| 
 "Many 
                of the older people remember the vision of the future that shined 
                through, a vision that was so futuristic as to not be believable," 
                Brown says.  That 
                vision certainly comes through in the replica of the fairgrounds. 
                There is the spike-shaped Trylon building, for example, and the 
                globe-shaped Perisphere, which housed its own theater.  Various 
                pavilions foretold of television, highways and the dishwasher. 
                 But 
                the centerpiece of the Fair, and the museum exhibit, are trains. 
                Today's youngsters are just as enthralled by them as their grandparents 
                were, Brown explains.  Beyond 
                that, Brown and Cryan note that model train exhibits are a natural 
                fit with the holiday season.  "They 
                weigh 20 pounds and puff smoke and whistle -- and they're not 
                Pokemon cards," Cryan says. Jim 
                Shelton New Haven Register Tueday, Nov. 30, 1999 pg. B6 |