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QC04172014

38 THE QUEENS COURIER • APRIL 17, 2014 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT www.queenscourier.com world’s fair Readers share their World’s Fair memories BY KATRINA MEDOFF As the grand opening of the World’s Fair Festival approaches, The Queens Courier is digging up memories of the 1939-40 and 1964-65 World’s Fairs. The World’s Fair experience is still fresh in the memories of our readers, and many have shared their stories. Mary Maggio was 8 when the 1964-65 World’s Fair was being built. “My dad worked in street lighting, so I was actually there before it initially opened up,” she said. Maggio and her mother would go the site to bring her father dinner. “It wasn’t open yet, but it was going to be open soon. I saw construction workers and electricians preparing for the fair.” Maggio spoke of the enthusiasm of everyone in Electchester, which was built for electrical workers, where she grew up. “We all couldn’t wait because it was something spectacular,” she said. “Our parents were there for the ‘39 fair, so they instilled in us — the second generation — that excitement by talking about it.” She remembers the Carousel of Progress at the General Electric pavilion; the Vatican pavilion, which Maggio had to visit with her parochial school; the giant U.S. Royal Tires Ferris wheel; and a water show. “The water show had people on Jet Skis and a clown who either opened or ended it,” she said. “I sat toward the front so I’d get splashed because it was so hot.” It’s a Small World “stuck in my head,” Maggio said. “When I went to Disney World as an adult, I got there and the one pavilion I went to was Small World — and it was closed for renovation!” Steve Dworkin was a teenager during the 1964-65 World’s Fair. “That might have been the best time to go to the fair because I went with friends,” he said. “I was sad when they ripped it down.” Since Dworkin lived in Little Neck, the fair was just “a quick ride” away, he said. “I don’t remember how many times I went,” he said, but “you had to go there quite a few times to see everything.” He remembers seeing “a lot of groundbreaking things” at the fair. “Chrysler was showing a car that could run on any combustible fuel,” he said. Supposedly, it would be ready soon, he said — “but 50 years later, we’re still waiting!” In the Illinois pavilion, visitors entered a theater and saw a fi gure of Abraham Lincoln sitting on a chair. “He looks like a statue or wax model, Photo courtesy of the Greater Astoria Historical Society.


QC04172014
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