The ticker tape parade honoring the New York Yankees was held on Friday, November 6, 2009. Beginning on Broadway at Battery Place at 11 a.m. and continuing northbound up the Canyon of Heroes to City Hall Plaza, where Mayor Michael Bloomberg will present the Bronx Bombers with the keys to the city.
The Yankees defeated the Phillies in six games to win their 27th World Series.
Canyon of HeroesThe New York Yankees parade as always will take place at the "Canyon of Heroes" The traditional route used when New York City throws a ticker tape parade. The routes move along lower Broadway, and finishes at City Hall.
In 1980, Pope John Paul ll was celebrated in a New York City ticker tape parade. The Pope was well liked in the USA.
Charles Lindbergh
It is a traditional parade that originated in New York City in which tons of paper confetti is thrown from nearby office buildings.They are generally reserved now for space exploration triumphs, military honors and sports championships.Recent ticker tape parades include: February 2008 for the New York Giants, Super Bowl champions and November 2009 for World Series champs, the New York Yankees.Answer:In the days when ticker tape was used, old printouts were often shredded in order to make a type of confetti that could be thrown from office windows during street parades. This practice, is common in Manhattan, New York and other urban centers, it is referred to as a "ticker tape parade." Ticker tape parades still exist, though there are other shredded office documents that now serve as the confetti
Becasue it was during the first Iraq War
Who Knew - 2010 Ticker Tape Parade 5-13 was released on: USA: 28 October 2011
march 21 1962
sorry no ones that old.
Ticker tape parades in New York City start at the beginning of Broadway. The lower part near Battery Park.
It was "ticker tape," as in a "ticker tape parade." Back in the days of the telegraph, the latest stock market figures were transmitted over telegraph to the offices of the Wall Street stockbrokers and bankers. The latest stock figures would print out on a continuous roll of thin paper, similar to the rolls of receipt paper that retail stores use today. The machine that printed out this paper was called a "stock ticker," because of the noise it made as it printed. The paper was called "ticker tape." When a parade went by, people would throw shredded ticker tape out the windows to the street below. These parades became known as "ticket tape parades." Computers and the internet eventually replaced the ticker machine. Nowadays, brokerage firms and TV news networks use a scrolling screen in place of the old ticker machines.
Ticker tape was used for telegraphs. The ticker tape would record the information which would then be transmitted through telegraph to the requested parties.
Bubble Tape does not have it's very own ticker symbol. It is made by the William Wrigley's Jr. Company. Wrigley's is traded under the symbol WWY on the New York Stock Exchange.