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Unique Tales, v. 1, issue 1, June 1937
Page 12
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12 UNIQUE TALES On the Zeiss machine itself there are 16 optical projectors for the fixed stars of the northern sky; 16 for the southern sky; 18 for the nebulae, star clusters, and Sirius, the brightest star; 16 for the constellations; 16 for the southern constellations, and the representation of the Milky Way; two for the Milky Way; 10 projectors and mechanisms for the Sun, Moon, and Saturn; eight for Mars and Jupiter; 12 for the network of lines, Zodiac Circle, equatorial line, parallel circle, and South Pole; four for the meridian; one for reading off the years; three motors for the advance of years, and one for the variation of the geographical latitude. Each month a different topic is covered. Incidently, the one for June as on Eclipses. Some of the forthcoming lectures cover the Moon, Comets and Meteors, the Galaxy, etc. We urge you to attend one of the lectures, or at least visit the museum at any time you might be in the vicinity of Hollywood or Los Angeles. It is well worth time, trouble and money spent toward it, and we know you will enjoy it. You can't miss it, for the building may be seen for miles. Here you can sit in the dusk of artificial night and see the endless march of stars in their tireless procession across the stage of eternity; down below the equator where the Southern Cross blazes in all its glory, up to the North Pole, over continents, back through time to the days of the Pharaohs, and ahead to the heavens our descendants will behold and conquer when we are dust. Surely there is something awe-inspiring and thrilling in this display of the God-given powers that mankind hurls in the face of the defeats and restraints and in the muck and mire from which he has crawled into the light of success and the future. "Tomorrow's Music." scheduled for the next issue. Don't miss this satisfying and highly probably prophesy of the entertainment in the future.
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12 UNIQUE TALES On the Zeiss machine itself there are 16 optical projectors for the fixed stars of the northern sky; 16 for the southern sky; 18 for the nebulae, star clusters, and Sirius, the brightest star; 16 for the constellations; 16 for the southern constellations, and the representation of the Milky Way; two for the Milky Way; 10 projectors and mechanisms for the Sun, Moon, and Saturn; eight for Mars and Jupiter; 12 for the network of lines, Zodiac Circle, equatorial line, parallel circle, and South Pole; four for the meridian; one for reading off the years; three motors for the advance of years, and one for the variation of the geographical latitude. Each month a different topic is covered. Incidently, the one for June as on Eclipses. Some of the forthcoming lectures cover the Moon, Comets and Meteors, the Galaxy, etc. We urge you to attend one of the lectures, or at least visit the museum at any time you might be in the vicinity of Hollywood or Los Angeles. It is well worth time, trouble and money spent toward it, and we know you will enjoy it. You can't miss it, for the building may be seen for miles. Here you can sit in the dusk of artificial night and see the endless march of stars in their tireless procession across the stage of eternity; down below the equator where the Southern Cross blazes in all its glory, up to the North Pole, over continents, back through time to the days of the Pharaohs, and ahead to the heavens our descendants will behold and conquer when we are dust. Surely there is something awe-inspiring and thrilling in this display of the God-given powers that mankind hurls in the face of the defeats and restraints and in the muck and mire from which he has crawled into the light of success and the future. "Tomorrow's Music." scheduled for the next issue. Don't miss this satisfying and highly probably prophesy of the entertainment in the future.
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