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Page 101 text:
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,,,,-,...,-,.,..--J-pg--p-1-nu.--sxiuunnussnrzuuu-11--ni I 5-1?4565934555'll'-N lE'N ii--I!-'N'i! N'-31'-!!--H-'6!-4Z 3!''3l'45'i1 N:,I l! 3! 3!' THF SCENF CHANGES - he View from my window is more beautiful in win- ter than in summer. In the summer all that I .-an 'H' see is a hot, dry field with a fcw withered this- tles here and there. Over in the corner I see a dust-covered old shack with some of the shing- les gone. Everything is hot and dry. In the winter a magical change appears. The hot dry field has turned into a beautiful white carpet, while strange entrancing designs sparkle all over the ground. In the center of the field you see a group of red faced children laughing and shouting while they play in the sno The old dust covered cabin has become a mighty fortress for the defense of another group of children. The blue sky puts a beautiful finish upon this delightful scene. --Harry Frederick, '38 treason verything was so strange and unreal. Just to FJ look at the landscape around stirred me with a f' mild forerunner of horror. I was in a deep, -J rather broad ravine and all about me was extreme desolation.- The slopes in every direction were covered with dead ashes from which rose the blackened stubs and tree'e skeletons looking like charred bones. It is impossible to describe the deep depression that lay on my heart from the aspect of those lifeless surround- ings. Here and there floating wisps of mist made an ash- en tree trunk look cold and transparent as a corpse. A olammy feeling waved through me and I looked hastily a- way, only to be met with similar sights. It seemed as if everything had been dead for thousands of years--as if something about the still air prevented life and growth. Even I felt cramped and cold inside and knew I could not stay in that atmosphere very long. I was following a narrow, winding path that slanted Under my feet the ashes were so solidity that I felt as if I were down along the slope. deep and so lacking in W q fl tl 'KI 'I 'I I I 'I gl 33 -Ig: 'I 'I QI 'I 'I 'I 3 'II 'I 'I '31 tl 'I 'I 'I 'kr I gl 'I gl tl tl 1 s s e 4 4 4 4 e 4 4 s 4 4 4 e s s s 4 e s s w e e s s-e-s-s-s-Qi . 99
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Page 100 text:
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.I . ,421 I 'I we: IW I' 'sk IW Il' SIC I :': 'Q '4 FI SIG I FI ff lie 'I II: :If I ak Iflg I? I II' 'I' Im I ls: II' Iw In u IW I? I m I is ft In g.. is In Ig' 91: Is Is Ig In SI! I lc I I ,fir Q4 41' -II' -.5-TI-5P'II4I'6I' -- ee as ee as 4+ 49 as as as as as as 4+ 45 as as as as 4q,f as 4 4 at S N O W fter stewing and worrying, I decided to write 1 about the joys and sorrows caused by snow. Jf' Many folks shout with glee when the fairy- like flakes tumble to the ground, but others sigh in despair. . My, the children are glad! They know that there will be no school because it is not safe for the busses to make their trips. The children, teachers and many others are out enjoying the healthful sports of skiing and sleigh riding. Early morning finds a group of them out for a day's fun. They take the spills as a great jokeg then they are up to the top and whizzing down again. Never a thought as to the danger of breaking a leg or an arm. The shouts and squeels ring through the crisp cold air until noong then they dash home for a snack to eat and toast their frozen toes by the fireside. Some decide to stay home by the nice cozy fireg but the others race back to get their turn on a certain sled. If the afternoon is bright enough, some of the sportsmen take advantage of it by taking pictures. When the snow begins to melt, hiking takes the place of skiing and sleighing. Oh, but the sorrows are great. The poor people suffer from hunger and cold. The snow causes many to be without work. The freezing weather causes the pipes to freeze and break. This kind of weather is the cause of many deaths because it enables the influensa and pneu- monia to get a start on the people. It is difficult to break a cold during this weather. The snow blanketed highways make it dangerous and difficult for those who have to travel. in a newspaper. the highway and and the bus driv- er were seriously lnjured. This fact alone should make people open their eyes. Some people insist that the roads are safe, and say HI don't see why they don't have scbool.N It is far butter to lose e few lays of school I recall an incident which I read Near Roseburg a school bus skidded off over u thirty foot bank. Ten children than to lose some lives. I --Mary Force, '57 as as as as as 4+ as 4+ as as 4+ at as as as as as as as if .ee as as as as 45 4+ as as as ee, '21- 5 'Il WI SIG I 112 is PIC 112 S24 ll: rl: 'If 'Il :lf 'If 'If is III ik 'IG SI' :Ie V fs 'w 124 'If It 'If 23 'Il 'If 'If PIG 221 wk 'If if Ik 222 all rl: :Ie Ik wk -K- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
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Page 102 text:
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i5'2-i!'95'l?'i!'4!'46'lP4!-35-I!-4542-if-if'!--294!--2!-4!--R--3!--Z54S-'N'T-l'---..- In 44-48- walking silently in an apparition world. This effect was heightened as almost invisible phantoms of ashes I 4849 51 :Isl 'l 4 I rose and drifted away through the black spires at each MI step I took. T, I All this was so disquieting I began walking more s' swiftly, but that served only to quicken my apprehen-' w' sions and my imagination. Once I thought I felt a ghost's W' breath on the back of my neck, faintly lifting my heir Ll and causing chills to crawl through me. I tried to shake Ig off such feelings, but my mind only dwelt on them the 2, more and I began to run. Once I had done that I lest all s control of myself and broke into sneer flight. I was thus running faster and faster when suddenly ml I came around a blind turn and stopped short. I' drew 'kg back involuntarily from what I saw crouched there again- rl st the ash-covered bank. It was a louthesomefthing, no s' longer a man but the inhabitant of a nightmare. The most a horrible part of it was the head and face. The latter ' ,,,' was very thin with cadaverous hollows under the cheek gl bones, but above it towered a large dome-like cranium 1 from which grew a few struggling strands of hair. The W' skin was a ghostly yellow and lips drew back from fangs W, to which froth clung. All these features, however, were w made insignificant by the eyes. These had black rings ,pl around them, setting off their terrible quality of in- ?l sanity. The white expanse of the eyeballs was abnormally xl large, showing by a wide margin around the small cold Tl green irises. The pupils were almost invisible, increas- at ing the intense stoniness of the stare. It was not only n the insanity of the eyes that appalled meg it was the ,Q cold staring expressionlessness of them, caused not by WI extreme mental control but by the complete absence of a jg mind. Their chilling effect was almost a physical pain ml as they held my gaze and my whole mind and body seemed s' to freeze. I tried to look away but the eyes held me as a Q snake's hold a rabbit. However, I became aware of some- gl thing that filled me with more dread, if possible. Ex- ml tended toward me from that smell grotesque frame was a I by shrivelled yellow hand with long thin fingers curled like rl claws. And by some means of locomotion unseen by me those sl clutching hands were moving slowly, inexoribly toward me! ml I opened my mouth to scream, but my voice caught in gl my throat. I tried to force myself to run, run, anything 5 to get away from there, but my nerves were paralyzed. Tl I was in that state everyone has experienced during night- sl mares. In spite of agonizing effort, all I could do was-shrinhe' --se-atat-.ez--:L-ze-rs-.ee-s-ae--zs--re.ae-n-0-n--ze-4e-ae.-:L-ze-er-1:-.ae--as -x- ez- -ze -zs ae -::- -se -:fl 100'
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