..Hi t A I A- ■-T' ❖ . i i Cl V '■\ I-- \v V-lA \ A, > Vv'- Fifth Edition iiontroat Collef:e, If^ji^r'ent, T. C, Jo.nuary, 1941 N. \ \ K fc- M 10' i 'f\ -Cl eicoiae It's opening',—this strange little door marked 1941—for everyone of us, Yrtiere it v/ill lead eventually none ceui tell hut vfherever it leads toirtorrow is in your own hands. This door is opening—at first -viith just a crack--and when v;e peek throiigh, all see there is a long road leading from that door—and that is the road we are to travel during 1941. Vie can make it another rut for oursel’/es^—stream.- ’'lined, certainlj^, but nevertheless a rut; or we call dig detours and cover up all the ruts and pave a smooth highway. As we push harder on the door, it savings open -suddenly, and we see a big v/elcame sign hanging above., The new year*. Last year is another road in the forest of life, but vre got lost, and became afraid, and made mistakes ’while traveling that road. lie •'.■/on't look back on that road, but ’.'Ve'Il the rough spots and •emember be wary for similar ones on the 1941 road. How good it is to s-tart traveling afresh dov.'n a gleair.- n* I* (Turn to I-''-’' r >v' tvro) I'lor-iin.g; Hum and bustle of many people in Pennsylvania Station, mingled v;ith the so’und of an organ way off in one corner—cold v/ind pushing against you £vs you leave- the station doors and start out on the street—a bro’.vr-clad nun standing just outside Hacy's 34th Street entrance hcldinv a tinv silver plate—pigeons, fluttering on -the gray stone steps of St, Patrick's Cathedral —the abrupt squeak of tires as a taxi stops—a traffic officer on horseback emerging froia a side street to direct the confusion on the aveiiuo. Afternoon; The huge golden bdlls in Lox’d a;ui Tavlor's window'--the brilliant colors of the costwies of the skaters flashing by on the Rockefeller Center ring—the jDhristma.s displayCof -fur rf.n Russek's corner wdridow—Halt Disney* s "Fantasia" at Radio City. Evening: Lights suddenly ablaze on 5th Avenue—the seven-story Cfiristmac tree lighted with red, v/hite, aijd blue bulbs concealed in pls.stic globes—and the lighted organ pipes at Rockefeller Cen ter—the h-um and bustle of the station again—this time Grand Central—then the roar of a train, and everything left behindj... - 0 0 0 - ?rouldn't this old urorld be better If the folks v.’e meet v/ould say: "I Inaow sojv.ething good about vou," And then treat us just that v.uy? Wouldn't it be nice to practice That fine way of thinking, too: "You Icno^v senething good .about me And I Iciov/ something g',ood about you."