The Bayfield Bulletin, 1964-07-15, Page 8•
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pected to travel to New York
and push the turnstiles in
Flushing Meadow Park this
summer and next.
Now I have run out of space
and I have not even mentioned
the exhibits of the 50 nations
present. Because they give this
"World's Fair" meaning, I want
to devote space next week to
the description of at least a
few of them.
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I
circus was always "the great-
est show on earth". Back in
the gay 90's and at the turn
of the century, Barnum no
doubt had reason to boast.
Probably his greatest asset was
his courage to gamble on pub-
lic reaction and curiosity. To-
day there is another showman
whose brain children, born of
a fertile imagination, have
thrilled thousands for several
decades. He doesn't boast.
Mickey Mouse and his World's
Fair animated figures seem
just a thought apart in this
area of creativity, yet they
have contributed immeasurably
to this year's "Greatest Show
on Earth".
If it can be said there is one
star of the New York World's
Fair, that star is unquestion-
ably Walt Disney, for it is his
gift of fantasy that has made
many of the commercial exhib-
its a joyous adventure.
Inevitably the first question
one is asked when friends or
neighbours learn of one's visit
to this billion dollar show is
"which exhibit did you like
Disney's genius created the
little people of Pepsi Cola's
"A Small World" gay and danc-
ing beside a canal filled with
small boats that carry Fair
visitors around the world on a
ten minute ride through a
fairyland of color and fantastic-
ally lovely floating objects sus-
pended above their heads. His
message is clear: A happy
world will be a united world
and realize "peace through
understanding".
Walt Disney can just as eas-
ily create a tropical setting in
a prehistoric world where dino-
saurs munch the vegetation,
volcanoes erupt and lava flows
while today's world inhabitants
ride past in Ford's handsome
gleaming convertibles from the
'dawn of history to the world
of today'.
General Electric's "March of
Progress" with its family scenes
from the advent of Edison's
discovery to today's electronic-
ally serviced dream house, to
me was an amazing Disney ac-
complishment in animation con-
trolled by electronic tape. While
the audience revolved around
the stage, the years from the.
turn of the century to 1964
were peeled off as painlessly
as skin from a banana. Those
in the audience who have lived
through the various stages of
appliance improvement could
be detected by their hearty
laughter at the humorous pro-
jection of electrical advance-
ment.
Tomorrow's World
General Motor's Futurama at
the last New York World's Fair
in 1939 predicted our massive
highway systems that today we
take for granted. This comp-
any's Futurama 1964-65, pro-
jects us in moving chairs equip-
ped with earphones into what
our world can be expected to
look like 20 years from now.
Recreation areas will be devel-
oped under the sea, communit-
ies established in the Arctic
atmosphere and the tropics re-
claimed for human habitation.
Fantastic, impossible? The
super-highways they predicted
in '39 seemed more than a
dream away, but soon ribboned
this vcontinent.
• These are only a few of the
spectacular exhibits created to
attract millions of people ex-
Diary of a Vagabond
(By Dorothy Barker)
ONE MAN'S GENIUS best?" It is rather trite to
answer "all of them" but I find
Barnum was a boaster. His it impossible to differentiate.
•
HURON'S FREE
TB DETECTION CLINIC
FIRST DAY RE-VISIT
CLINTON—Town Hall July 15 July 20
July 16 July 21
July 17 July 22
BAYFIELD—Town Hall July 20 July 23
CLINTON RCAF
STN.—Ritchie Building July 21 July 24
Operating from 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m.
each day, unless indicated otherwise.
PLAN TO HAVE ALL YOUR FAMILY
ATTEND
Huron County Tuberculosis
Association
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