( AB tha yflwfr oLway* do } L cvetybodif's must —you'll n ecd inOce tMn alDcction and cocnpanLonship, You'll atid a ploioc to live and food! to «a,t. Whidi uKaiu you^nct the family aeadt doOTt but ;^Mr--wiU wed ssnmey, Ttitiffi you just iign up for the f^y- roU Saving where yoix work^ or for tbB BocidrA-MiOAlh Flan at the banic wluifi you hav6 a cbecfclag account, liun iJi^ icfllly pOQ up, pf course, there arii other reastuu fdr buyii^ XJ. Savii^ fiond^ They're SAFE. Backed by (bp cvedit of ihjb Uiujud Stal«^ (hat's alL Tlwy K t-HOFtTABLE. You 4 dol- ^ata am for 3 put ih, afK^r 10 yY:bir«. HieyVt LIQUID. Lil^c i^aicr, You can gCtyoLir otsh. c^ut of^hcrn 41 uny tiirx « + * R^nember those words '*Dielt away," Tb«y 9^ beiuv Ukau a voluine t^^taU^ iic4 (hac yuu hqve Ibs time ihan yon thmk. to save. FORTUNE-TEElLiINQ Is not *5M ol ttic ajttrlliutcs qJ 1. C, S- W^'re mucli Uiiarfl concamed With helfStngf those Who noed atwcjnlised tralnlii^. For, repalvcUeaa of what tl^o future may bring, tmiliicA men wiU ccutinuit to Jiuld tiie imporumt poeltlonff In 1>imiiLesa>aa incA aa lodiistxT. That^s why w« stfoineriy KcoMuiend thnt you prepare yourself now for cuanggis that may tiu^HU^n your occupe^ ttondl «t&tu£L lA periods |)Ef yo^tkm^l micertaLnt^, ttalitliir mIwbiJ? Tour X. Si can help you acquire nc^ch o£ tlie tfeomilcal knowledge ;jr6u need. Caiirses cover more than 40tJ commercial and InaustrM Stubjects, You stuiay Jjti ?our Apaxe time « ,. . H6>7iouar'0«ik pace pmi^ess Just HB fast as your atiAJltSeB pnd ambition permit. I>(m't dekLy your pEO^imm JEor »elf-- advancement. MsU l^hls cgupon ioAfi^. [NTERNflT]OHAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS , Piumblnii 'Caurut SAIrtocdllJiHiInt C Htavtlea ^l«mblni riAMrlpwvllBq Q CI'^:i1ufry,.l[>dyi'Ut4 n F^lnilcipin HiBiJna hlla indKOarllAatfit C4vf^l E^lnMrlrtfl, ll.ydhl'tAct.urA't andi M]n.lrt0 -CAIIH*! □ Cnll {.nflnearlrv □ C^l rili!?ed neutron pile Jit Los Altimosj likt: itiiim atomic science anTtouncenientfi a Little difTiciilt to «^iituafCi TllOt Gate Ridge and Han- fdid piles, the piles at Argoiuifi Nftticmal Xjaboratoiy In Ghlc^Ot attd the Canadian peic at Chailc River, arc all difFeretit — and to a d^ree that*s not iiitmcdi:itely obvioitS. TIlc \y]l<;^ at HiLiiFord iir^e^ of course, iiLL-vory plEcs — cominercial- productio'n job^f iL& distinct from research or lMM*atory piJea. Thsy ware biliit to prodtitc |>latOni«m, no knowledge. They Eire water-cooled,^ graphttc-modcrated piles working; at cTctTemdy liigh-tncrg^ levels— ™l- lioiip'of kilo^vatt -hours. * At Oak Kidgc is the lir^t tjf the Inrgt'Stzalc labotalory piles ; it the one which fiist produced pluto- niwEi^ and jielded laiovvlcdg* oi higb-enei*g>'-level piles^ since' it was operated at kilo^^att power levels before the first Hanford pile was eomplclcd. If? a grapbtfemodeT- ated. air-cooled pile ushtg purified natural tiraniinn. It's u laboialocy pi EC, however, deaigtied primariliy to supply knowledge of plutontum *jtoii si'PKTi t'ti-y. mant^facture, Tt has sonic utility as ii research tool, and tvu produce a stnali tjuantity of radioisotopes. Its production of wanted isotopes i^ yet^ limited howiefver, since it designed for plutoniuEEt-producfion research^ tn ptutonibm prodactioii* all available neutrons not essential to matntaining- the chain fission re- action must be used in transaTlltinj; U-238 to pliitonium. A pile desi^nctl with this in iiiind will Uave such uranium slug spacinjjfj ct cetera^ as to barely operate at all ; cfvien^a- slight absorption of neutroris in scimiithinj; other tlian U-238 will causes a neu- tron deficiency^ and the atomic fire v/ill go out. Mence, putting in nitro gen saks, say^ for C-H production will lower the available netitrotis: only a very small qu;uitity can be put in such a pile. At At^nrie National Laboratory^ there is a heay^wAter moderated pile; here the heavy-water serves both as moderator and cooling a,gent. allowing^ fairly high power-level opcratfortt Since heavy-hydrogen — in tht heavy water- — is a far more efficient moderating a^at than graphite, more ndttrons are arvall* ■ aDie for reactions ottier tnart maiti- tammg the fissiDEi reaction^ Also^ becfijuse watfir^ can be pumped^ ftnd tinutinin slugi moved freely Uinnigh it, slug-amngenutits can' 1« varied in a manH'Cr itnpossible with graphitc-lJot-k piles. The Ar- gonf)e pile" is a far more fle^ihle unit^ far more of a research tooU afld more valuable fnr producing knowl- edge. All these piles Use f>uHfied nau qral «raninm, oontainiti^ somewtiat less than 1 % and lietter than 99% U-23Sv Chulk River. CanatJai has a heavy-water moderated pile ustnis somewhui enriched uranmni; a slight amount of purilled^ s€t^a- tated U-235 is added to the tiatural bmnium slugs in the pile. Still more neutrons can be taken from this pile for researeh purposes .with- out quencbii^ the atomic fiire^. The hcsavy^vi^ater muld increase a million fold in miUionths o[ a second^ when ;shorfc distazicea were involvedp Bnt hms b^ore the explosive stage reached, the enormous enef^y {troductipn in «ach of the masses will raiije the temperature to thousafids, then .Jens of thotisands of d^rees. By that time J of coursep the uranitim masises will have been volatilized with a gentle pouuug, and distilled away. And that, of cotarsei meam that the masses Inve been digpemed and scattered into the maximum.pos- sable vohtme at the minimiitti po»* sible cnncentratian — wbidi stops the reaction. Thk EorioR. A8T01TJri>IN0 BClHIfOH^VICTIOK * ■ NOW YOU SEE IT... The JiivU had to find that Steimd FtftrndatioTiM. Amt^ be^ fOHM of hig ftosMTt the Sticond Poww^a^^rt couUlnH let hm^ Bjif hfcffit^e he rutid vroft of the Oe^'ifT^^ tf^^ h{^d certaki special pcmerst the Mtde zeaan^t e^&'dy stopped — BY ISAAC ASIMOV fliiuir«(t«d by Rooen- "After tJie defial^ ' bwsit-up tat tht firj>t Galactic Emp^rc^ it was tlic ccjnibination of world;; under tin; personal rtilft of that alrang* personality known to hui tiines as *T1i« HutV that Jfixal pr^e^ tdty ^titli id iioiIM voTiiiiEkf bf spac^^ truly imperial in scope. The earlier cominerctal empire of the Fduoda- tion had been diveree aod loosdy fcait, despite the impalpable ijack- ing a£ the predictions nf psychd- history. It was not to be com- pared with the tig^itly cort trolled 'Union of Worlds' under the Mulc^ compd«iji£f' jut did 0110 fenlii tiie T^tinie fbe Gatapey aiid one- ^fteftttfii of its population — ^* "£d^3GLya cJn History" ^^jgum Vier t Tlief« k uuidi more Ugura Vier has to iay oa l3ie «ub]«ct of the Hule 9Bd Ma Enqiire tmi al-^ mo«t ftll of it U not g^mifljie to tbe bstte at iDnmediate H^n4t and moat of it ta considerably too dry for ■ our ptirpo^es in any case, Mamly, he la coric«m«d with the ftconomic co^ditiom that led to Ch« rise of the ''First atizcd of tJie Union"— ih^ economic ctmsequeaoes tlifiieof. If, at any t3m&, he b mildly aij^onrshed over the colossal haste with which '"that sLrEinge person^ ality'' rose from tiothiii^ to vast donointon in five year^^ he conceals it If be n furdier sotptided at die sadden ccsnCtlon of cxpaiisioti in foTor of a iive-year con^oltdation qf territojy^ lie hid*9 the fact. We therefore abandon Vier and continue on otir own path for ouf own purposes and cake up the his- tory of the Great Interregntim — betvmn tbe First anid Seoo^d Galactic Etnpifes-~at the end of tfivt fire years of coRH^idaiioei. ^ Potitics^y, tte Uniffli is quietp Ecofiomically, it ts prpspetotiB. Few would care to excltange the peace of the Mule*s steady p^rip for the chaos that had preceded. On the worlds which five^" years previousiy had tata>wn tJw Foiu]daticHi» tbere might be A QASitalsic Kgret« but no moreu The FowidatkM'ii leaders vTere dead* vrhe»fe useless ; atid Cost- \Terted, where useful^ And of the Con^-erted» the tiseful Was Han Pritcher, now lieu- tenattt generaL In the days of ^fhe Foundatieti, Han Britcber tiad $eeii a captaiEi and a inenDber of -^e underground J>eiiiocratic Opposition. ^Whei^ tlie J^oimdation fell to the Mule with- out a %ht« Pritcl;er fought the Htile. Until, liiat la, ht was Con- verted. 'Vhe CoovednsioQ wa« not the ordinary one broivbt: oa* \fy the power of superior reason. Han Pritcher knew that .well enough^ He had been changed because the Mule was a mutant with metntal' powers quite capable of adjtiatfag ' the emotions of or^t^naiy humans to suit himself. But that wtisfiod him completely. Tli^i was as it should be* The.v^iy contentment u-itti th^ Conversion was a prime syniiitom oi it, but Han Pritcher was no longer even curious about tJte matter* And now that h& was retumtng irum his fi Ftb major pcpedition into the boundlessness of the Galaxy Outside the Union^ it was with some- thing approaching artless joy that the veteran spaceman and InteUi- j^ncc agent considered his approach- ing audience with the "First Citi^^n**' Hb lumt fac^ gouged out of a dadt, gra^dess wood tliat did DOt seem to If^ capable of smiling without cracking/ didnt show it"biit the outivard indica- tions were unnecessary. The Mule oouM see, the emotions ^hfaitt, down to tbe smallest^ mtidi as aa man tspuld see tbe twitch of an e^'fthrow. Prstcher leit liis air cat at the old vice-regal hangars and entered the palace grounds pn foot as wa$ r^jiured. He walked one mite alwig: the a ii mured . I4^w^;^-^lw3i vei^^ itmpi^ Ami viS^ T^f^^r Jk»e«? tjfiAt^ o\-cr the squaire n^s jHiIacc {^rounds, there was not one guard, not one soldkr^ not one ftrmed man. The Mule had need no protee- "tht: Midc ira^t his own. hesTj all-^ porvterfdj pTDlectOF. PritcheiV loot$tti|^ beat 'sc^ftly in his own c^rs, ^is the pftlace reared its gJeaming, incredibly light and incredibly Strong jn^^tallic W&IL** before him in thft daring, over- Mown, near-bectic arches that cbatai;fteriz«d the aCi^ldtecttirb. the: Late Bn^re^ It b»od^ ^toi^^ over the em;^ grounds^ ayfit via. ^fowtledL ci^ om the hoii- ZOXlr WLthiti the paJaee was tliai one mam — by liimself — ^xf]^ plafn^'door of Hute^ft^ owtt focm in the highest gitttef tqF the palace iSpiiesk It ^ifieitec! — ► Bail Clianiiis ft^s yout^g^ and Bail Cliannis virus Unconverted, T^t, is, in plainer language, tua eii£b^{ldn££l ijitijee-up Imi^ Ib^e^^ "tiHi^ acfjiiit^ by die Miile> It irt:thBi]]cd Bro\r T^C^ SM IT ^ . * exactly as it had bccti fanned bj j3as Qi^iuuil stmp^ of its hmSSty and ittie subsequent madificsitkHu of his environments And iUwt satisited! binij too. At not quit« thirty ^ he was in marveloHsIy good odor in the capi- tal. He ^vas handsome and qnid^- witted— therefore successful in society. He was hiteU^iienl' and ae!f-pps$essed — therefoti:' success^, fn! with the Mule, ^xtfi lie iffias. t1l&{ip4Qt£thly pleaded a£ b6th stle- eesses. And now, for the first time^ the Mule had sunimoned hitn to per- wnal nudienCe. His le^ carried him dowa the stitteriiig highwey 0>at Jed tauQ}^ tn the Bpetl^^frraJiVEunuiu .spires ^tht^t ' had been, once the residence of the viceroy of Ka^ gan, wiw ruled under the t^ii% Eto^p tama^!^. lEke' Mute i(v*as to begin Ibe dile»^e met tno^ Tbfr Mule: had disoovertid^ the whereabouts oi the Second Foundadcrn> and would attaSc. Male ha.d cdine to lan agmitatint with the Second Fotrndation and divided the Galaxy, The Mttle had decided ihfi Second Fdimdation did not exist and would take ovef aJl ditj Galaxy. No use lisdng all the varieties one heardiiti die an^rpptrti;!. It was not ^veti the^ £rst time audi nunonf- ha^l cinadaised. But now the^F seemed to have more body in them, and all the free, expansive souls who thrived on wat^ nlihtar^' aflveii' til re J and puliticai chaos and withered in time$ of stability and stagnant peace were joyful. Ball Chanms^ oiDe ot tliese. He did not- fifear the TinysteridiUB Second Foundation- For that mat- ter, he did not fear the Mule, and boasted of it. Somc^ perhaps, who dis-ipproved of one at once so young and so well-off, waited darkly for the, i^ckonii^ with thr gay ladies' aim ^bo employed .iti^ wit openly at the expose of the Mule^s physical appearance and sequestered life. None dared join liitn and few dared laug^h, but when nothing happened to hini, his i^utation rose accordingly. Chatuiis tmpioykuig '^sr^ tO; the tune he was hummiriif. No4ii8exi9e wiords with the recur- rent refrain : "Second Foutidation threatens ihe Natiocn and all of Creation.** He was at the pa^lacc. The huge^ smooth door 4wung massively open at hi^ approach a&d he ctitered. He. sbepped on 10 the widej mreeghi^ lamp that 11 * moved upward under him. He rose swiftly in the ngiselesa ekva^ 'tor,* He atood before the small plain door of the Mike^s Own toom in the highest glitter of the palace spires. It opened--^ The nian who had no tiame ot:her than, the Mutei and no tJ£le other thati First -Citiken looked out through the one-way transpiir" etKy of the wall to the light atid lofty dty on the horizon. Tn the darkening twilight, the stars were emerging^ and not one but owed allegiance to. him. He Bmiled with fleeting Jfeiitter^ nt9A sit llie thought. The alle- giance they owed was to a personality few had eyer seen. He W3S not a man to lool^ iit^^ the Mule— not a niRn to look without derision. Hot more tlian one hundred and twenty pourtds vrsis ^ttetfhed mt nito hi^ fi:i^.footr eig^t le^digtk His limbs were -bony stalks that jutted out of hiy scrawni- ness in graceless anfjulariiy. And hh thin fa^e was nearly drowned out m the prominence of a fleshy heak that thrust three inches out- ward. On^ his eyes plaj^ed* ^^e with the general farce that 'wad the Mule. In their softness— a strange soft- ness for the Galaxy's greatest conqueror— sadness was never en- tirely subdued. ■ In the city was to be found all the gaiety of a luxurious capital oti Injurious world. He might have efitablUhed hU capital on the Fotrndatlon, the atron^eet lof hts now-cbnq tiered enemies, but it was far out tm the very rim oi tkis Galajcy. Kalgan^ centrally located^ playground, i^tvd Jiitn hetteP— atrstegically. But in iu^traditioiial gaiety, eti- hanced by tmhcaniM>£ pfoa/gisdXyr he fovind no pcuce. Thty feared htm and obeyed iiim and, p«rliaps> - even respected bJju wfki Qoiald: at li&n without contempt? Only those lie t^iad Converted. Attd of vrhut mine was their artificial loyalty? Xt iacktsd flavor. He might liave Adopixid titles, and enforced rkual and invenljed ebiboratioji^ but ev«& that should ii».ve changed Hothtt|gi Better — or at least* no woIbch-* to bft simply tbe First Cttircn — atwi ^ hide himself. T]i£re xyas n sudden surge ol rebellion .within him — 'Strong and t^rutal. Not & portion of the G»l«3!cy must be demed. turn. For fire years he had rcmamed sitent and buried here on Katgan because of the etemaU misty, space-ridden menace of the unseen j unheard , . unknown Second Poundatiopu 3tic wias thirty-twou Not old— tnit he fdt ol^ hcudy'r wftaterer it» mutant meutal powierSi. -was pliysi- QlUy Tveak. Every star ! Every flftar he couM see — and every star be couldji't see- It mvst all be hial ■ S£vcii£^ OR alL Qn a Inttnanity of which lie waL«a1 a parL On a Galaxy in wliiclt he didu'l fit.1 The cool, overhead warning light flkkered. He could . ioilow ^ NOW V4vtr BJe» n * * , progresfl of t!$e man who had en- tered the palace, and simultaue- ously, as Ihou^h his mutant $eti4e liad been eohanoed aufi seo^itijsoi in I^Mf loiiely twilight, fdt tht wash of emotional content toiidf the fibers pf liis twain. He reoognisjed to identity with- out Ati effort. It was Pritchsr. . Captain Pritcher of the otie-tinw FoUtidatiou. The Captain Fritcher who had been ignored and ptassed over by the bureaucrats of that decaying govecotnent^ The Cap- tain X^iitcher whose job as petTj^ spy he had wiped out and whom he had lifted from its slime. The Capiam Pritgher whom he" had made first colonel and then gen- eral; whose scope ot activity he liad made Galaxy-wide.^ ^_ The now-General Fri^dier who wadf lEon rebiir tihoii^fh lie hciirtii^ compldely. loyaL Arid ytt witli alt that, not loyal because oi hene^- fits gained:, not Ipyat out of grati- tudftj not loyal as a fair return -—but Joyal only through the arti- fice of Conversion. The Mule was conscious of that ^ong unalteiaible aurfkce layer ol loifitSty and love tiiat coliored evciy awlrl and ed<^y of Hie emotionality- of Han Pribeher— the layer he had himself implanted five year* beJtore, Far underneath there were the origmat traced of stubboni individu- ality, impatient of rule^ idealisn:! '•^'^Mlt em' hej, himself^ oould scaioely detect them any lopger. The door behind h3[m opened, and he tiirned. The trjuisparent-y jif (iie wali faded to opa^i^, and If* the pu]^e evwiing l^bt gave way to the vrUitely blaKiii^ glcw ^1' Btsifiic power, ■ Hau Pritchet took the scat indie acted, Thtre waa neither how- ii^^ nor kneeling nor the wse of lioncjrifi^s in private ati4ieiices with the Mule. Tbe Mttle was merely ''Ftiriat Cidzca.** He was adidns^ u "'sir.*' You sat in bia fmesetioe,, antl you cottM turn your badt on* h\m it It eo happenftd that jtou aid. To Han Prttcber this was all evjjdcjice of the sure aiid ogiiiideiit liower of the uciAtt, He wia^i wamity with it Tbe Mule satd: "Your Snal re- pott reftiched iiac y«*te«Jay* 1 <#ti't deny Huit I find it ^MHawwhsit The general's evubrotva cloeed uyoii each other: ''Vc-s, I imagine so— but I doii'i SM tti what othcv contrlusioiis I coukl luitvc conie. There just usii't sjiy Secoml KoUKiBatiOnt sirJ^ Af]4 the Mijle ^wtssidered asi;d then silbwly ahool: hiia heaid, as he: had done ,niany a lime l>&fore^i "Therd^g the evidence o£ Ebfmg Mis: There is always the evideiioe i>f Jibling Mis,^ It was tK>t a new stoty- Pritclver without qualification: "M\^ inay liave been the greatest psy^Mogist of tbe Fauthdationt tniit lie wa& a liaJbg^ 'ooitifHured to HaTi*^ Seldon^ At the time he was invcsH^tiiig Sel don's works. He was under the firtifidal sti-Tfinl-itioii ot your own braiti coiitroL )lov. 13 aiay hav^ pushed hi;u too far^ He Ku^ak :hftye heen WTou^a Sir* he •out have been wrodgi^* The Mule sjglied. Ma lu^briou^ face thrust forward: on its thin stalk of 9. neck. '*l£ only he had lived another minute* Me was on the point of teUing "me where ihe Second Ficmndatton yiftL^ He knetip, l^tn teiling ym< I Mtd Iwt hive letreated* 1 tteed' not have waited and waited. So nni^- time loeL Five years gone for nothing." I*ritcher could not have been ceusDrious over the - weak longing of, hi9 ruler j his cavx^rolled mental niakeHtp forUad^^ thali^ ' H« was dis- turbed instead; v^^gnely uneaay. Tie said: *-l!ut ti^t alternative explattation ' caii there possibly be, sir ? tlve tii^es^ I^l^e gone out. You yourself have^: plotted the routes And IVe lefi^ no asteroid tmturi^ed.. It ^wa# ^dure^ htmdred yeaf^ a^^that Hari SehtoAi of £h« old JEira^'re iiiipfK3id6dly established uvo Foundatiou!^ to act as nudei of a new Emi>ire to replace the dying old on«. One hundred years after SeTdon, the First Fotmdation — the one we. lauOfvr-jsfi wdP^^Waa l^nown. A-hroug^i all the Pedphfery. One hundred lifty years after Seldon — at the time of ili^.last bottle with rhe old J£nipire — ^it wa^ known throughout the Galax3\ And now it's thinee hundred year^^ — and where Aliould tiiis mysterioB* Second be? In no eddy of the Galajctic stream has it lieen heard oi " **Ebling Mi* said ijj Itfejw itself si'oret. Only secrecy can vora its weakness to strecigth." '^Secrecy as dee|i as tlus is past possibility vFitboat noftescistteacse as wen." The Mule looked up, lar^ ^yes ab^rp aaid waiy, "Nol It does exist.^ A bony finger poititctl sluarpb^ "There is going to be a slight chapgc in tactUrs/^ Fritcher frovvtied, *^Voa plan tP advice it." "Noif of course not. Yoa will lia^ to. go ctit once fL^iii^^— one last time. But with another in joint . command/' There wiis a silence^ and PritcU- er's voice was liard^ "Wlio, sir?'* "T lucre's a young man lier.t in Kalgan, Baii PwtanjsJ" •fl've never beaid of huiS, sir" *'NCf, I imagine not 'But got an £tgHc mind^ Iie^s ambitious^— - and he's ftoJ Converted/* Pritcher^s lon^^ jaw trembled for a Uirc Instant, "I fail to see tiic advantaec that" * "There is one, Pritdier* Yoti're a resourceCql atid experienced maiL You liave glve&' me aerviob Hut ymt Arc Converted. Your motii'^tioa h simply an enforced and helpless loyalty to myself. When you lost your riatii.ie moti^-'a- tioR&j you last somethiirtg, some subtle drive* tbat I caniioc possibly tttplace " "I dbn^ fed dia^ »t^'^ »id PtitKbeir,.gritriIy. "I rt-ca!l mjraelf quite ^ell as I was m tbe days when 1 was iart enemy of ^urs* I feei none the iniiCTior," '^Natur^ly not," and the Mule*3 inouth t^vitched into a smile. "Your judgment in litis matted % scarcely objective^ This Cbatnus^ n&v^ Is HOW xou e»if . , , amhiHoufi — iw himself. He ■ is eomfjletely traslwortl^^-out of no loy^ty but to hlius^f: He knows that it b on my ooat-tailB that he rides and he n'ouM do anything Co increase my power that the ride might be Long i\in6 far and that thu destination itiight bu glodous, H he goes with joti, there is just tlvat added ptish Btthtiid -scekuvg— that i^sh for himself." "Tbei]>" said Pdtdicr^ still in^b- ent^ ^Vhy not remove, my own Con^rsioa^ if yatt think viKll improve me. I caiv scarcely he mistrusted, now." "That nevcf, Pritther. Whil<^ you ate within arm^s reach, or blaster reach^ of myself, you will remain firmly held in Conversion. If 1 yeem to release you this min- ute t would be dead the next." Tfie eeiittral*a nosbrils flared. "I am hurt that jou should think so,'^ '*X doa^ taesax to hart you* bat it is Impossible for yoa to Teallke what your feelings would be if /free to form themselves aTon^. the lines of your naturfi! motivation^ The human mind resents contnoL Tht Ordinary Liunian hypnotist cannot bypnottzp a person agatnst hi& will for that reason* I can^ becnuse I'm not a bypnotistr helteo?e *me, Pritchet\ the resentment that ' you cannot ^ow and do not even know yon possess is sontelhit^ I - wouIdn^t want to fac^/' Pritcher's hesid bowed, l''utility wrenched hini and left him gray and liaggard Inside. He said Vkitli axt^^