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2010 the Urban Development Corporation’s annual fireworks display

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Display location:Kingston Harbour
City:Kingston
State:Jamaica
Date:December 31

Details: Thursday night, when fireworks lit up the skies over Kingston Harbour, Sylvester Johnson tightly held on to his son Kareem’s legs – he was sitting on his shoulders. The youngster beamed with joy as the dazzling, coloured lights, accompanied by onomatopoeic explosions, created fleeting works of art above the polluted waters. But Sylvester was looking at the sea, which he had jumped into many times, years ago.

It was the late 1970s and Jamaica was in political turmoil. Sylvester was having his own maelstrom. A homeless boy he was, whose hobby was diving into the harbour several times a day. The waterfront was his home, other homeless boys his family. The streets were his school, and did he learn a lot. Now, the melange of good and bad memories had transported him from the present – he didn’t hear the very loud climactic sounds that heralded in 2010.

The camaraderie with the other boys, the fights, the sharing of food afterwards, the deaths by drowning, the disappearances, the pursuits by the police. The men who drove by at nights trying to seduce them with gifts and money. The teacher woman who promised to school him, but kept him at home as a servant.

When he decided enough was enough and refused to wash her undies, she called the police to say he had broken into her house. The trip to the police station and the leap over a high wall after he bolted from the police car when the lone lawman got out to urinate along the road. Scenes of those and more he watched in the reflections of the lights from the calm waters.

But, it was when the face of the woman he saw at North Parade started to emerge from the glare that the sea became black once more and Kareem shook him from his reverie. He stooped as his 10-year-old burden of a son jumped from his broad shoulders. He held his hand and they headed to Parade via King Street.

More flashbacks

Sylvester’s pace was fast. Tired, little Kareem struggled to keep up with him. “Can’t we get a cab, Dad?” he whined. “Soon!” was the short response. He had to see her again.

The walk up King Street brought back more flashbacks. But, how much it had changed. Dirtier, it certainly was. Too many buildings in need of renovation, he thought. Where is Time Store? He wondered. He didn’t see it on the way down. And all those fast-food stores.

At the top of King Street, at South Parade, he turned east, homeless people lined the sidewalk. His heart beat faster as he turned on to North Parade. He glanced about, but she was not around. He looked again, but the woman in the red head wrap was nowhere to be seen. People were all around heading back home.

At the taxi stand, in front of The Captain’s Bakery, he boarded a cab. Kareem was first in. He rested his head on his father’s leg and fell asleep immediately. Sylvester rested an arm around Kareem’s waist, and his thoughts went back to the events of the day.

He was back in Jamaica after being away for years. Bitterness had kept the divorced, single father at bay. This year, however, he won over. He wanted to show his son his roots. From New York they had arrived two days before Christmas. They had a good time but, deep down, Sylvester hoped that he would have gone back to New York with a lighter heart.

Thursday, on his way to the waterfront he gave Kareem a tour of sections of downtown Kingston. At Parade, he circled the recently renovated St William Grant Park, as he told the wide-eyed Kareem about the place he had frequented as a homeless youth. He was about to tell him about the unsightly Ward Theatre, when he saw a woman leaning against the wall that enclosed the park, across from the Rollington Town taxis.

He stopped and stared at her. “You know her?” Kareem asked. “No,” a confused-looking Sylvester replied. Kareem tugged his hand, and they continued down East Parade. Sylvester became silent no longer the upbeat tour guide he was. All the way down King Street the woman was on his mind – that face, her face was so familiar, only that it was older.

When the taxi reached his hotel, he brought the sleeping Kareem to their room. After tucking him in, he took a shower, had some ginger wine on the rocks, then went to bed. But all night he didn’t sleep a wink. The face haunted him.

The meeting

Friday morning, he brought Kareem to stay by a long-time friend of his who, too, was vacationing in Kingston. Into another taxi he jumped. The woman’s face was calling. Strange, but he was nervous. The journey seemed longer than usual. Upon arrival, he saw her, at the very spot she was the day before. As he approached her, his heart raced. He knew her, he was sure. But she was fatter and had aged, looking so much different from the last time he had set eyes upon her, over 30 years ago.

“Babsy?” Sylvester enquired timidly.

The woman raised her head. Her eyes were closed. Slanting her head to one side, she asked, “Who it is?” Her voice echoed in his skull, as it did many times before.

“A say, who it is? Yuh giving me something?” She was now holding on to the white cane resting on a thigh.

Sylvester stood speechless. His throat got tight. Then the tears, and the memories of Miss Babsy came in torrents. He fell to his knees and cried uncontrollably. He held her sore and swollen legs, and squeezed them.

“Clear off!” the woman cried out.

“Mama!, it’s me, Sylvester!” he whispered through his sobs.

“Sylvester! Sylvester!?”

This time he answered her, unlike the day when she gave him the last beating.

“Sylvester! Sylvester!” she shouted – the meal of dumplings and butter was ready. It was after she gave him a sound spanking for coming back from the shop with steel wool that was ‘married’ to flour. But Sylvester was gone. Tired and weary Sylvester had gone, just as his ‘father’, the man who called him a ‘jacket’ had disappeared.

Now, he was at her gangrenous feet, weeping as a child. Miss Babsy held his balding head, which he rubbed against her knee and said, “Never mind, my son, never mind.”

Boom, boom, pow! Fireworks Display in January

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Display location: Catawba Meadows Park
City:Morganton
State:NC
Date:January 9

Details: Morganton, NC – Fireworks usually aren’t a mid-winter treat, but on Saturday a group of pyrotechnic trainees lit the afternoon sky above Catawba Meadows Park during a certification and training course.
The group of approximately 50 fireworks professionals took part of a certification course to comply with a new North Carolina law that goes into effect Feb. 1. The law requires all pyrotechnicians to complete eight hours of training and a written exam administered by the N.C. Department of Insurance.
The law stems from a Fourth of July fireworks explosion on Ocracoke Island. Four workers from Melrose Pyrotechnics of York County, S.C., died in the blast.
The N.C. Division of Occupational Safety and Health fined Melrose Pyrotechnics of York County, S.C., almost $45,000 for safety violations, although the specific cause of the explosion is still unknown.
David Thompson, Table Rock Pyrotechnic Services, said previously, pyrotechnicians only needed a N.C. Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms license.
Table Rock Pyrotechnic Services, a Burke County based fireworks operation, and Zambelli sponsored the Saturday morning class and afternoon live shooting course. Instructors came from Pennsylvania and Florida and participants came from across the state.
Rob Roegner, engineering services liaison with the Office of the State Fire Marshal, said the certification class covers the safety basics of working with pyrotechnics.
The live shooting course demonstrated shooting fireworks manually and electrically and included engineered accidents in a controlled environment, Roegner said. Professionals must complete six shootings to acquire certification, which is valid for three years.
Gregg Gettys, a member of Table Rock Pyrotechnic Services, said, “I think (the law) has been a long time coming. It should have been done earlier.”
Thompson agreed, but said the quick implementation of the law has created a less than smooth ride.
The course on Saturday is one of the first in the state, Roegner said. Several more have been scheduled across the state in the upcoming weeks.
Thompson said Table Rock Pyrotechnic Services has about 70 members in the club who will need to be trained.
Table Rock Pyrotechnics began in 1982 and has provided the fireworks for the City of Morganton’s Fourth of July and festival events, at local high schools and at various shows in the region.

Fireworks display to celetrate the opening of the African Cup of Nations soccer tournament

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Display location:LUANDA
City:LUANDA
Country:Angola
Date:Jan.10.

Details: LUANDA, Angola — Fireworks lit up Luanda on Sunday as traditional and contemporary performers broke into interweaving dance in a ceremony to mark the opening of the African Cup of Nations soccer tournament.

The ceremony was held at a giant, Chinese-built stadium, just two days after an armed attack on the Togo team bus left three dead.

A minute’s silence was due to be observed ahead of the Angola-Mali kick-off later Sunday.

“Despite the terrorist attack, Cabinda will remain a hosting city,” Angolan president Jose Eduardo dos Santos said in an opening speech. “There is no need to be afraid.”

Several African heads of state were present, including President Ruphia Banda of Zambia and South Africa’s Jacob Zuma, whose country will host the World Cup later this year.

Fireworks display on Burj Khalifa

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Display location: Burj Khalifa
City: Dubai
Country: Dubai
Date: Dec.28

Details:Its launch was spectacular, but can the world’s tallest building draw tourists to Dubai, asks BERNICE HARRISON

IT WAS NEVER going to be an intimate party for a handful of the sheikh’s closest friends. For many reasons, the only way to launch the Burj Dubai, the tallest man-made structure on the planet, last Monday was with a jaw-dropping fireworks display in front of an estimated 5,000 guests.

The pyrotechnics were the finishing touches to an already spectacular evening that began for about 300 VIP guests with a drinks reception – water and juice – on the ground floor of the tower (burj is Arabic for tower), where, for most men, the dress code appeared to be immaculate white dishdashas and red-and-white headscarves; many of the relatively few women in the VIP section toted giant designer handbags to go with their jewel-hemmed abayas. Gold Louis Vuitton totes, as big as weekend cases, were the most spotted.

Once seated on squashy sofas in a viewing section – for a reason I can’t fathom I was only a dozen seats along from the party’s host, and Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum – the spectacle began.

Ten parachutists drifted down from the sky, carrying giant flags bearing the sheikh’s picture and looking like extras in a Bond movie, while a giant air balloon hovered for no apparent reason in the sky. The fountain in the man-made lake in front of the tower kicked off with a dazzling water display, shooting jets of water 30m into the sky in time to traditional Arabic music.

Rubberneckers in this part of the world aren’t discreet. Before the giant video screen giving the history of the project boomed into action, lines of men stood staring at the seated sheikh (who was flanked by his government ministers), as if being that close to him was simply enough.

The building’s vital statistics were kept a secret until the last minute – about 800m tall had always been the official figure – for fear the owners of some other skyscraper might stick a mast on top of their building and claim the glory. After seven years of construction Dubai wasn’t going to be trumped – but in reality no other building is even close, and there were gasps from the crowd as a counter on the screen clicked away until 828m was revealed as the height.

That announcement was expected, and it had people around me tweeting and blogging the news, but the revelation of a name change was a major surprise and even more newsworthy. It’s been the Burj Dubai since the first sod was turned, in 2003, but it is now the Burj Khalifa, after Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al Nahyan, who is president of the United Arab Emirates and ruler of nearby Abu Dhabi, which has been bailing out debt-ridden Dubai.

As the tower is going to be mostly a tourist attraction instead of a symbol of property development, the name change from the easy-to-Google Burj Dubai is going to be a less catchy sell.

Looking up at the astonishing structure as smoke from the fireworks wafted through the choreographed light show beaming out from the tower, it was easy to believe the dizzying statistics. Burj Khalifa, which can be seen from 95km away, has 28,000 windows, 1,044 apartments, 160 hotel rooms and 49 floors of offices.

The floor that will draw tourists like a magnet is the world’s loftiest observation deck, up at level 124, which has floor-to-ceiling glass panels giving 360-degree views. Those who want to test their head for heights can step out on to the terrace. The deck opened to the public on Tuesday with an entrance fee of about €17.

Access to the deck is via one of several lifts that are also record breakers. At 504m they have the highest elevator rise, although they cover that vertical ground in less than a minute.

The anchor tenant, the Armani Hotel, which will take up the first 37 floors of the building, is not due to open until March 18th, but the Italian designer promises a “lifestyle experience”, saying “with this hotel I am bringing the ‘Stay with Armani’ promise to reality.”

Industry analysts will be watching to see if his five-star hotel can command premium prices in a city crowded with five- and even so-called seven-star establishments that have had to drop their prices in the past 12 months.

The first residents of the Burj, the owners of the 140 apartments in the Armani Residences, will move in early next month; other residents and corporate tenants get their keys in March.

Despite the astonishing spectacle of the fireworks, a long-time Middle East commentator remarked to me, as we made our way out through the crowd, how restrained the whole event was – relative, that is, to the way it had been for the past 10 years, when this part of the world defined blinging excess. There was a time, he said, when entire planeloads of Hollywood A-listers would have been flown in for a launch of this magnitude. Not any more.

Fireworks display over downtown Grand Rapids

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Display location:Grand Rapids
City:Grand Rapids
State:Michigan
Date:Jan.9

Details: GRAND RAPIDS (WZZM) – A Hannah Montana look-alike from Holland is one of several performers in downtown Grand Rapids this weekend looking for work at the Michigan Association of Fairs and Exhibitions Convention.

Delegates from more than 85 events are learning about everything, from food sanitation to shopping for entertainment.

The convention caps off Saturday night with a fireworks display over downtown Grand Rapids. The convention is not open to the public, but the fireworks will be viewable by anyone.

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