, though it had fallen into jeopardy when city officials withdrew about $400,000 in support.
After weeks of limbo, the Mummers Association successfully raised enough private donations to continue the pageant filled with flamboyantly dressed performers, sometimes described as the city's Mardi Gras.
Rich Porco, a Mummer for 51 years, said the uncertainty made this "one of the worst years I've ever been involved with."
Instead of preparing for the festivities, "you found yourself thinking more about, 'Is there going to be a parade?"' Porco said. "It was hard."
In Pasadena, Calif., hundreds of thousands of spectators were expected for the Rose Parade. Organizers said any economic hit they might have suffered was lessened because commitments to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on floats have been in place for at least a year.
"We may or may not feel the effects of the economy this year, but more likely next year," Tournament of Roses Chief Operating Officer Bill Flinn said. "We do feel one of our jobs is to bring optimism at a time when things are not so good for so many people."
The Peach Drop, which has been the staple of downtown Atlanta's New Year Eve since 1989, was expecting almost 100,000 in attendance at Underground Atlanta -- an 80,000 dropoff from last year. Some attendees believed the shaky economy played a part in fewer people showing for the event, but they said it wouldn't deter their spirits.
John Buleey, a building contractor from Dawsonville in north Georgia, expects hard times to come next year. The 39-year-old also said the struggling economy should improve by the year's end.
"Sure, we'll go through tough times," said Buleey, who wore a shiny, gold-colored hat that read "Happy New Year" across the front along with his five family members. "But judging from the past, this country will overcome our financial woes."
(© 2009 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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