I was born at Fort McPherson, Georgia and lived my early years either on Army
posts or in a small town in Mississippi. During my last year of high school I
moved to Grand Isle, Louisiana and finished school at South Lafourche High
School, a forty mile ride up Bayou Lafourche. Many students drove to school in
small boats, I took the bus. Often getting up extra early to fish for an hour or
so before the bus arrived.
I attended Northwestern University of Louisiana before leaving to
start a career managing small businesses. Moving to Texas I lived in Beaumont
and Houston for many years until I decided to move to Metairie, Louisiana. All
my adult life I managed or owned small businesses except for a six year job as a
test electrician for a shipyard with government contracts. There I tested ships
generators and power distribution equipment and various other systems
demonstrating them to the U.S. Navy under at sea conditions. We made many trips
down the Mississippi river, around Cuba and back. Then I started a florist
business and a stained glass studio and operated them for ten years before
moving to my present location way out in the country southwest of Purvis,
Mississippi, where I work small jobs, keep a large vegetable garden and flower
gardens all around the property. I may start or manage another business but in
this economy, it seems nice to let others do the worrying and keep things
simple.
I have one ex wife in Texas, still good friends and the mother of
two great sons. Myles is a teacher in South Louisiana and Michael works for an
intelligence company in England. My bride of twenty-six years, Diana and I enjoy
life in the country and each others company. It is a comfortable place for us
and for my best friend, a basset hound named Moses.
I started in Rotary at the Metairie Sunrise club. I talked a member into
inviting me and just kept coming. I am not sure if they wanted me at first but
finally invited me to join. I jumped right in and volunteered for the Club
Service Chairman, which no one seemed to want and started printing a weekly
newsletter and kept doing that for six years. After a few years as Club Service,
I switched to International Service and became Treasurer, Secretary and so on to
PE when I left to move to the country. I also served as communications chairman
for District 6840 for five years and started the District web site serving as
Webmaster for five years. I also served one year as the district newsletter
editor. I was able to help other clubs in the district start their own web sites
and gave presentations at a number of district conferences on the Internet,
communications, how to be effective secretaries and presentations for treasurers
as well
One year right after joining Rotary I found a bunch of people on the Internet
while looking for more information about Rotary. My club was nice for breakfast
and a few projects but I knew there had to be more. These people I found were
just what I was looking for, sharing knowledge, offering help or telling me
where to find it. I stayed with the group and even helped when they decided to
start a monthly newsletter. For five years I wrote two articles for the
newsletter, which we decided to call the Breadbasket. I served on the board and
was on the BOD when we became an official Rotary Fellowship and served as Vice
Chairman for the infamous two and a half year tenure. I wrote the first set of
Bylaws for the fellowship, which others are still trying to clean up. I have
also been a part of the ROTI membership committee and handled the day-to-day
duties of our e-mail lists for about six years. I have served on the ROTI BOD
every year since the beginning and have enjoyed every minute.
I have made many great friends here and met a number of them at conventions.
ROTI has been a great asset in my life. With nothing but time invested,
ROTI has given me enormous amounts of knowledge, support and friendship. For the
past eleven or so years ROTI has been a part of my daily routine I still enjoy.
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