[To Bertha, it looked filthy and infected. She refused to go.] I was scared, ... I thought my grandma was going to die. |
And I wasn't going to leave without my family, |
because the eyes can fool anybody. |
I really learned from the experience and it was exciting. I'm going to come back and explore the park, |
If he were any lesser of a man, he wouldn't have made it, |
In Gwinnett, they don't shut down the whole city just for one team, ... Down there, you see all the stores are closed and the stadium is jam-packed; there's so much support down there. It's overwhelming. |
In the 50s, we were bombarded with immigrants, men who jumped ship who wanted to stay in this country, girls who came to work as domestics and they were running to the priest with all their problems, ... [They wanted to know] where to find an apartment, where to work. |
No, I won't, ... I'm going to need all the pictures I can get. |
That wasn't the nightmare, ... After we got to the staging point, it was horrendous I wanted to get my family out of there because I knew it was getting worse. |
The poor man is happy; he expects no change for the worse |
The poor man is happy; he expects no change for the worse |
The weather was fine. It was a regular day, |
Time makes all things worse |
Tony will bring excitement and knowledge to the many different areas we want to establish on the broadcasting end, ... Our desire is to have excellence in everything we do here and Tony no doubt brings that to our very important radio and TV vision. |
We came in yesterday, |