
Man admitted to 2025 Osaka Expo with 85-year-old ticket
Tickets for the "Grand International Exposition of Japan" in Tokyo were released in 1938 but the event was postponed indefinitely as Japan became embroiled in World War II.
Organizers of the 2025 expo, which opened last month and runs until mid-October, said in a statement they had decided to admit holders of tickets to the 1940 event.
They exchanged one of the old tickets on Monday for two one-day expo passes, the statement said.
Local media reported that the 1940 ticket-holder was 25-year-old Fumiya Takenawa, who lives in Tokyo but was visiting his parents' home in Osaka.
Takenawa is a collector of expo-related memorabilia and in March he purchased the 1940 ticket online, the Mainichi Shimbun daily and other outlets reported.
They published a photograph of him smiling and holding up the old ticket, which features an elaborate red and black design.
The expo or World's Fair, which brought the Eiffel Tower to Paris, began with London's 1851 Crystal Palace exhibition and is now held every five years in different locations.
Previous expos in Japan — in Osaka in 1970 and in Aichi region in 2005 — have had similar policies of giving "invitation tickets" to people holding passes for the 1940 event, the expo organizers said Monday.
Takenawa was reportedly a fan of the huge white and red "Tower of the Sun," the symbol of the 1970 Osaka Expo that still stands in a park in the metropolis.
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The Mainichi
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And then, just when I had built up a small collection, I stopped flying as much and was peremptorily returned to economy on an almost permanent basis. For most of us in life, we are lucky if we get to one or two South American countries, lucky to have a couple of pretty Dutch houses as souvenirs of travelling business class, lucky to spend a couple of days at Osaka Expo... But we can surely summon up admiration for those who refuse to compromise, who want the full set, and manage like the Expo Lady to get round all 188 pavilions. When she got into the Dutch Pavilion, my only regret is that the Dutch Consul General did not present her -- instead of a silly "Miffy" toy -- with the full set of 105 Delft Blue Dutch houses. That would have been a truly suitable presentation to the amazing Expo Lady, that most superbly accomplished hunter of the White Whale. @DamianFlanagan (This is Part 66 of a series) In this column, Damian Flanagan, a researcher in Japanese literature, ponders about Japanese culture as he travels back and forth between Japan and Britain. Profile: Damian Flanagan is an author and critic born in Britain in 1969. He studied in Tokyo and Kyoto between 1989 and 1990 while a student at Cambridge University. He was engaged in research activities at Kobe University from 1993 through 1999. After taking the master's and doctoral courses in Japanese literature, he earned a Ph.D. in 2000. He is now based in both Nishinomiya, Hyogo Prefecture, and Manchester. He is the author of "Natsume Soseki: Superstar of World Literature" (Sekai Bungaku no superstar Natsume Soseki).


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