448 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
448 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
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FIREWORKS IN THESE UNITED STATES - 1984 -
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Through no fault of my own, the land area of the 48 contiguous United States
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is some 32 times larger then that of England. Each of these 48 states has its
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own laws regulating fireworks, so fireworks activity in the country as a whole
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can be described only in general. Here in New York State, for example, the
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fireworks law during the 42 years of my lifetime has been simply, NO! However,
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as you will see, the public will have fireworks with which to celebrate festive
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occasions, such as, Independence Day (The Fourth of July). [Despite the fact
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that our Fourth of July is set aside to celebrate the "founding of a new nation
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and freedom from Great Britain's tyrannical rule," in most of this country the
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use of fireworks as part of these festivities is forbidden, while in
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"tyrannical Great Britain," fireworks are legal!]
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There are two categories of fireworks in these United States. The type most
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often used by the general public is legally described as "Class C or common
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fireworks, devices suitable for use by the public and designed primarily to
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produce visible effect by combustion." Some small devices designed to produce
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audible effects, such as firecrackers and pyrotechnic whistles, are also
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included in this class. (In England these would be called "Shop Goods.")
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The second category is termed "Class B or Special Fireworks, those man
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ufactured articles designed primarily for the purpose of producing vis ible or
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audible pyrotechnic effects by combustion or explosion." As these are limited
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to use by professionals at public displays, I will have little more to say
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about them.
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Until 1976 there were few federal (nationwide) laws pertaining to fire works
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for use by the public. However as bureaucrats abhor legislative vacuums, it
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came to pass that:
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"On June 8, 1976 the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) pub lished in
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the Federal Register its Final Order for Fireworks Devices. The order,
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constituting regulations pursuant to the Federal Hazardous Substances Act,
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became effective on December 6, 1976. In response to injuries caused by
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fireworks, the order deals with Class C fireworks, intended for consumer use,
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but has no effect on existing state bans on fireworks or generally on fireworks
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used for public display (Class B fireworks). [Please note that this and what
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follows are quotes and not my wording or ideas.] The order regulates common
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fireworks by specify ing:
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"What fireworks devices may not be sold to consumers
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"The prohibited chemicals which cannot be used in regulated fireworks devices
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"The physical specifications for the regulated fireworks devices
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"Labeling of fireworks"
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PERMISSIBLE AND BANNED FIREWORKS
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"The regulations promulgated by the [CPSC] pursuant to the Hazardous
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Substances Act ban the following articles as hazardous substances because they
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possess such a degree of danger or nature of hazard that adequate cautionary
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labeling cannot be written and the public health and safety can be served only
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by keeping such articles out of inter state commerce."
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BANNED FIREWORKS
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"Fireworks devices designed to produce an audible effect if the effect is
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produced by more than 2 grains of pyrotechnic composition (including but not
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limited to cherry bombs, M-80 salutes, silver salutes, and other large
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firecrackers, aerial bombs, and other fireworks designed to produce audible
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effects, including kits and components to produce fire works)
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"Firecrackers designed to produce audible effects, if the effect is produced
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by more then 50 milligrams
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(0.772 grains) of pyrotechnic composition
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"Aerial bombs, and devices that can be confused with food, i.e., dragon eggs,
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cracker balls (ball-type caps)"
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BANNED CHEMICALS
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"Arsenic sulfide, arsenates, or arsenites, boron, chlorates (permitted in
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coloured smoke, party poppers and caps, and small spinning devices), gallates
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or gallic acid, magnesium, mercury salts, red or white phos phorus, picrates or
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picric acid, thiocyanates, titanium finer then 100 mesh, and zirconium."
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The state of South Dakota also prohibits the manufacture of "Firecrack ers
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longer than 3 inches, made wholly or in part of dynamite, nitro glycerine, [or]
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giant powder." [It would be interesting to know what prompted them to pass this
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law!]
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There are several more pages of regulations setting forth physical spe
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cifications for Class C fireworks, that are on the whole rather dull and
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because their enumeration would not appreciably help your under standing of the
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American fireworks scene, I will not trouble you with the details.
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The determination that a fireworks device conforms to all of the varied
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requirements allowing its sale as class C, is for the most part done by the
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Bureau of Explosives, which despite its official sounding name is a private
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company sponsored by the Association of American Railroads. The BOE's most
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important function as concerns fireworks is the issuing of "EX" and "BX"
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numbers to both Class B and C fireworks of domestic manu facture and imported,
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as proof that these items meet all shipping requirements (BX numbers) or that
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they are Class C (EX numbers).
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Unfortunately, there have been some past problems with imported items
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admitted without "EX" numbers, which, when later tested were found to be Class
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B rather then Class C, and therefore not permitted to be sold to the public.
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As a result, the authorities have become more vigilant in assuring that
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imported items have the required "EX" numbers assigned to them.
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The 50-mg limit on the amount of powder permitted in firecrackers and the
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total abolition of "cherry bombs," "M-80's," and like devices, has resulted in
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the creation of a black market to satisfy the public desire for these infernal
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devices. Unfortunately, as profit increases geome trically with device size
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and power, even larger "ground bombs" have found their way into the public
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hands or what's left of them! Several years ago a number of rather large
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salutes (commonly called "block bus ters") were produced using a normal-looking
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fuse manufactured using the wrong type of powder. This fuse burned for only an
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instant rather than for the expected three, or more seconds! The results of
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this mistake are obvious, and therefore I will spare the reader the sordid
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details.
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With the explosion of an illicit "fireworks factory" located in Benton,
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Tennessee May 27, 1983, killing ten persons, one could posit a consid erable
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market for these devices, and one could further speculate that the distribution
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of such a large number of devices would require a well organized group.
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The 50-mg limit has resulted in the production and marketing of a num ber of
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ersatz "ground bombs," called variously "M-800's," "M70's," and "Ozark
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crackers." These are devices having external dimensions equal those of banned
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large salutes, while containing only the legal maximum 50-mg powder content, to
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the great disappointment of many a purchaser.
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LOCAL LAWS
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Laws vary from state to state, with some states having no laws regulat ing
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the use of fireworks and therefore presumably allowing all that are legal under
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federal law, while other states allow NO fireworks for pub lic use. My native
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New York is included in this list - NO ANYTHING - not even sparklers. Some
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here in New York are reduced to lighting steel wool pads and twirling them on
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the end of a string for fun! Others, in a small Connecticut town, stand around
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the lake at night holding red highway flares as a Fourth of July celebration.
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AUUGGGHHHH!
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Some states have "safe and sane" laws (e.g., California and Washington)
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allowing only those devices approved by the State Fire Marshal, but none that
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explode, shoot fireballs or rise in the air. Still others prohibit only those
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that "leave the ground" and firecrackers. In many states the dates on which
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fireworks may be purchased and used are also specified, the most common times
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of permitted use being around the July Fourth Independence Day holiday. (I
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don't know if King George III liked fireworks or not, but he really gave us on
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this side of the Atlantic a handy excuse to display ours!).
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Christmas, and/or New Year's are the second most common times for the public
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to display fireworks. Indeed, in the southern United States, most fireworks
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activity takes place at Christmas and New Year. Two rea sons have been
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suggested for this difference in timing: (1) The Fourth of July falls on the
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anniversary of the fall of Vicksburg, Mississippi to Union forces under General
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Grant on July 4, 1863, effectively ending the Civil War, and (2) "No fireworks
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were used at Christmas time in the Northeastern United States because of the
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background of the settlers. The Church of England forbade such demonstrations
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as fireworks for celebrating Christmas. In the South the predominant culture
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was Spanish and French, and both of these nationalities celebrated Christmas
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and New Year's with fireworks as early as the 14th century."
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A number of avenues are open for those living in "closed states" to obtain
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fireworks for use on the "Fourth" and other festive occasions. Probably the
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most common way is to obtain them from your local bootleg ger, as almost
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everyone seems to know of someone with a garage/basement/trunk full of
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fireworks he is willing to sell for a handsome markup. Indeed, photocopied
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price lists circulate freely through the populace, here in the East around the
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Fourth of July.
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No doubt the second most common means for one to obtain fireworks is simply
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to drive to a state permitting their retail sale, e.g., South Carolina where
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along the main roads may be found stores with so large a selection that they
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supply shopping carts for their customers' use! Other states, while
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prohibiting sale to residents, allow sales to those residing out-of-state;
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therefore it is possible for those able to prove out-of-state residence to
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purchase fireworks where otherwise prohi bited.
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There are, as can be expected a number of companies who will fill mail orders
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for fireworks. Whether they will arrive at your home is prob lematical if you
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live in a closed state as large numbers of shipments are "confiscated" by local
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authorities upon arrival. The "Church Act", a federal law prohibiting the
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"transportation of fireworks into any state in which the sale or use of such
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fireworks is prohibited," has been in existence since 1954, but it has never
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been vigorously enforced, assuming there could be found a way to enforce it!
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While I, for one would not agree that "laws are made to be broken," there is
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always the classic, "while it may be illegal de facto,.... de jure ....." That
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is to say, if you and half of the neighborhood chil dren (children are great
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"cover") are out on July Fourth shooting off your goods, few if any peace
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officers in this county are going to bother you (assuming you haven't broken
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any windows with your ground bombs). In fact, some years ago the New York City
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Police Department announced that it was senseless to call them and complain
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about fire works on the Fourth, as they had more important things to do!
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Indeed, come July Fourth, my neighbors and I "truck on down" to the local park
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and proceed to "DISPLAY" fireworks with great abandon. I am rather keen on the
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park as with its lake and large amounts of open space, it is possible to shoot
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rockets and such with out having to worry where they will impact, and since so
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far none of the local children have demon strated the ability to walk on water,
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keeping them at a safe distance and out of the line of fire is that much
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easier. Aside from the rockets our activities cause little nuisance in the
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park, in the form of lit ter, &c.
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An interesting "convenience" has arisen concerning the sale and posses sion
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of fireworks here in New York State. The law provides that posses sion of more
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than $50 worth of fireworks is considered prima-facie evi dence of intent to
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sell and therefore is a misdemeanor (i.e., a crime with a maximum sentence of
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less than one year in jail and/or a maximum fine of $500, although nothing
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approaching either penalty is common), but it is still a criminal offense and
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not the kind of thing one would want on his record. To prevent this from
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happening either at the time of "arrest" or before the trial, the quantity of
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fireworks "seized as evidence" is "reduced," seemingly by magic to a quantity
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having a value of less than $50. Therefore no "arrest" need be effected or
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trial held, as one can simply be issued a summons (like a traffic ticket), let
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go with a verbal warning or if need be, plead guilty at the appropriate time to
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"possession of fireworks," which is not a crime but an "offense" (in the sense
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that a parking ticket is not crime), and simply pay the $25 to $50 fine levied.
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Whole truckloads of fireworks have been known to disappear in this manner. I
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will allow the reader to form his own opinion as to the morality of this
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arrangement, and as to the final disposition of the missing material!
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Here in New York City, starting in early June, one may venture to the corners
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of Broadway and Canal Street, (the confluence of the rapidly expanding
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Chinatown and Little Italy) and, while taking in the local colour, notice on
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each of the four corners individuals rather boldly asking passing pedestrians
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and drivers if they wish to purchase fire works. This trade will be carried
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out until a day or so before the Fourth of July, when the outraged dignity of
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those who disdain fire works forces the officers of the local Precinct House (2
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blocks away) to take some token action, generally confiscations of the
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remaining merchandise.
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The large Chinese population of New York is provides good excuse for those of
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us wishing a respite from the "winter fireworks doldrums" to venture forth in
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early February to help the Chinese ward off our common "devils" and bad luck
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during the Chinese Lunar New Year. For a five- day period this year, Chinatown
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streets were closed to traffic at night to provide a clear area for the Dragon
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Dancers to perform, and on which to light [illegal] fireworks and such. My
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fellow aftificier and I, in a spirit of most complete altruism, help the
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Chinese celebrate with our fireworks as a way of thanking their ancestors for
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inventing gun pow der! As an aid in helping the natives celebrate this year, I
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had the foresight to obtain some "Horse Brand" All Red Crackers, which even the
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natives had to admit were "very authentic." As the festivities take place under
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the watchful eye of the local constabulary, one is wise to limit himself to
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"legal" illegal fireworks: i.e., no large salutes, so as not to offend the
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sensibilities of the local populace and officials. Last year, despite numbing
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cold and the 2 - 3 feet of snow on the ground that severely limited the
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functioning of various small ground spinning items, not to mention one's
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fingers, we managed to "carry on."
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Strange as it may seem, there is little in the way of fireworks avail able in
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Chinatown, other then the ubiquitous firecrackers and bottle rockets, perhaps
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because as has been pointed out to me, "the Chinese may make the fireworks, but
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the Italians work the docks." Indeed, although it is often difficult to
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determine the ethnic background of individuals in this polyglot metropolis, the
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persons selling fireworks on the street corners surrounding Chinatown are
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obviously not Orien tals. However during the Chinese New Year celebrations a
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small numbers of locals set up stands (cardboard boxes in some cases) from
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which to sell fireworks to the passing tourist trade.
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There are, of course, those true aficionados who enjoy setting off not only
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commercial fireworks but their own handcrafted devices. As a means to this end
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there have arisen a number of local fireworks clubs, such as the Catskill
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Mountains Pyrotechnics Association (CMPA), a not- for-profit New York
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corporation, of which I am member number 13. (The exact reason for the club's
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incorporation has been forgotten by me, but, if nothing else, it provides a
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patina of legitimacy to our hard- to-hide activities!) Weather permitting, on
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the first Saturday of each month starting with March and ending in October,
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members meet under cover of darkness atop a shale bank overlooking a small dirt
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strip air port in the Catskill Mountains of New York, to "do their thing."
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The production of fireworks by an individual for his own use is some what of
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a legal gray area (to put it politely). The Pyrotechnics Guild International
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Incorporated (PGII) has obtained an opinion from the Director of the Bureau of
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Alcohol, Tax and Firearms (BATF), the agency in charge of enforcing federal
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fireworks laws, that if one is making fireworks for his own use, and not for
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commercial sale, he can reason ably expect to be left alone. (Avoiding
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activities that might call attention to one's offbeat hobby in a way that
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cannot be ignored, is generally considered advantageous. Smoke pouring out of
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your windows accompanied by the sound of exploding fireworks is a phenomenon
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quite likely to be noticed!)
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The CMPA has obtained a federal permit to possess and store Class B
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fireworks, which covers members while attending club shoots, and to a lesser
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extent while traveling to and from club shoots. Possession of a copy of both
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the federal and local permits has worked wonders with the local police forces,
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in rare cases where members have been stopped en route.
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On the local level, unless one has an accident or the neighbors com plain
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loudly, one can do his thing in peace. As a matter of personal conviction, and
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for reasons of personal as well as political safety I for one do not make
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exploding fireworks. To facilitate the production of homemade devices a number
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of establishments have arisen willing to supply the budding pyro with both the
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tools and supplies of his trade. Items such as star pumps, fuse, drifts,
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sundry paper goods (tubes, caps, end-plugs and discs), plus otherwise difficult
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to obtain chemi cals, are readily available through mail order.
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Prior to each shoot, the club secretary obtains a permit from the local town
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to "display fireworks." Then on the night of the shoot he notifies the State
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Police of our activities, the notification being a courtesy, as it's hard to
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hide when you have 30 or more people shooting fireworks on top of a mountain!
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Although the area consists almost entirely of dairy farms, we try to keep the
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production of large KA-BOOMS (aerial salutes) down after 2100 hours in the fall
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and spring and 2200 in the summer, because the local farmers are of necessity
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early risers.
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During club shoots one is likely to see anything. (While members are free to
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bring any item they desire, assuming that it's not radioactive (!), we try to
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discourage LARGE ground bombs, for reasons of safety and as these devices are
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long on pyro and short on technique.) This means anything from the profound
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such as the three-inch salute that burned to the ground, bounced up to a height
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of three feet ! and only then deto nated !), to the profane: a three-inch
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shell from which only one star ignited! But then there are those whose efforts
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result in devices that would not go unnoticed at a professional display,
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including such effects as glitter -flitter, strobe stars, lamp black stars,
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electric spreader mines, colour changing stars, large whistling rockets &c.,
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all hand-crafted by members. Although the most common sized aerial shell is
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one three inches in diameter, four-, five-,and six-inch diameter shells are not
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unknown. Other members in keeping with bigger-is-not- always-better, have
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produced spectacular effects using only 1-1/4" diameter shells.
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The club has used its expertise to put on several commercial displays for
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both fun and profit. The free shoot was a gift to the town of Prattsville, New
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York for its bicentennial. (Good fireworks make for good neighbors!) Other
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clubs in the country are even more active in putting together shows, and
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several have competed at the annual PGII convention.
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As can be expected with so many persons gathered in one place regularly for a
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single purpose, a supplier of common fireworks has been found willing to keep
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our larders filled, at case lot (wholesale) prices.
|
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|
|
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|
Some members, feeling that fireworks are not only for the enjoyment of us
|
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|
Brahmins, have consented to supply various members of the public, and friends,
|
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|
with fireworks, presumably at a profit. So far, no grief has come from their
|
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|
activities.
|
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|
|
|||
|
An interesting relationship has developed between several of the club members
|
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|
and the owner of the airport and surrounding farm. The club secretary is a
|
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|
licensed blaster among his other trades, and therefore has legal access to
|
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|
explosive materials. As a result several members have donated their labor and
|
|||
|
offset the cost of the explosives neces sary to remove a number of large rocks
|
|||
|
from the fields surrounding the airport. They have also blasted down a large
|
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|
part of the shale bank, providing the airports owner with broken rock for use
|
|||
|
as paving mate rial for the runway, &c. As a result of these operations there
|
|||
|
has been the created a large flat stone area for those wishing to shoot Class C
|
|||
|
well separated from those igniting Class B. The blasting oper ations have had
|
|||
|
an added benefit in that they provide a legitimate out let to those members
|
|||
|
whose interest in fireworks has manifested itself in the form of larger and
|
|||
|
larger salutes, more and louder noise. (This seems to be a problem we have in
|
|||
|
common with of other clubs.) Further, after spending the better part of a day
|
|||
|
drilling holes in assorted rocks in preparation for blasting operations, when
|
|||
|
drilling and blast ing operations are completed they have satisfied a burning
|
|||
|
desire for loud noises and are too tired to do ground bombs or much else. They
|
|||
|
have also come to find that the loneliest job in the world is that of the guy
|
|||
|
who lights the fuse!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In an effort to provide a medium for communication among pyro-hobbyists
|
|||
|
across the nation, Max P. Vander Horck in San Diego, California stared the
|
|||
|
first monthly newsletter entirely devoted to such activities in November, 1966,
|
|||
|
titled simply Pyronews. The response to this first ten tative effort was so
|
|||
|
enthusiastic that in January of 1968 Van (as he is now familiarly known) began
|
|||
|
publishing a small magazine-format monthly under the more elegant -- if less
|
|||
|
pronounceable -- name of American Pyrotechnist.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
True to the axiom that success breeds success, Van's second attempt to
|
|||
|
promote communications in a hitherto notoriously uncommunicative field was
|
|||
|
joined in January, 1970 by Fireworks News, "A Monthly Magazine on Fireworks,
|
|||
|
Explosives & Pyrotechnics" published by Peter N. Colonnese in Lexington,
|
|||
|
Kentucky. Then, in October, 1970, apparently deferring to that other old axiom
|
|||
|
that two heads are better then one, Van and Pete joined forces under the banner
|
|||
|
of American Pyrotechnist Fireworks News, "A Monthly Journal on Fireworks &
|
|||
|
Pyrotechnics," which continued with Van as editor and Pete as publisher until
|
|||
|
November, 1976 (final issue numbered 102).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As a direct outgrowth of the enthusiasm and correspondence generated by these
|
|||
|
joint and several publications, Van founded the Pyrotechnics Guild
|
|||
|
International (PGI) in March, 1969, a name reflecting the fact that his
|
|||
|
readership by then extended far beyond the boundaries of these United States.
|
|||
|
In announcing formation of the Guild in that issue (AP, Vol.2,#3) he stated
|
|||
|
that he felt the time had come to establish a nucleus for a non-commercial
|
|||
|
organization devoted to the common (or uncommon) cause: the love of fireworks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As a representative symbol thereof, he went back to the seventeenth century
|
|||
|
for the grizzled image on the venerable "Green Man" with his "fyre clubbe," who
|
|||
|
traditionally led processions of fireworkers at royal (and sometimes
|
|||
|
not-so-royal) celebrations in Jolly Olde England.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As noted below, the Guild has thrived and survived numerous changes of hands
|
|||
|
and scribes during the 15 years since its inception, as has its Green Man
|
|||
|
emblem. It even survived a name change to the tongue-twisting "Pyrotechnics
|
|||
|
Guild International, Incorporated" (PGII) and accompany ing assessment of
|
|||
|
annual dues beginning in 1975! Another change came at the end of America's
|
|||
|
Bicentennial year, when Pete gave up publication of the APFN in November, as
|
|||
|
previously mentioned, and Van took it over again under the original name of
|
|||
|
American Pyrotechnist from January, 1977 through June, 1981 (AP issues
|
|||
|
#103-153), jokingly referring to it as "its own grandpa"! At that point
|
|||
|
history again demonstrated its repetitive nature when Van passed the
|
|||
|
pyro-publishing torch on to Jack Drewes, who himself had already established a
|
|||
|
reputation for pyro- journalism in previous issues of the Catskill Mountain
|
|||
|
Fireworks News and in succeeding ones with that geographical reference dropped.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Starting July 1981 the new publication in turn became the current Amer ican
|
|||
|
Fireworks News, "An International Newsletter for Fireworks People," for which I
|
|||
|
am a "special correspondent," this being a fancy way of saying that I work for
|
|||
|
nothing. Published twelve times a year, the American Fireworks News is a
|
|||
|
newsletter-format publication dealing with less technical fireworks activities.
|
|||
|
Jack also reproduces and dis tributes John Bennett's Fireworks as a service to
|
|||
|
American readers. As a service to those with professional interests in
|
|||
|
fireworks Jack has begun publication of Fireworks Business (Issue No.1,
|
|||
|
February 1984).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To disseminate information of a more technical nature, Robert G. Card well
|
|||
|
in 1977 founded Pyrotechnica, "Occasional Papers in Pyrotechnics," of which to
|
|||
|
date nine numbers have been published.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Guild at present has over 600 members throughout the country. To keep
|
|||
|
members informed of Guild activities, and as a medium for articles dealing with
|
|||
|
construction of an array of devices, safety, history of fireworks, the
|
|||
|
collection of fireworks related items and various other facets of interest to
|
|||
|
members, the Guild publishes the PGI Bulletin, January/February 1984 being
|
|||
|
issue number 40.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Since 1973 the Guild has held annual conventions. At the 1983 conven tion,
|
|||
|
contests were held for: Grand Master, Advanced - Intermediate - Novice Aerial,
|
|||
|
Best Large -Medium Large - Medium Shell, Advanced Rocket, Novice Rocket, Novice
|
|||
|
Ground, Class "C" Commercial, Best Comet, Best Wheel, Best Movie Special
|
|||
|
Effect, and Best New Aerial Effect. A "SUPER STRING" of 293,000 firecrackers
|
|||
|
was *****. (There seems no appropriate word in my dictionary to describe the
|
|||
|
"*****" of a 293,000-cracker string!) Various seminars and workshops covering
|
|||
|
the diverse interests of the membership in fireworks are also held. As the
|
|||
|
highlight of the 1983 convention a 24"-diameter 118 lb. ($1000!) "Thousand
|
|||
|
Flower Blooming" shell was launched with great success and effect, even though
|
|||
|
after firing, it took three days of concerted effort to pluck the mortar tube
|
|||
|
from the ground!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In closing, even though I and others like myself may live in states that
|
|||
|
allow no fireworks, by the use of simple common courtesy, i.e., no loud noises
|
|||
|
at odd hours, superior timing, the use of national, local, religious, and
|
|||
|
ethnic celebrations as "cover," and the formation of common-interest clubs,
|
|||
|
such as the CMPA, Northern Lighters, Cracker Jacks, Great Lakes Pyrotechnics
|
|||
|
Assn. et al, we have our fireworks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Although others residing within political divisions having more under
|
|||
|
standing and liberal fireworks laws may have an easier time obtaining and
|
|||
|
displaying their fireworks, I doubt that they have as much fun as we, for our
|
|||
|
Independence Day, like your Guy Fawkes Day had its origins with people of an
|
|||
|
independent and rebellious nature; what more appro priate way to express this
|
|||
|
than with fireworks, to the pleasure of us "fireworkers" and our audience!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Call The Works BBS - 1600+ Textfiles! - [914]/238-8195 - 300/1200 - Always Open
|
|||
|
|