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  #1  
Old 01-02-2001, 07:59 PM
Northern Piper Northern Piper is online now
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So what are those li'l red icons beside the three columns? teeny little firecrackers?
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  #2  
Old 01-03-2001, 10:14 AM
Arnold Winkelried Arnold Winkelried is offline
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Yes.
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Old 01-05-2001, 05:39 AM
Northern Piper Northern Piper is online now
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why?
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Old 01-05-2001, 08:44 AM
bungie_us bungie_us is offline
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Quote:
Why?
Might have something to do with the explosions out in the street that woke me up on Sunday eve about midnight. (I was still so exhausted from last years New Year's Eve celebration that I dozed off a little early. . .)

cheers,
b
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Old 01-05-2001, 12:02 PM
Northern Piper Northern Piper is online now
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explosions? am I missing something? what explosions?
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  #6  
Old 01-05-2001, 05:31 PM
Irishman Irishman is offline
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:cough: fireworks :cough: As in New Year's Celebration. As in "big party".

No, the world didn't come to an end. This time either. Who's on for next year?
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Old 01-05-2001, 05:37 PM
Arnold Winkelried Arnold Winkelried is offline
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jti, I think that firecrackers might have come to be associated with New Year's Eve because it is a chinese custom to set off firecrackers at New Year celebrations, and in the USA, especially on the west coast, the Chinese cultural influence is noticeable. I have heard that Chinese firecrackers were traditionally used to scare away evil spirits.
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Old 01-06-2001, 09:41 PM
Northern Piper Northern Piper is online now
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learn something new every day - I've never associated fireworks or firecrackers with New Year's. But if you guys say so...
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  #9  
Old 01-07-2001, 08:55 AM
bungie_us bungie_us is offline
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I meant real explosions. Grenades. Bazookas. People running in terror. Oh, the humanity. That sort of thing. Doesn't that happen everywhere?

Okay. Just kidding.

But there you go. I thought fireworks were everywhere. You're not the only one to learn something new, JTI.

Cheers.
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  #10  
Old 01-07-2001, 11:28 AM
Northern Piper Northern Piper is online now
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maybe it's because where I live, it's generally not comfortable being outside at midnight. This New Year's Eve wasn't too bad, around -20° Celsius, but we'd just come off a cold snap of -35° Celsius at nights for the ten days before Christmas.

I'd rather stay in and watch the ball drop on TV.
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Old 01-08-2001, 11:14 AM
Irishman Irishman is offline
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Hey jti, if you were watching the ball drop on TV, didn't they show the fireworks celebration with it? New York supposedly had a big display. Not that I would know, I wasn't watching.
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  #12  
Old 01-09-2001, 12:36 AM
Northern Piper Northern Piper is online now
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well, you see, my New Year's usually goes like this:

6:00 to 11:30 - go to friends' house with the Beloved; supper with friends; visit with friends.

11:31 to 11:54 - drink champers with the Beloved and friends.

11:55 - someone says, "We should turn on the TV and see the ball drop."

11:55 to 11:58 - turn on TV; frantically surf Canadian and American channels, looking for the Dick Clark and the ball.

11:59 - find channel with ball.

12:00 midnight - watch ball drop; say "Happy New Year;" kiss the Beloved.

12:01 - comment that there's nothing on now but a bunch of drunken New Yorkers in Times Square - they look cold. Turn off TV.

12:02 - 1:00 - Drink more champers; driven home by the Beloved.

So even if there are fireworks after the ball drops, I'm not likely to see (or remember).
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