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Rain Throws Wet Blanket Over Southland New Year's Revels

Weather: Despite free bus service, official events draw small crowds--which is fine with some who do show up. Skydivers and other acts bow out.

JANUARY 1, 2000 EXTRA

January 01, 2000|ANTONIO OLIVO, TIMES STAFF WRITER

Luis Castro, who considers himself optimistic about the new century, wanted nothing more than a good party where he could flaunt his positive outlook.

That's why he was at Plaza Olvera in downtown Los Angeles on Friday when the clock struck noon and the sound of church bells, gongs, shofars and cymbals resonated throughout the city.


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Signaling the start of a coordinated 13-hour celebration at five spots across Los Angeles, the cacophony meant "something big is going to happen," Castro predicted.

But when he looked up in vain to find what he was told would be a parade of skydivers parachuting toward the city's birthplace, Castro saw only gray skies--and a steady drizzle.

"Maybe something bad is going to happen after all," he mused after the skydivers and several other acts bowed out because of the weather.

The LA 2000 festivities, billed by city officials as proof that Los Angeles will be the entertainment nucleus of the world as it heads into the next millennium, wound up becoming the dreaded party to which relatively few people came.

Hundreds of thousands were expected to show up for the five programs that carried through until 1 this morning. But only a few thousand had arrived by sundown, despite the free MTA bus service to each site.

On the hour, each multicultural program celebrated the passing of a new year in one of the scores of countries represented by Los Angeles residents. The evening was to culminate with a special-effects-laden midnight countdown coordinated among the five sites.

"This is a great place to celebrate the new millennium," said Kristina Roesel, 19, a college exchange student from Germany, who attended one program at California Plaza on Bunker Hill.

While friends and family in Berlin were already squeezed amid millions awaiting midnight there, "the crowd here isn't so bad," she said.

Only small clusters of families had braved the cold, wet weather a few hours after the musical and family events began in downtown Los Angeles, Baldwin Hills, San Pedro and Van Nuys.

The story was the same at an all-day program in San Clemente, where Orange County families gathered under cloudy skies to celebrate at a block party near the pier.

By 4 p.m., one swing band had cut its show short because of the rain. The parade that was supposed to draw 2,000 marchers wound up with 500.

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