Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

‘When America fought back’

President marks 9/11 anniversar­y at Pa. site

- By Jennifer Peltz and Karen Matthews

NEW YORK — Americans looked back on 9⁄11 Tuesday with tears and somber tributes as President Donald Trump hailed “the moment when America fought back” on one of the hijacked planes used as weapons in the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil.

Victims’ relatives said prayers for their country, pleaded for national unity and pressed officials not to use the 2001 terror attacks as a political tool in a polarized nation.

Seventeen years after losing her husband, Margie Miller came from her suburban home to join thousands of relatives, survivors, rescuers and others on a misty morning at the memorial plaza where the World Trade Center’s twin towers once stood.

“To me, he is here. This is my holy place,” she said before the hours-long reading of the names of her husband, Joel Miller, and the nearly 3,000 others killed when hijacked jets slammed into the towers, the Pentagon and a field near Shanksvill­e, Pa., on Sept. 11, 2001.

The president and first lady Melania Trump joined an observance at the Sept. 11 memorial near Shanksvill­e, where one of the jetliners crashed after 40 passengers and crew members realized

LAS VEGAS — There are two flights of stairs curling around the head-turning glass bong, all 24 feet of it. There also will be an elevator to ferry people from the ground floor — where the pipe’s 100-gallon reservoir sits — to the mouthpiece high above.

It weighs more than 800 pounds, and the bowl can pack a quarter of a pound of marijuana. It has elements in the glass that will make it glow while bathing in black light. Jason Harris, the artist who made it, said it’s his artistic opus to the cannabis culture. “I make giant bongs,” he said. “They are my voice to make noise in the world.”

But to be heard and noticed on Fremont Street in downtown Las Vegas — where the bong is housed — is no small task.

It’s a sensory tsunami on Fremont, filled with street musicians playing “Stairway to Heaven” on electric violins or steel drummers hammering out hits from the ’80s.

There are screams from people shooting down a zip line above the street. Tribute bands blast metal music, and boozy packs of tourists point at half-naked men and women trying to lure them into posing for a picture.

And size matters, too. Vegas Vic — the iconic neon cowboy — towers above a souvenir shop and stands 40 feet tall. There’s a giant pint of Guinness atop Hennessey’s that is 80 feet tall. Slotzilla, a slot machine perched in the middle of Fremont Street, reaches a height of 120 feet.

Harris saw it all as the perfect home for Bongzilla, as his creation is known.

“Las Vegas will be the new Amsterdam of the world,” he said. “I see it as a big lighthouse and beacon that says, ‘Just smoke me.’ ”

But the 47-year-old knows that can’t happen in Las Vegas — at least not yet.

Though Nevada legalized recreation­al marijuana in 2017, it can only be consumed in a private residence.

But it’s become a booming industry in the state, just the same.

The Nevada Department of Taxation recently released numbers that showed that for the first full fiscal year, marijuana sales yielded tax collection­s totaling $69.8 million — 140 percent of what the state had forecast. Total sales — including medical marijuana and related goods — hit $529.9 million for the fiscal year. Cannabitio­n, the soonto-open marijuana museum where the bong resides, is not a licensed dispensary, however. It sits on a leased spot of commercial space near a craft brewery and across from — convenient­ly for stoners — a Denny’s.

The museum is scheduled to open officially this month.

Harris doesn’t really want any run-ins with the law — like that time in 2003 when he was arrested in a massive Justice Department raid dubbed Operation Pipe Dreams that also swept up actor Tommy Chong.

“At that point, I thought my bong-making career was over,” he said. But by the time Colorado legalized recreation­al pot in 2012, he was back in the game, riding on his reputation as the founder of Jerome Baker Designs and crafting bongs — some as tall as 7 feet — as the world of cannabis culture grew more mainstream.

Bongzilla, Harris said, was a significan­t undertakin­g.

It took 15 people blowing glass eight hours a day — for four days — to make Bongzilla in a studio in Seattle.

It then had to be disassembl­ed, packed into special boxes and transporte­d in a truck that wouldn’t draw a lot of attention. It was driven down Highway 95, a twolane road that runs along Nevada’s western side through a smattering of small towns.

J.J. Walker, founder of Cannabitio­n, said it took several days to reassemble Bongzilla.

He said workers had to build a special clip to secure it to the railing so it won’t move. Reassembli­ng the parts required a special bonding agent that would keep it intact while allowing smoke to flow freely through the tube. They added a mural backdrop of Tokyo for Bongzilla’s display. No sign of Mothra, however. Even though Bongzilla can’t legally be used to smoke weed, it was important to Walker and Harris that it work.

Nevada state Sen. Tick Segerblom — a Democrat who is running for a seat on the Clark County Commission — said he envisions a day when people can take a hit off the enormous bong.

Segerblom, a longtime advocate for legalizing marijuana use more broadly, said when he first saw Bongzilla, it blew him away. He also said he’ll be attending the opening of Cannabitio­n.

“It’s what we do best here, and it fits in well with our party and outlaw image,” Segerblom said. “But I’m also hoping it makes people aware that Las Vegas is the perfect place for the cannabis culture and, if we can pull this off, it will become a major focal point for us.”

 ?? LEE HERSHFIELD/COURTESY ?? Palm Beach County: James Holmes, of Wellington, reads a plaque that describes the origins of one of the largest steel beams recovered from the World Trade Center after the attacks and is now displayed in Wellington.
LEE HERSHFIELD/COURTESY Palm Beach County: James Holmes, of Wellington, reads a plaque that describes the origins of one of the largest steel beams recovered from the World Trade Center after the attacks and is now displayed in Wellington.
 ?? AL DIAZ/MIAMI HERALD ?? Miami-Dade County: Firefighte­rs and police attend the 9/11 Ceremony of Remembranc­e at Tropical Park.
AL DIAZ/MIAMI HERALD Miami-Dade County: Firefighte­rs and police attend the 9/11 Ceremony of Remembranc­e at Tropical Park.
 ?? JOE CAVARETTA/SUN SENTINEL ?? Broward County: The Coral Springs/Parkland Fire and Rescue honor guard perform Tuesday during a 9/11 memorial service in Coral Springs.
JOE CAVARETTA/SUN SENTINEL Broward County: The Coral Springs/Parkland Fire and Rescue honor guard perform Tuesday during a 9/11 memorial service in Coral Springs.
 ?? ISAAC BREKKEN/FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? It took 15 people blowing glass eight hours a day — for four days — to make Bongzilla in a studio in Seattle.
ISAAC BREKKEN/FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES It took 15 people blowing glass eight hours a day — for four days — to make Bongzilla in a studio in Seattle.

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