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Page 26 text:
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24 THE LAUREL these, the bay stretches to the right and left for about fifteen miles in each direction. The width varies from five to fifteen miles. On the tip of the southern peninsula is situated San Francisco. It is from this point that each of the bridges has a begin- ning: the San Francisco-Oakland Bay bridge extending in an easterly direction across the bay to the city of Oakland, and the Golden Gate bridge northerly across the Gate to the tip of the northern peninsula. The Gate bridge forms the key link in the proposed All-Pacific 'Coast-Highways Sys- tem. When the bridge is completed in May, 1937, coastwise traffic will no longer have to be ferried across the Gate. Instead, it may cross the new bridge and continue di- rectly along the coast, thus saving much time and expense. The bridge itself will be the world's long- est and most magnificent single span sus- pension type, and the first ever to be stretched across a major harbor entrance. This single span, looping gracefully from the high towers, is approximately four-fifths of a mile long. Probably the most interesting parts of this bridge are the two cables from which the deck, or roadway, of the bridge is sus- pended. Composed of thousands of strands of steel wire about the size of a lead pencil and supported by two towers of reinforced concrete each 745 feet high ftaller by 191 feet than the Washington Monumentj these cables, thirty-six and one-half inches in di- ameter, are constructed in place since there is no mechanical contrivance that could pos- sibly raise them to their high saddles. Enormous spools containing sixty miles of this wire are placed on each end of the bridge. Bights, or loops, are carried' in- dividually over the towers, allowance being made for the proper amount of sag. At the ends, these wires splay outward to the va- rious portions of the anchorage. The wheels carrying these bights have been per- fected to the extent that it is possible to string about three and a half million feet of wire in eight hours. While these cables are being spun and the decks assembled, much progress is being made on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge. This bridge crosses from San Francisco to Yerba Buena Island, bridging a two-mile expanse of water with twin suspension spans. The piers and towers on which these spans rest were constructed in water over a hundred feet deep plus an additional hundred feet of mud which had to be cleared away so that the piers might rest on the rock bottom of the bay. The construction of these piers differed from the regular mode in that they were built from the surface down instead of build- ing from the bottom up. Huge cellular, or honey-combed, caissons were constructed and floated to the pier sites. The honey- combing consisted of wells of steel tubing about fifteen feet in diameter. Metal domes were fitted and welded to the tops of these and then additional air compressed into them to make the whole structure buoyant. Concrete, poured around the wells, caused these caissons to sink. As they sank, the wells were lengthened by welding sections of tubing to the tops of them. This process was continued until the bottom of the cais- sons touched the mud. The domes were then removed and the mud brought to the surface by means of buckets. More con- crete was added as the caissons sank deeper into the mud until they finally rested on the bedrock. Yerba Buena Island, the eastern anchor- age for the second twin span, is situated midway between San Franciscoand Oak- land. This island rises 340 feet above the surface of the bay. Since the lower deck of the bridge is only 185 feet above the water, the height of the island presented an obstacle. After some consideration a tunnel was drilled completely through it, a distance of three thousand feet. This tun- nel has the largest bore of any ever built. This extraordinary width and height is necessary to accommodate the double decks of the bridge.
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Page 25 text:
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THE LAUREL 23 Twenty-five years later, Joan's mother and brothers sued the courts and had the case tried over again. The Pope declared Joan of Arc innocent. Not until five hun- dred years later, in 1920, was the Maid of Orleans enrolled into the catalogue of saints! Apt indeed is the tribute Bernard Shaw pays to the Holy Heroine, in his play Saint Joan , Half an hour to burn you, dear Saiint, and five centuries to find out the truth about you. George Bernard Shaw's remarkable play Saint joan , which has just com- pleted a successful season in New York, with Katherine 'Cornell in the title role, embodies his unusual and exceedingly in- teresting idea of Ioan of Arc. He shatters all romantic and glamourous conceptions of her as a beggarmaid or a princess. Katherine Cornell portrays his creation of joan to perfection, yet her mere utterances in simple and unelaborate words cannot help but impress one. Shaw believes that joan was great because she was simple and direct, intellectual, though illiterate. She believed staunchly in her- self and her mission, but she was not a ro- mantic little plaster saint with a conscious halo around her head. On merely read- ing the play, one is nearly converted to George Bernard Shaw's Joan, but Shaw's subtle wit and occasional digs at conven- tion interfere just enough to prevent one from agreeing completely with his Joan. After seeing the play with Katherine Cor- nell as the honest, able-bodied, confident, magnificent rustic, it is difficult to adopt any other view of Joan of Arc. In the English playwright's idea, Joan was burned essentially for what we call unwomanly and insufferable presumption. In the prologue, he states in his inimitable manner- that As her actual condition was pure upstart, there were only two opinions about her. One was that she was miracu- lousg the other that she was unbearably presumptuous. She lectured, talked down, and overruled the king, statesmen, prelates and generals. She was the most notable Warrior Saint in the Christian calendar, and the queerest fish among the eccentric worthies of the Middle Ages. The expressions he uses in describing Saint Joan are-- A sane, shrewd country girl with extraordinary strength of mind and hardihood of body, a woman of policy, a daughter of the soil in her peasantlike matter-of-factness and doggedness. She could coax and she could hustle, her tongue having a soft side and a sharp edge. She was very capableg a born boss. He denies that she was the least bit pretty, but the possessor of a very uncom- mon face: eyes wide apart and bulging as they often are in very imaginative people, a long well-shaped nose with wide nostrils, a short upper lip, resolute but full-lipped mouth, and a handsome fighting chin. The centuries have passed. Justice has been rendered to Joan and to her work. It is now for sincere hearts to recognize the divine character of her wisdom. For my part, I agree with Mark Twain in acclaim- ing Saint joan of Arc as the most noble life that was ever born into the world save only One. Mary Magoni '36. YT DREAMS OF CONCRETE AND STEEL ODAY, in various parts of the world, many gigantic constructions are being developed. Hardly is one world's largest or world's highest completed before the inventive mind of man has perfected new methods and new materials making still more colossal constructions possible. So rapidly is this progress and development being made that soon the historic caption One of the Seven Wonders of the World will be changed to merely One of the Wonders of the World. Within sight of each other in San Fran- cisco Bay there are two vivid examples of the progress being made along the line of bridge construction. Entrance is gained to this bay through the Golden Gate, a strip of water about a mile wide between two narrow peninsulas. Immediately inside
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Page 27 text:
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THE LAUREL 25 From this island, the bridge continues to Oakland through a 1,400 foot cantilever span, built of steel girders and through several railroad and deck-type spans. Con- struction on a cantilever span is begun at each end. The arms of steel are literally pushed outward into thin air until they finally meet in midstream and are joined together. Excluding the piers from which the arms were begun, there are no piers of any kind to support the weight of the arms, either during the construction or after the span is completed. This brings up the problem of stretching thousands of tons of steel out into space so that the sag due to gravity will not cause the bridge to be lower in the middle than at the ends. This problem was overcome by tilting the outward ends of the arms, so that, at one time, these ends were about four feet higher than the level at the starting piers. In other words, the sag has been so calcu- lated that the enormous weight of steel bends 'itself downward, and thus, when the two sections are eventually joined, there will be no detectable difference in plane. This bridge, to be completed in August of this year, primarily will connect San Francisco, where six square miles at the northern tip of the peninsula support a population of 635,000 people, with the East Bay district, comprising Oakland, Ala- meda, and Berkeley, with a total population of 393,000. Each day 50,000 commuters cross from these communities to San Francisco. Previous to the building of this bridge, forty-five million people and five million automobiles were transported an- nually by means of ferries from San Fran- cisco to Alameda Country. Thus it will be seen that this bridge will be a great saving to the residents as well as for tourists. It is only after years of experiment and study that these bridges, of proportions never before thought possible by man, are rapidly nearing completion. As time ad- vances, new engineering feats will blaze forth only to be dimmed by still more stu- pendous realizations of the powers of man. Jay Pratt '36. OUR HERITAGE - THE NAVY HE world has had navies since the somewhat dim past, dating back to at least one thousand years before Christ. King Minos of Crete was the first sea lord. He issued a code of maritime laws which was in use as late as the fifteenth century. Since those times the navies of the world have developed tremendously, but some of the old institutions and traditions are still adhered to. The first naval vessel in this country- equipped to defend itself against attack, to harass enemy shipping, and to protect its constituents-was built at Plymouth Col- ony as a protection against pirates. She was christened the Blessing of the Bay and was the first truly American naval ship. During the American Revolution the United States had a. small but efficient navy, and the most conspicuous figure in it was John Paul Jones. Everyone has read ac- counts of his exploits in the Ranger and the converted French ship Bonhomme Richard. He was a master seamang and in the days of sail, seamanship was half the battle. In many encounters, especially the one between the Bonhomme Richard and the Serapis , Jones was handicapped be- fore the Hght by small-sized or unmanage- able ships, and only his superior ability to and his indomitable courage enabled him to come out ahead. john Paul Jones is sometimes called the Father of the American Navy , and he justly deserves that title. sail From 1794, when 'Congress first officially appropriated for a navy, to 1860, there were many advancements in ship construction and propulsion, such as the invention of the steamboat and the screw propeller. just a short time before the latter date, ships were made more invulnerable by armor plat- ing. In Europe this device was used spar- ingly, and the first complete ironclad in the world was the Monitor , built for the United States Navy by John Ericsson. You are all familiar with the appearance of the
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