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 | Fireworks light New York Times Square moments after the New Year begins Saturday, Jan. 1, 2005. A century after the first New Year's Eve celebration in Times Square, close to a million revelers welcomed 2005 with wild cheering, confetti, fireworks and kisses, while also pausing to mourn the devastation of the South Asian tsunami. click to open  |  | Andrew Montalvo, left, and Stephanie Kostakis, both of Orlando, Fla. share a kiss as the clock strikes midnight Saturday, Jan. 1, , 2005 at Times Square in New York. click to open  |  | Fireworks light New York Times Square moments after the New Year begins Saturday, Jan. 1, 2005. click to open  |  | Confetti snows down in New York Times Square moments after the New Year began, Saturday Jan. 1, 2005. A century after the first New Year's Eve celebration in Times Square, close to a million revelers welcomed 2005 with wild cheering, confetti, fireworks and kisses, while also pausing to mourn the devastation of the South Asian tsunami. click to open  |  | Two heavily armed police officers stand guard on Wall Street as commuters arrive for work, Monday, Aug. 2, 2004 in New York. Financial institutions identified as targets of a terrorist plot in three cities opened for business Monday under stepped-up security and defiant words from people who said they won't be cowed by the extraordinary intelligence pointing to a potential attack. click to open  |  | Two heavily armed police officers stand guard on Wall Street as commuters arrive for work, Monday, Aug. 2, 2004 in New York. Financial institutions identified as targets of a terrorist plot in three cities opened for business Monday under stepped-up security and defiant words from people who said they won't be cowed by the extraordinary intelligence pointing to a potential attack. click to open  |  | Framed by the Brooklyn bridge New York Highway Patrol officers stand guard under the FDR Drive, Monday, Aug. 2, 2004 in New York. Despite a government warning about possible terrorist attacks against major financial institutions, workers on Wall Street Monday showed little concern and said terror alerts and heavy security are part of life now. click to open  |  | New York City Police Department Emergency Service officers walk down Wall Street near the New York Stock Exchange August 2, 2004. Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge announced on Sunday that Al-Qaeda was targeting specific buildings, including the New York Stock Exchange. click to open  |  | A eavily armed police officer stand guard on Wall St., as commuters arrive for work, Monday, Aug. 2, 2004, in New York. Despite a government warning about possible terrorist attacks against major financial institutions, workers on Wall Street Monday showed little concern and said terror alerts and heavy security are part of life now. click to open  |  | Heavily armed police officers stand guard on Wall St., as commuters arrive for work, Monday, Aug. 2, 2004, in New York. Despite a government warning about possible terrorist attacks against major financial institutions, workers on Wall Street Monday showed little concern and said terror alerts and heavy security are part of life now. click to open  |
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