houston lockhart -- halfway to meet us and sharing we would make it home all right without freezing. you didn't drive in those days are anything. dad and mom were always very attuned to make sure that we were cutting it in school. if we let down, that was the most eerie thing -- serious thing, if we didn't buckle down. of course, i worked too. in high school i did a lot of yard work. i had everything locked up of -- up and$.35 a yard down the street, $.35 a yard. i learned how to press pants and cuffs. -- sew when one of the guys needed mending or a patch, that was my job. i was also a paperboy. i wasn't content with one paper. i had two morning routes and an evening round. in those days we had competition. the carriers actually went out to help sell the paper. my pitch was because i came from an industrial community like pr i came from an yea industrial community. i got so good at it that i had two morning routes i thought i could cover. admittedly in the early days my father would help me with the sled when the papers were so heavy. in the wintertime he would help me on sunday beca