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THE PORT Beach Carnival The opposite side toward the lake (a recently discovered map names it Harbour Street) dissolved into a small desert of sand and grass. Benches and trestle tables of wind-worn timber and posts emerged like bleaching bones from the landscape forming a rough horseshoe. During the week they were playground to kids running their length to a soft-sand landing that pre-1969 might have been a South Pacific beach head and after stood in for Tranquility base. But come a summer Friday or Saturday night, that vacant stretch could transform into a mystical, magical dream: the Beach Carnival. In the preceding weeks, posters and handbills appeared tacked to lampposts and community bulletin boards around town, fighting for attention over cries of “Church Supper” or “Dance at the Casino”. They displayed in storefront windows, competing with the faded notices of years past. Rotary, Lions, Kiwanis, they all had their allotted Saturday nights gambling every bit as much as their carnival patrons on the whim of the weather to bring in the dollars to continue their good works. Carnival was preceded by an afternoon of slowly mounting activity and tension.
The air began to buzz and those bleaching bones gave the
slightest shiver of anticipation.
First to arrive at the site were a few
trucks and station wagons bearing equipment needed for the games of