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NEW YORK (AP) - Frankie Ling is only 14, but he's already planning a trip to London. He wandered down to the Barnes & Noble in his Brooklyn neighborhood a month ago, bought a guidebook with his own money and has been lobbying his parents to take the next big family vacation there. Thursday's bombing on the London Underground hasn't changed his plans, or those of many New Yorkers.
"Even though there was a terrorist bombing, I know it was bad and everything, but I still want to go there," he said Friday. "That isn't going to change my opinion."
The teenager, who was in fifth grade when the World Trade Center was destroyed, added: "We were attacked and we still live here. So I'm like, whatever, we'll still go."
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