N^orth I Colh ?“taix in Business TInsnatchable m y' fourteen years old, my J *^o the moon was an ex- ivhich I shall take with me ing oveiit life, jg that sht age is most impression- in to go the trip was something brought; ordinary. When one of Ellen as who was quite wealthy of a slight chance that his have to^ht let him take a guest on aned to the moon, I put , but out of my mind with or too st^^oeration because I doubt- > would ever happen; how- ^e begun' .^^^oths later, I was seek- ice then^^^^^°'^ ftom my parents to id with f ^tiy and night on a e eyes. ^ o^oon. After securing Kay Madison -j really )out it A hant her inn ;d at travel to our closest ^ns an experience in itself, and ^ inside of the : be hot. f before, but I never had 1 X\/r\nU 1 t worry jL ilcvwj. ixav^ ^ould have the oppor- girl haStelv^ f ^ ^ first id^wirK^^n ^^ip th all the latest ultra- ' ^nnons. Although we were J in a practically vertical ty whickenH ^inios, I could not tell it. s to co^ide o? the petk;„ ^bip was connect- 1 makes theS °nter layers of ‘,i «ine What is fog? Yes, it is a cloud like mass of minute globules of water, but just how can fog be summarized? How can it be handled as a substance? Fog is an evasive little creature—so evasive that one has no control over its be havior! Fog does exist. One knows that. It is a shunning material. It dodges and baffles a person. It emanates from nowhere; it disintegrates into nowhere. It disappears suddenly, but where goes the formerly opaque existence? Can fog be a mirage? One never holds fog. One sees fog, but it dis appears as one approaches. Is it an illusion? Perhaps it is, or is it pos- ' sible that fog is just a vaporish nymph instigated by fanciful imag ination? Let us state facts. Fog is mod erately wet. It is found in the at mosphere, on one’s glasses, and in some minds. It is odorless and has a humid, untangible existence. It that I swin'“^"’-compartmeni = “yAmost fevd ‘b fo^neinp atom-pow *Jagki ROE E Powers can be stifling and suffocating. This questionable existence is hard to lay hold upon, or, shall we say, unsnatchable. It is a powerful existence. It controls the vision and human activities at times. Yes, it is opaque and trouble-making, but what can a person do about the sit uation? The human race truly is a victim of fog’s mischievous ways. Have you ever tried a game of grapple with fog? You run, you leap, and you grapple. What? You did not catch it? Where did that elusive little obscurity of a cloud go? Oh, you say you can’t retain it in your hand? For shame. Now you have let that little bit of opaqueness slip through your fin gers. You haven’t caught it yet? Well, that is inevitable, because you will never catch the little nymph! Yes, fog does exist in the atmos phere, on the glasses, and in some minds. It is odorless and unsnatch able. It is baffling and shunning. In more ways than one does a per son seem to have a touch of this obscurity when he endeavors to de fine this darkened state, whether it be in the atmosphere or on the cerebellum! Lost In FirC'^Pldij snt, for neinp „ ' atom-pow- into knn smooth that I n life tbeven ° k taken giarif and ir ents asPsee thm because I ut I h%at T ^ telescopic wm- :d thatfove. we were on ly indo^'ina u tio strain in recisiofl ^as compart- but u% motor ; will br the sh;f oxygen— a to rri^hich ^ P fot our oxygen in’s ci^i be used later, popular^ontinued to Page 18) tst; unfl his sh^ A poet loses himself in the fire-play Of a candle gleaming in a darkened room Until the fire becomes words And the words become fire And lambent flames play on the tarnished dre^. —Shirley Oakes Path To The Qoal - « * t t Within the dismal blackness of my melancholy tnhid. Where saddening thoughts are born and kept, I find That, though my heart is saddened—rooted deep in this dark sod, It struggles upward, outward toward its God. And when, in simple blessings’ soft remembrance, I am glad. Content in the assurance I have had A part in coaxing to some childish face a joyous smile. My heart is closer drawn to God the while On, onward! Ever farther must thou reach and grasp, my soul; And joy and peace await thee at thy Goal. Faith, love, and hope; these mark the path Christ tr^; Through sadness, joy, or chilling storm I HILLTOP—PAGE SEVENTEEN il ixes jorld 1 T-Seni( le Ser m wil plani ximati ilty, a Sf Sm ill’s in itic g Caro] tival I. oke’s ackei rd ai ay e e av ary indi ly hi of il andll yas a ratii arav Sude d b best mmi le c( ted pro( : the ime. izab Drt side Ass{ fast tun w th dito 1 Igrai he le ti mu H r rm