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From YouTube: City within a City part 2
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A
B
You
graduate
you
went
all
the
way
through
nichols
and
graduated
what
year,
1970
1970
okay
now
dude.
It
was
during
that
time
when
there
was
that
gradual
integration
from
nichols
to
biloxi
did
that
affect
you
in
any
way
and
tell
me
how
and
how
did
you
decide
to
stay
at
nichols.
D
C
D
C
E
B
C
F
D
D
C
Was
interesting
in
19,
the
ending
of
1968,
our
principal
cj
duckworth?
Yes,
he
left
the
school
and
took
a
job
with
the
state
teachers
association,
and
so
he
left
biloxi
and
then
they
had
to
bring
in
a
new
principle
and
our
principal
was
mr
steward
right.
He
was
a
caucasian
man,
okay
and
those
two
years
he
was
our
principal
and
he
continued
to
be
the
principal
after
the
school
turned
into
a
junior
high
school.
B
C
D
C
B
B
C
C
We
made
history
and
a
few
years
after
that,
an
african-american
girl
won
the
title.
She.
C
D
F
Yeah,
so
that
meant,
I
ended
up
being
one
of
the
first
male
teachers
that,
because
some
of
the
people
that
was
in
that
graduate
program,
we
was
from
like
gainesville,
either
other
parts
of
florida
and
then
georgia.
But
I
was
one
of
the
first
male
kindergarten
to
third
grade
teachers
in
the
state
of
florida.
G
F
In
orlando
and
then
of
course,
her
mother
and
father
was
ill
in
my
spring
and
then
my
mother
was
ill
and
getting
ill
in
biloxi,
so
we
decided
to
move
back
home.
So
what
I
did
is,
I
came
back.
I
drove
back
to
the
biloxi
school
district
and
superintendent
r
d
brown
was
with
the
superintendent
okay,
and
so
you
know
what
I'm
talking
about.
G
F
Dr
bill
lee
was
assistant
superintendent.
I
went
in
and
told
him.
I
was
a
had
a
masters
in
early
child
education
and
undergrad
at
j
state
sure,
and
then
I
wanted
to
come
in
and
teach
a
kindergarten
first,
a
second
grade
position
in
the
biloxi
district.
You
say:
oh
no
man
don't
teach
that
that
ain't,
nothing.
We
ever
heard
of
you
need
to
go
back
where
you
came
from.
F
And
I
turned
around
and
went
on
hey
I
turned
around
and
went
on
back,
so
I
was
still
teaching,
and
so
we
got
so
that
we
say
well.
We're
gonna
go
ahead,
move
back
anyway,
so
I
came
on
back
and
when
I
came
back
this
time
I
went
to
the
school
district.
Dr
olan
ray
was
the
superintendent
and
dr
larry
draudy
had.
D
F
In
as
his
assistant
superintendent,
so
when
I
went
in-
and
I
spoke
with
dr
ray
dr
ray
referred
me
to
dr
drawdy,
because
he
was
over
personnel
and
dr
droughty
sent
me
out
to
boudoir
mr
duncan
was
the
principal.
G
F
F
I
can't
thank
his
name
right
now,
but
I
interviewed
with
him
and
then
they
sent
me
down
to
the
central
office.
The
interview
with
mr
bob
cherry.
F
I
don't
know
if
you
know
him
or
not,
but
he
was
over,
like
the
top
of
one
probe
and
all
that,
and
so
after
I
came
back,
then
they
actually
hired
me
at
bouvoir,
and
so
they
put
me
in
a
first
grade
position,
so
I
ended
up
when
they
put
me
in
the
first
grade
position.
F
G
D
D
F
D
F
School
she
was
okay,
schools,
yeah,
okay,
but
then
what
happened
is
when
I
took
that
job
as
a
first
grade
teacher
in
the
biloxi
district,
which
they
don't
have,
and
you
need
to
make
sure
they
get
it
in
the
history.
D
G
F
No
well,
he
he
no!
No,
we
can
get
him.
He
can
get
him
because
we
got
them
printed
right
here
in
biloxi.
D
G
G
F
G
F
Anyway,
see
that's
what
I
mean
I,
I
ended
up
being
the
first
male
1
kindergarten
third
grade
teacher
in
the
state
of
mississippi
and
also
in
the
biloxi
school
district.
So
I
did
first
grade.
I
did
first
grade.
F
F
So
personally
I
just
felt
that
way
and
but
she
came
in
I
I
was
there
with
her
and
then
we
I
left
there
and
went
up
on
the
doug
mcqueen
temporarily
at
boudoir
and
then
after
doug
mcqueen
left,
then
tisdale
came
in
and
then
after
tisdale
left,
then
bruce
oil
came
in.
So
I
I
was,
I
coordinated
the
mentorship
program
at
boovo
elementary
school
and
then
also
I
was
the
originator
of
the
mardi
gras
parade.
F
That's
how
I
got
connected
with
taconi
and
his
wife,
because
what
I
did
was
when
I
put
that
parade
together.
F
F
F
Yeah
but
yeah
so.
D
F
When
I
left
everything
the
contacts
and
everything
I
left
that
with
I
got
with
the
principal
susan
brand
at
the
time.
D
F
Was
the
last
principal
and
then
laid
it
out
and
gave
it
to
her,
and
then
I
also
gave
it
to
melanie
nelson,
who
was
at
jeff
davis
later
on
yeah.
D
G
I
And
for
every
one
of
my
father
and
mother's
children,
there
were
cousins
and
we
all
went
to
perkins
and
then
to
nichols
high
school,
and
we
would
walk
to
school
every
day
from
the
back
bay
to
nickels,
going
around
the
bay
and
through
a
little
swampy
area
by
the
old
swimming
pool.
Until
we
got
to
nickels,
my
classmates
have
been
lifelong
friends.
Some
of
them
grew
up
with
me
on
fair
street.
I
Others
would
join
us
on
our
walk
as
we
passed
the
lonely
street,
the
other
side
of
fair
street
raynor
street,
and
we
would
all
walk
to
nichols
high
school.
B
And
so
what
do
you
remember
about?
Let's
say
your
senior
year.
I
I
I
It
was
still
segregated,
mississippi,
had
a
plan
where
the
12th
grade
and
the
first
grade,
then
the
11th
grade
and
the
second
grade.
That
was
the
process
at
that
time
and
I
decided
to
stay
at
nichols.
That's.
B
I
Very
feeling
some
were
apprehensive
about
it.
I
was
apprehensive
talking
to
members
of
my
family
who
were
educators,
and
the
decision
was
that
it
would
be
better
for
me
to
get
into
a
school
if
I
were
a
sort
of
big
fish
in
a
small
pond,
as
opposed
to
going
to
biloxi
high
and
being
a
minnow
in
an
ocean,
so
they
they
felt
that
my
chances
for
academic
achievement
would
be
better.
If
I
stayed
at
nichols-
and
I'm
glad
I
did
because
we
were-
and
we
still
are-
a
very
close-knit
class.
No.
B
I
Even
the
students
who
went
on
to
go
to
biloxi
high
celebrate
with
the
class
of
66.,
they
are
members
of
our
class.
J
Now
I
did
not
graduate
from
nichols
high
okay,
okay,
but
I
went
to
nichols
high
up
until
the
12th
grade
great
and
that
was
in
1965..
D
J
And
then
in
65
they
desegregated
the
schools,
you
know
and
they
only
desegregated
the
12th
grade
and
that's
the
grade.
I
was
in
12th.
G
J
B
J
As
I
said,
the
schools
were
desegregated
in
1965
the
12th
grade.
They
didn't
desegregate
the
lower
grades.
You
know
at
that
time
and
well.
My
mother
was
very
civic
minded
and
she
impressed
upon
me
that
someone
had
to
go
because
before
the
school
board
has
said
that
the
only
reason
that
blacks
were
not
going
to
biloxi
high
is
because
they
had
never
applied.
J
We
knew
that
was
not
the
situation
you
know.
So
when
they
said,
if
someone
apply,
they
can
go.
Well,
that's
what
we
did.
There
were
seven
of
us
that
applied
to
go
and
six
of
us
remain
throughout
the
year
and
graduated
in
66,
the
one
of
the
persons
he
didn't
stay.
B
Okay,
we
didn't
stay
so
there
were
seven
african-americans
blacks
in
the
in
the
66
class
of
biloxi
high.
B
And
so
six
of
us
graduated
graduated
yeah
and
whose
decision
was
it
to
go?
Did
it
was
a
decision
from
your
parents
that
you
would
go?
How
did
that
work.
J
Well,
the
naacp
wanted
someone
to
go
and
my
mother,
you
know
she
really
made
the
decision
that
I
would
be
one
of
the
ones
to
go
yeah.
I
always
say
that
back
in
those
days
that
your
parents
didn't
negotiate
with
you,
they
told
you
what
was
going
down.
You
know
like
that
yeah,
so
she.
J
B
Okay,
yeah
so
talk
to
me
about
your
experience,
one
of
only
six
or
seven
six
or
seven
black
students.
You
know
yeah
epilepsy,
yeah,.
J
There
were
the
enrollment,
there
then
was
about
1500
and
there
were
six
of
us,
okay
and
they
put
all
of
us
in
different
home
rooms.
J
You
know
so
you
pretty
much
went
throughout
your
day
what
you
know
not
in
a
comfortable
position.
You
know
because
you're,
the
only
one
and
they
had
anxieties
about
talking
to
you.
You
know
the
other
students
did
you
know,
and
so
you
pretty
much
went
uncomfortable
comfortable
through
the
day,
but
we
did
it.
You
know.
B
J
G
Yes,
well,
what
about
your
early
education?
You.
E
E
D
E
In
a
northern
part
of
pascagoula
toward
the
beach
going
toward
the
beach
beachfront,
it
was
on,
I
can't
think,
of
the
name
of
the
street.
Now
that's
okay,
but
the
school
was
exciting.
When
we
went
there
was
something
different
but
right
away.
You
know
it's
a
big
difference,
there's
less
discipline,
less
orderliness
and
we
were
in
the
ninth
grade
not
feeling
that
we
were
getting
any
more
advanced
education.
E
E
G
E
E
There
was
no
discipline
with
the
kids,
they
could
come
in
anytime
and
leave
and
talk,
and
so
we
said
to
each
other,
this
ain't
working
here
so
one
day
I
don't
know
what
caused
it,
but
we
agreed
my
brother
and
I
out
of
frustration
that
look
just
we're
not
gonna,
learn
anything
here.
So
it's
a
waste
of
our
time
sure
well
we're
just
going
to
quit
school
without
our
parents
permission.
We
just
went
to
the
principal's
office
and
returned
in
our
books
and
we
left
school.
E
So
then
we
went
home
and
we
broke
the
news
to
the
parents,
especially
to
our
father,
and
we
told
him
that
we,
we
weren't,
going
to
learn
anything
there.
So
it's
a
waste
of
time.
So
why
should
we
stay
there?
And
so
we
said
well
what
y'all
going
to
do,
because
y'all
need
to
get
your
education.
He
said.
Well,
we
want
to
go
down
to
our
mother
sorrows.
You
say:
well,
we
don't
have
the
money
for
the
tuition,
we
said
well,
we'll.
G
D
E
Somehow
was
able
to
acquire
a
bus,
a
yellow
school
bus,
yeah
was
owned
by
the
church,
saint
peter
and
here's
where
I
come
in
that
year.
E
So
I
came
in
this
guy.
Peter
fisher
was
his
name.
He
was
like
15
or
16
at
that
time,
and
I
think
I
was
like
turning
15
at
that
time,
and
so
he
started
driving
the
school
bus
and
then
he
didn't
have
to
they
didn't
have
to
make
two
trips
just
drive
it
park.
It
all
day
drive
it
back
in
the
evening,
so
he
was
one
of
my
better
friends
because
we
grew
up.
E
All
of
us
went
to
the
saint
peter's
and
we
were
confirmed
together
holy
communion
together
and
we
were
really
close
friends,
so
we
finally
found
our
way
on
that
bus.
So
now
we
got
a
student
who's
driving
this
bus.
There
are
no
adults.
Now
he
didn't
have
the
driver's
license.
Yes,
he
did.
He
did
that's
what
I'm
saying
when
he
turned
16
okay,
then
he
started
driving
this
bus.
Okay,
16..
I
think
they
allowed
him
to
have
a
driver
so.
E
G
E
I
worked
and
sent
my
self.
This
is
how
I
paid
your
jewish
for
my
tuition.
When
I
would
get
off
the
bus
in
the
evening.
I
would
get
off
and
I
wouldn't
go
home.
I'd
go
straight
to
a
drugstore
called
a
village
drugstore,
which
is
there
in
pascagoula,
was
owned
by
a
guy
who
became
my
mentor.
His
name
was
maceo
dennis
he
had
come
back
from
the
navy
and
he
went
to
xavier
university
and
got
his
pharmacy
degree.
E
E
My
mentor
saw
to
it
that
I
got
scholarships
and
he
sent
me
down
to
xavier
university
and
I
enrolled
in
pharmacy
school.
The
little
money
I
had
was
gone
within
that
first
year,
so
the
second
year
I
didn't
have
any
money,
so
I
couldn't
get
back
into
school,
so
I
literally
just
dropped
out
of
school,
so
I
went
back
home,
so
this
mentor
would
not
let
that
be.
He
said
to
me:
well,
what
are
you
going
to
do
now?
I
said:
well,
I
just
get
a
job
at
the
shipyard
or
the
paper.
E
Sure-
and
he
said
well,
how
can
you
help
him
with
no
education?
So
then
I
said
to
him:
well,
I
don't
have
the
money
to
do
this.
He
said
so.
I
said
you
know
I
heard
about
a
school
down
in
texas
named
texas,
other
university,
and
I
understand
that
the
tuition
is
a
whole
lot
less
and
they
got
a
pharmacy
school
and
it's.
G
E
Lot
less
than
xavier,
so,
while
I'm
sitting
in
here
for
a
few
minutes
to
write
this
letter
to
the
registrar
he
comes
back
in
to
me
and
he
says
I
tell
you
what
it's
it's
late
and
he
would
always
put
the
finger
on
me
I'll.
Tell
you
what
you
do
you
take
my
car
in
this
credit
card
and
you
go
down
there
because
it's
june,
you
ain't
got
enough
time
to
play
around.
Just
go
down,
get
your
transcript
and
you
go
down
there.
E
So
he
gave
me
his
car
and
his
credit
card
man,
that's
what
a
waterfall,
okay,
yeah
and
I
drove
that's
huge.
I
drove
from
pascagoula
down
to
texas,
went
into
the
registrar's
office,
told
them
who
I
was
gave
them
all
the
information
I
had
bang.
I
got
the
information
back
within
a
few
weeks.
Wow
and
as
I
say,
the
rest
now
is
history.
So
in
the
process
of
doing
that,
I
became
of
age
and
I
got
drafted,
oh
god,
because.
E
D
G
E
E
L
M
M
N
L
M
Well,
I
was
that's
our
mother,
that's
our
mother
sorrows!
Yeah!
After
that
point,
I
went
in
service
women's
army
corps.
Okay,
women's
army
corps
women.
I
went
in
service
because
I
could
not.
My
parents
couldn't
afford
to
send
me
to
college
and
the
fellows
were
going
to
to
the
military,
and
this
was
my
way
to
do
that.
M
I
always
credit
the
white
house
hotel
for
sending
me
into
the
military,
because
I
was
up
there
on
the
third
floor
and
they
were
cleaning
the
rooms
after
labor
day
and
I
saw
the
school
bus
pass
by.
I
left
there
walking
and
went
to
the
post
office
and
we
ended
enlisted
in
the
army
at
that
time.
It
was
women's
army
I
enlisted
for
two
years,
and
this
is
how
I
went
to
my
college,
but
I
didn't
do
it
until
after
I
got
back
home,
got
married
and
had
five
babies
in
eight
years
time.
M
O
O
O
I
remember
miss
roseman,
I
think
she
was
the
council
woman
there,
and
so
they
were
all
they
were
all
very
good
teachers
there.
It
was
an
all-black
school
and
and
then
in
1970
it
was
integrated.
So.
A
D
O
Well,
at
that
point
I
had
had
a
baby
and
I
was
more
into
you
know
my
being
raising
my
child.
I
got
married,
so
I
was
in.
I
was
out
of
the
school,
so
I
didn't
really,
you
know,
keep
up
with
what
was
going
on
there
and
then
eventually
I
left
biloxi
in
1972
and
to
go
and
start
a
new
life
somewhere
else.
With
my,
I
had
two
two
girls
so
and
you're
back
here
with
your
friends
and
I'm
back
here.
O
I
come
not
every
two
years,
but
I
try
I
try
to,
and
this
is
our
50th
high
school
reunion
celebration
being
here
is
very
important
and
it's
something
that
that
everyone
should
participate
in
and
and
enjoy.
H
So
we
had
everything
very
convenient.
It
was
a
wonderful
time,
it
was
doing
segregation
and
it
was
all
afro-american
school
at
that
time
in
biloxi
high
and
michelle
and
some
of
the
other
schools
all
caucasian,
but
we
knew
it
was
going
to
come
a
time
that
this
would
end
and
integration
came
through
in
1967.
H
H
My
mother
did,
I
know
my
father
lucian
brown,
my
mother,
geradine
brown,
good
known
people
worked
at
the
buena
vista
hotel
for
many
years,
which
was
one
of
the
biggest
hotels
busiest
times
business
that
we
had
at
that
time
being
a
vista
hotel,
1967
I
moved
on
up
in
high
school
and
I
was
a
junior
played,
football
basketball
ran
track,
six
or
seven.
H
We
was
a
gulf
coast
champion
in
basketball
and
football,
and
that
was
a
very,
very
well
known
time
during
that
time
that
we
were
known
to
have
a
fantastic
football
and
basketball
team
matter.
Of
fact,
we
had
one
of
our
players
that
graduated
with
us
he's
not
here
right
now,
but
he
was
drafted
by
the
chicago
band.
B
P
B
P
The
fellowship
with
my
friends
and
their
fellow
other
classmates,
it's
such
a,
we
lost
all
of
that
when
we
went
and
integrated
with
the
biloxi
high.
We
lost
that
camaraderie
and
so
just
seeing
them
last
night
in
the
spirit
we
have
and
the
family
like
atmosphere
that
we
share
with
each
other.
You
can't
replace
that
and
our
children
will
never
experience
that.
So
it's
a
wonderful
feeling.
B
P
Irreplaceable
because
we
were
a
village
that
raised
all
of
our
kids
together,
including
the
teachers,
so
our
friends
and
were
also
teachers
and
the
other
leaders
in
the
community.
So
we
all
worked
together
to
help
raise
the
children,
and
so
we
were
all
parented
by
other
people
like
her
mama,
miss
beck
and
all
the
other
people
misguided.
They
all
parented
us.
So
we
don't
have
that
kind
of
environment
anymore.
B
Yeah
there
there's
there's
that
joke
or
not
a
joker
there's
that
line
that
that
you
did
something
wrong.
Your
neighbor
wasn't
and
then,
when
they
told
your
mother,
when
you
come
home,
your
mother
went
there
when
your
father
came
home
from
work,
told
him
that
he
will
I'll
be
there.
B
That's
something
else,
something
else
just
give
me
an
order
or
first
of
all,
you're
born
in
bluffsy.
P
Okay,
so
I
I
transferred
here
to
mf
a.e
perkins,
I
was
in
the
10th
grade
and
I
did
go.
I'm
sorry
I
did.
Even
when
I
was
in
ocean
springs,
I
started
our
mothers
of
sorrows,
so
I
went
there
for
two
years
and
then
my
parents
divorced,
then
I
went
to
keys
elementary
school,
then
transferred
back
here
in
the
10th
grade.
I'm
sorry
when
I
was
10
years
old
to
the
5th
grade,
so
I
went
to
a.e
perkins.
Then
I
went
to
mf
nichols
junior
high.
B
P
It
was
simple,
I
was
interested
in
mathematics
and
I
had
taken
algebra
2
and
that
was
the
highest
they
had
at
nichols
that
they
offered.
So
in
order
to
get
algebra
3
for
trig
and
geometry,
I
had
to
go
to
biloxi
high,
so
I
majored
in
mathematics
at
xavier
university.
So
for
my
career
it
was
a
career
move.
Q
I
had
went
to
15
different
schools
before
that,
so
I
went
we
was
when
I
met
the
class
of
68.
I
was
in.
I
met
him
at
sixth
grade
and
then
we
left
and
then
I
didn't
see
him
anymore
and
then
my
father
got
ready
to
retire
in
michigan
chaos,
sawyer
air
force
base
and
I
got
to
get
to
go
back
here
to
biloxi,
and
then
I
got
to
graduate
with
the
class
of
68..
Q
Since
then
I
traveled
a
lot
and
then
I
decided
to
settle
in
milwaukee
wisconsin.
It
was
a
very
educational
thing.
I
got
the
bachelor's
degree.
I
got
the
master's
degree
in
scotland
of
science,
I
loved
it.
I
started
as
a
scout
master.
I
moved
my
way
up
and
when
I
decided
to
stop,
I
was
assistant
district.
Commissioner.
Q
I
worked
on
the
council,
I
loved
it
doing
that
because
it
was
very
adventurous.
We
did
a
tremendously.
The
boy
scout
had
a
lot
to
offer
the
reason
why
women
got
into
the
positions,
because
at
that
time,
divorce
is
starting
to
happen
a
lot.
It
was
a
lot
of
men
and
women
was
divorcing
and
being
separated
from
the
fathers
and
the
mothers.
So
most
of
the
mothers
was
raising
the
sons
and
they
went
into
boy
scouts.
So
therefore
they
took
more
women
start
moving
into
these
positions,
and
it
just
was
a
wonderful
experience.
R
I
lived
in
the
project
in
bay
augusta
around
a
lot
of
friends.
We
grew
up
with
a
strict
neighborhood.
Everybody
was
family,
everybody
looked
out
for
each
one.
I
really
enjoyed
it
the
best
days
of
my
life.
Now
you
said
you
played
legal
league
baseball,
played
negro
league
baseball
and
with
the
velocity
dodgers
now
you
must
have
been
part.
L
Of
the
program
that
was
done
at
the
old
museum.
R
Yes,
I
am
I'm
with
the
oil
museum
with
mr
windham.
R
R
I
went
to
the
I
went
to
the
u.s
navy.
I
went
and
joined
the
navy
in
orlando
florida.
I
spent
four
years
in
the
navy
went
to
italy,
spain,
france,
greece,
where
it
made
all
of
europe
and
come
back.
I
was
on
a
guided
missile
destroyer
in
norfolk
virginia
and
spent
four
years
in
the
navy
and
come
back
home
and
spend
35
years
in
the
shipyard.
R
N
R
Is
your
50th
reunion
here
this
is
my
50th
year
union
we've
been
graduated
out
of
school
50
years.
This
is
quite
a
gathering.
This.
R
S
A
S
It
was
wonderful,
we
were
the
only
school
that
I
knew
of
that
we
could
walk
to
school.
We,
the
address,
never
changed
from
elementary
school
all
the
way.
Through
high
school,
we
went
from
a.e
perkins
elementary
to
nichols
junior
and
senior
high
school
on
950
belmont
street.
At
that
time,
which
is
now
nichols
drive
and
we
were
able
to
walk
to
school,
I
was
a
member
of
the
band
and
the
choir
and
I
graduated
in
68.
That's
why
we're
doing
our
fifth
year.
S
I
went
off
to
college
for
a
little
while,
and
I
went
to
the
military
I
retired
out
of
the
united
states
navy.
S
S
To
stay
back
like
home,
and
so
now
I'm
just
retiring
and
just
enjoying.
S
S
I
never
seen
cotton
before
until
I
got
up
the
valley
and
so
and
for
some
reason
we
just
were
they
just
thought.
We
were
up
with
people.
S
L
S
D
S
We
would
go
on
main
street,
it
was
popping
24
7.
and
I
was
out
even
when
I
spoke.
I
wasn't
supposed
to
be
out
there.
You
know,
but
once
I
got
a
rage,
it
just
went.
It
was
just
another.
Like
I
said
new
orleans,
it
was
all
the
clubs,
the
businesses
and
everything
and
lux
was
really
nice
and
that's
what
that's
the
main
thing
I
missed
now,
but
the
casinos
coming
in
and
kind
of
just
took
all
that
away.
But
that's
what
I
really
miss
about
this.
A
K
All
the
way
to
nichols
high
school
played
sports,
my
full
time
that
I
was
at
nichols
high
school,
all
sports,
baseball,
basketball
and
track
and
played
when
I
wasn't
at
school
with
the
city
of
city,
leagues
and
all
of
the
sports
dealing
with
peewee
baseball
and
swimming
at
the
swimming
pool.
All
the
sports.
K
Yeah
when
I
was
in
high
school
in
my
sophomore
year,
I
started
playing
with
biloxi
dodgers
over
at
the
old
stadium
by
the
football
stadium
back
in
the
day.
Just.
L
K
In
1963-64
and
my
through
my
whole
years
of
school,
it
was
all
dealing
with
sports
and
and
education,
and
so
from
all
of
the
sports
that
I
dealt
with
in
high
school
was
anything
that
could
be
played.
L
Now,
after
you
graduated
well
first,
what
was
it
like.
A
K
My
last
year
is
in
in
high
school.
I
I
went
to
high
school
a
half
a
day
and
this
is
1965.
I
started
to
to
work
miss
robin,
which
was
my
counselor
got
me
a
job
and
I
started
working
at
the
biloxi
post
office.
D
K
K
I
graduated
from
high
school.
I
was
picking
up
selective
service
in
the
afternoon
at
the
post
office
and
that's
when
I
found
out,
I
was
getting
ready
to
get
drafted
in
the
military
in
the
u.s
army.
K
So
I,
the
selective
service
person
came
down
one
afternoon
and
she
told
me
that
thomas
your
number
is
coming
up
and
I
was
getting
ready
to
get
drafted
into
the
military.
K
So
meanwhile,
because
the
person
that
I
was
they
had
a
test
set
up
for
me
up
in
the
next
day
with
the
us
army,
and
so
I
went
up
at
10
30
the
next
morning,
which
was
on
a
wednesday
and
took
my
engineering
test.
K
Nichols
high
school
and
the
people
in
the
area
that
was
behind
me,
I
worked
for
mrs
golday
when
I
was
building
growing
up
and
actually
cleaning
the
offices
in
the
morning
cleaning
acts
of
the
the
beer
garden
that
she
had
back
then,
and
so,
and
just.
K
Coach
yeah
yeah
so
and
then
I
my
career,
you
know
doing
sports
and
stuff
with
the
looks
of
dodgers
back
then
you
know
carried
me
on
to
meet
people
playing
baseball
down
in
pensacola
florida
with
the
atlanta
breeze
farm
team
back
in
their
64
and
65.
K
It's
always
been
wonderful
with
the
people
that
grew
up
and
knew
me
by
what
I
actually
did.
You
know
as
far
as
sports
and
what
I
did
in
school
and
you
know
miss
roseman,
which
was
one
of
the
people
in
my
life.
That
really
helped
me
out.
As
far
as
starting
my
career.
K
I
was
a
left
field
center
field
and
I
was
a
pretty
good
hitter
so
and
I
was
fast
as
far
as
base
run
yeah,
but
I
was
a
fielder
left
field,
good.