The First Fifty-Five Fifty-Seven
Mom was a farm girl. Dad was a city boy. The
war was over and they met in St. Louis. I was born in 1948 in Poplar
Bluff, Missouri, and grew up in Kennett (about an hour to the south). Dad
was a "radio announcer" and mom worked for the "welfare department." Job
titles that --like my youth--vanished years ago.
A little piece of shrapnel from the Baby Boom, I watched a lot of TV. In
the early 50's I sat two feet from the Motorola, staring at the
Indian-head test pattern until the afternoon programming got underway. The
spirit of Norman Rockwell hovered over me through a near-perfect
childhood.
The Beatles released I WANT TO HOLD YOUR HAND in the US just after
Christmas in 1963 and it a very big deal by February of '64. Hard to
imagine a better time to be a high school sophomore. We weren't paying
much attention to Viet Nam, yet.
By the time I started college in the fall of 1966, getting and keeping a
draft deferment was top of mind. I quickly switched my major from Business
to Theater. Guys were coming back from Viet Nam and bringing good drugs
and great music and protesting was catching on, even in the Midwest.
I was part of the first draft lottery and drew number 210, just low enough
to be dangerous. Following graduation in 1970, I goofed off all summer
before --at my father's suggestion-- entering law school at the University
of Missouri-Kansas City. I attended classes and kept my deferment until
Nixon froze the draft (in December of 1970) at lottery number 195. I quit
law school the following week, just before finals.
In the spring of 1971, I went to work for the
U.S. Postal Service as
a Postal Inspector. After three months of training in D.C. I was sent to
Pendleton, Oregon, where I audited small post offices in Oregon and
Washington. I counted stamps and money orders for almost a year and
investigated exploded rural mail boxes (a federal crime). Like law school,
not what I had in mind.
In early '72 I returned to the Midwest and hung around
Memphis
for a few months before returning to Kennett in early summer. In July, I
started working at KBOA on the
overnight shift and found my true calling. For the next dozen years I spun
records and MC'd the Little Miss Christmas Belle Pageant.
In March, 1973, I met Barb at
Tommy's North-End Cafe and fell in love. We dated for six years and
married in 1978.
In June, 1984, we moved to Jefferson City, Missouri, to work for
Learfield Communications. For the
next 15 years or so, I handled affiliate relations for the company's
various radio networks. When the Internet came along, I got the bug and
slowly started migrating in that direction. I now spend most of my waking
hours online --with periodic breaks for Barb and the dogs--and look
forward to every day.
March 8, 2003
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