~)~JO ~ SS~&I18. Tay2~or ~ j~ Pei‘son interuisw•d L A. Anderson (dark brownL ~ ~2~o w. ~8~th:-3~trat; ti~ti. RoOk, A~üsas À~ ‘F8 __-.__s- ~L *~* R Ocoupation ~ u— - Eou~s~e end ~i~rd am - _ - - ~-~- z ~ ~ -~-~‘j~ --w-- ~ - •1 don‘t ~ow nothin‘ about slavsry. You know I wouldn‘t know nothin‘ bout 1.‘t oaua• ~ I was only four years old ihn ths war snd•d. All I know is I was born in slarsry; but I don‘t know not~in‘ bsut it. ~ WI don‘t r.i~ab.r nothin‘ of my parsnts. Ti~s was all confiiesd end old folks didn‘t talk bfors chilun. They didn‘t haTe tii~. Besides, my mother and father wsrs .e.paratd. ‘I was born in Arkansas and have livsd hers all my lits. ~tt I don‘t gossip and entertain. I just moved in this houes last ~ssk. Took a ibasl~ be:rrow sill brought all. thes• things hers ~iysalt. wTh08. boys out there jus‘ threw a stone against tlis house. I thought th• hœs• ime falling. I ~rk si] day and ~hsn r~ight co~s, I‘~ tired. ‘I don‘t haTs no wit., no childrsn, nothin‘; nobody to help out. I don‘t ask the neighbors nothin‘ cept to clear out this junk they l•tt h.xe. I eI ain‘t goin‘ to talk about ths Lt Klux. I €ot other things to think about. It takes all my tiu~ and strength to do my work and live a Ohriatian. Yolk. ~ot so nowadays they don‘t cars bout nothin‘. I just lIve hers an~ serve th• La~d.