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Page 25 text:
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general 200 feet wide by -100 to 900 long and radiatingly spaced by broad courts from a central Court of Homes. To build these stately palaces with their combined exhibit space approach- ing some one million square feet, the cost is some 5S6,750,000, including py- lons, pavillions, stautary, murals, im- pressive fountains and manifold archi- tectural refinements. Apparent in the Treasure Island skyline is the slender 400 foot Tower of the Sun, only 57 feet in diameter. At its base is the Court of Honor. Competing in height with the lofty towers of the Bay Bridge and 72 feet higher than the wooded crest of a neighboring island, this dominant architectural note of the Fair has cost approximately 3535o,ooo. It will mount a -I-I bell Carillon during the Fair. A new Pacific style of architec- ture has been devised to exalt the visitor spiritually into a Never-Never Land where romance in the Ancient mystic forms has been blended into long horizontal lines, setback pyra- mids and mosques characteristic of Maylayan, Incan and Cambodian treat- ments. Tlrere will be a presentation of the distinctive American Indian civilization dramatically presented as part of a Federal exhibit. In addition to be- ing an absorbing exhibit never before presented, it is expected to establish a new vogue for a national crafts- manship that will help the Indian to stand on his feet financially. The Temple of Religion, a 35100,000 structure with a great Tower of Peace, will be constructed where creeds will join in presenting religious displays and activities throughout the Fair. A super-pageant that dramatizes the colorful history of the Eastern Em- pire under many flags from early ex- plorations to modern times, will be presented on a 500 foot stage. There will be a large scale duplica- tion of the real Hollywood Boulevard, including five shops and cafes, a studio with sets, sound stages and typical location scenes, and real celebrities of filmdom. Industrial West, a gigantic mil- lion dollar relief map of the eleven western states, 135 feet square, show- ing dams, transmission lines, rail and highway lines and national resources in exact detail, is in the patio of the Hall of the Western States. A huge model mountain, 50 feet high and strations of every type of Western mining will be found in the Treasure Mountain exhibit. A 2500 mile trip will be made in a few minutes. 400 feet long, with working demon- Be the Guest of the West in '39 is the invitation, See All the Wfest, with San Francisco as host cityf' Here is the 1939 XVorld's Fair at the Pacific Gateway, a significant ex- position of the empires that are build- ing in the golden pathway of the Setting sun. ZI
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Page 24 text:
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20 of splendor borne of the Machine Age and given to mankind. It is the West's Dream of a Decade. A dream which has become a reality and is supported by the pledge of Americans everywhere. The Atlantic side is separated from the Pacific Area lands by a broad avenue of trees which adjoin the International Palace where interior exhibits will be displayed. Countries exhibiting in the Interna- tional Palace include Denmark, Hol- land, Czechoslovakia, Venezuela, Ru- mania, Sweden, Polland, Bulgaria, Portugal, Turkey, Paraguay, Uraguay, I-Iungary, Nicaragua, Germany, Boliv- ia, and Alaska. These nations, in- tent upon bringing out their best fea- tures, are not too dignified to add characteristic touches to Treasure Is- land fun, will make the Pageant of the Pacific memorable. Negotiations are proceeding with more than a dozen other nations, and the Fair opens on February 18, 1939. At least fifty foreign lands will be represented to make San Francisco's Fair the most cosmopolitan and color- ful in the history of the world. It promises to outdo even that of the Panama Pacific International Exposi- tion which until now has been the greatest show ever held in the West. Nations will be on parade with art and industry or dramatic display. Participating countries will design their efforts so as to express the cul- tural rather than the commercial wealth of their lands. Their exhibits will be built around the themes of historical customs and the recreations of their people, and distinctive arts and crafts. Exhibits will be in the Oriental manner. For, although many will be of modern colorful tone there is something of the languor of Pacific Countries which is to dominate the scene. Not only the countries of the Paci- fic and all Latin America have re- sponded to the invitation to take part in the Fair, but Europe is also to be represented in a major way. Twenty- one countries and one United States Territory will have their own individ- ual pavillions, while another nineteen will exhibit in the International Palace. Nations of the Pacific will be to- gether on Treasure Island in a special area designated as the Pacific Basin Area with the pavillions of various countries built on the banks of the picturesque Pacific Nations. The Pa- villion of European Nations and these countries of Latin America on the At- lantic side are separated from the Pacific Area by a broad area of trees and adjoin the International Palace. Treasure Island is a trifie over one mile square, a bit longer than it is wide and the buildings have been so grouped that they may be seen with a minimum of walking. No museum feet at the Golden Gate Exposition, is the slogan used. The main exhibit group comprises six great blocks of exhibit halls. in
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Page 26 text:
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Dirge I hntc thc moon 'lihc moon llI.ll uvcr glows Lila-.1 silcnt frost, I'm Inst . . . l'm one who timer knows A inimgc on .1 ticld .ll-LIT, Inst, .ts .1 w.1n1l'rin1Q, xlmuting xt.1r I lI.Ilk' tht- ity moon, I lI.llL' thc 5l.lI'S Iht- 5l.lI'!s wlnth shine sn hright I.ikc .1 l5L'.lLOIIlS cyu. I cry . . . I hitlc my hc.11l tirom tht- light I scck thc dark so still 11nd tlt-up Nut tlrt-.tins ut hope torinunt my xlctp - I lI.1lL' thc CllNl.1III Sl.lI'S. I lI.llC thc wintl The wintl th.1t sings in thc trccs I.ilc1' .1 SL'I'k'll.ltlL' l'm .ll-l'.lIkl . . . Ilnlwk li.lLL' tltmts lwctinrc mt- nn the lvtuvc Illll Indus when I stretch out my ttrms In lUlIt'lI .intl hultl its yoltlcn 1l1.1rms I lI.IlL' th.1t xtinging wind. I lI.llL' thu tlnwLt's The tlnwcrx xx'l1i1'h ll.lYL' L1 stent sn g.1y like spukling wine, I pint- . . . I lung l0I'lWC.1K'L' .ill night .ind tl.1y Yct it tlocs not llC.II' L'.IL'll time I lvltuitl Anil pray .intl s.1y. Ynn'rc .ill I ncctlfl I l1.1tt' thc smiling tlowcrs. tl KU 111711 I1
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