When you went to the University of Hawaii for the first time as a tour to see if you could play football and you like saw the gym. Yeah, was it like a really good gym? No, we got actually got one of the best facilities in the nation one year in yeah One or two years in there did you when you toured and they were did you get recruited?Yeah, type thing what they show you to kind of get you in there the games and stuff the campus Okay, campus was cool, but that was like for that seemed like a big social draw, you know the campus. So even though you and I weren't didn't have that academic desire like Booker T.
Booker Taliaferro Washington (April 5, 1856 – November 14, 1915)[1] was an American educator, author, orator, and adviser to several presidents of the United States. Between 1890 and 1915, Washington was the dominant leader in the African-American community and of the contemporary black elite.[2] Washington was from the last generation of black American leaders born into slavery and became the leading voice of the former slaves and their descendants. They were newly oppressed in the South by disenfranchisement and the Jim Crow discriminatory laws enacted in the post-Reconstruction Southern states in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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