| A McKinley Neighborhood |
Linda Wheat O'Connell '67 lived in a remote
Alaska frontier town, where free-roaming buffalo and moose outnumbered
people. After living there for two years, she returned to St. Louis
and reared two children. Linda is completing her twenty-ninth year
as an early childhood educator and still considers teaching preschool
her dream job. Linda lives in south St. Louis county and is a member
of St. Louis Writers Guild. She is a freelance writer with articles,
essays and poems published in various magazines, newspapers, anthologies,
literary journals and local press. The ocean tugs at her Midwest
soul and her grandchildren tickle her fancy. Linda enjoys writing,
camping and traveling. |
In the mid ’60s, I lived near the wide intersection of Jefferson/Gravois/Sidney. On weekdays after school, I walked to Schmiemeyer’s Drug Store to purchase a newspaper for my parents. Outside of the drugstore there was a metal newspaper stand manned by a paperboy. If he wasn’t there, I simply took a newspaper from the shelf underneath and left the seven cents on top the stand, no slot, no locked box, just trust. On weekends around dusk, the distributor dumped bundled, 3" thick newspapers at the curb. Dozens of paperboys congregated on the corner to load their wagons; then they headed out on their particular routes. They tugged those wagons up and down the residential streets. The clanking of metal wheels, louder than the paperboys’ shouts, filled the night air.
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Linda Wheat O'Connell '67
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