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The JJC counselor didn’t inform me of this during my interview. It was not until I
               entered FSU in 1955 did I learn that I hadn’t received a record of all my semester hours.

               I  breezed  through  my  College Algebra  at  JJC because  I had  already  gone through
               Calculus in the Air Force. My favorite subject was Social Science which I studied
               under Professor Joseph A. Hauber who enthusiastically helped me connect with the
               history of my German grandparents. He attended Union Theological Seminary in New
               York and was fluent in five different languages. He not only taught us Social Science
               but most importantly the Etymology of words. Since most words have a root from
               Latin, I then could understand a lot of things I read without actually knowing a new
               word’s definition. Fortunately, I took one year of Latin in high school and two years of
               Spanish. Another of my favorite subjects was Philosophy which was taught by the
               acclaimed philosopher and theologian, Dr. James A. Stewart. His teaching of reasoning
               and logic helped me understand how people could reach different conclusions from the
               same facts.


               CHAPTER 22 - Meeting the Love of My Life
               One Sunday, I visited the Riverside Park Baptist Church which was a few blocks from
               our house. One of the first persons I met was Bob Carter. Bob introduced me to his
               sister, Virginia. I liked her from the beginning and we began sitting together in church.
               We  soon  became  Sunday  School  teachers.  Many  people  said  that  we  looked  like
               brother and sister when together. Virginia impressed me with the confidence of her
               convictions, and I  got the impression that she was very compassionate about other
               people. In fact, I felt like she would have liked to become a missionary, although I
               never told her that.

               After dating Virginia for six months, I asked her to marry me. We picked out her rings
               from the Ferrell Jewelry Store at the corner of Main and Monroe Streets in downtown
               Jacksonville. Virginia had worked at the soda fountain of the Lane Drug Store. I always
               enjoyed watching a “soda jerk”, (not Virginia), making Ice Cream Sodas. I remember
               the Scarlet Nectar, a four-dip vanilla ice cream soda that was built on a base of red
               cherry syrup. Virginia also worked for a short time at the snack bar in the Jacksonville
               Train  Terminal  at  Lee  and  Bay  Streets.  When  I  met  her,  she  had  a  sales  job  at
               Grayson’s, a women’s apparel store on Laura St. We like to meet for lunch at the lunch
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