For the first time, anyone can get a message printed on a piece of the
multicolored confetti by visiting the Times Square Information Center or by
using the Internet to type a message on a "Wishing Wall Online" -- http://tinyurl.com/2c5efd.
The message-carrying pieces will be mixed among the more than one ton of confetti, organizers said.
Messages can be serious or silly, said Tim Tompkins, a spokesman for the Times Square Alliance, which organizes the party.
So far, messages have included everything from wanting to be taller or having a smarter boss to healthy children and asking for the safe return of a child from Iraq, he said. "Peace in the World," reads one posted on the "virtual wishing wall."
"Another person wrote that they wanted their husband to get a green card so that they could join them here in the states," Tompkins told WABC-TV.
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On the Web:
Times Square Alliance: http://www.timessquarenyc.org/
[Associated
Press]
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