Maggie Berry

African American woman, Maggie Berry, seated in front of a microphone and wearing a headset.

"I can just look back and see all the folks that lived where I lived at. Great people. Wonderful people. Took care of each other, it was just a great, great little set up out there."

 

Parts of this transcript were autogenerated and there may be errors.


00:00:14 April
So, my name is April Medina and today I'm interviewing Maggie Berry who lived in Danville during the middle of the 20th --The 20th century. Description: I'm here with Stevie Berry, who's the son of Maggie Berry, Mr. Michael Hughes, Mr. Charles Grey, and Doctor Jeffrey Shenton.
Today is April 26th of the year 2022 and we recorded this interview at the Danville Boyle County African American Historical Society. And today, we'll be describing Maggie Berry’s experiences during the 20th century here in Danville. Ready to get started?

00:00:58 Mrs. Maggie Berry I’m ready.

00:01:00 April
OK. Can you—can we start a little bit with you telling me about yourself? Anything about you?

00:01:08 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Well, I grew up here in Danville. And growing up in Danville at that time was very hard. I'm 85, almost 86, so I've seen a lot, heard a lot. And my growing up in Danville was pretty rough at that time. Well for, all of us kids my age now. The most thing about growing up in Danville was hard for me with we had to walk from Lebanon Pike to Bate School, Perryville Road from Bate to Bate School and we wasn’t allowed to ride da buses. ‘Cus we were Black. And all the kids would ride by on da buses and call us the N word and just throw stuff at us. And it was--it was horrible. It was horrible. And my neck--I think this is my first encounter--but I think my next one would be like when the Bun Boy was there. We got out of school. We wanted to get hamburgers, milkshakes, French fries and all that kind of good stuff. Just plain goofing around and it was hard because we had to go. We couldn't go sit down in the restaurant. We had to go to the back door and get served. And that was--that was my two worst things I grew up with in Danville.

00:02:40 April
Were there any good times or anything that you particularly enjoyed?

00:02:44 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Yes, it was a good time. It was a man named—this, this is pertaining second street--his name was Arthur Napier. He was a great person. He had kids and he understood and after school he would ask our parents if we could come to his place, to his restaurant, and we did. And he let us, just let us have a ball. We enjoyed that a lot. That's my best part of that.

00:03:21 Mrs. Maggie Berry
I do I have...three brothers, they all deceased. I'ms the only one that’s living.

00:03:36 Mr. Charles Grey What was their names?

00:03:36 Mrs. Maggie Berry
One of them was William Berry--Willie Mac Berry--and Charles Berry.

00:03:45 April
You mentioned, I believe you called it “mud boy” is that what it was called? Mud boy? 00:03:53 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Bun boy.

00:03:54 April
“Bun boy”, thank you. And you said you had a lot of fun there. How often would you go there?

00:04:04 Mrs. Maggie Berry
We wasn’t allowed in Bun Boy, no.

00:04:05 April
Oh, you weren’t, you weren’t.

00:04:06 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No, we were allowed on the 2nd street area to the guy that owned the restaurant, Mr. Arthur Napier. That’s where we were to have our fun at.

00:04:24 April
Is there anything else about your childhood that you'd like to tell me?

00:04:31 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Yeah, well I was a happy girl. I mean I was a happy person coming up, and I had good parents and a good mom, and I was I was happy. We--we worked a lot but that was what we did, but I--I had good parents here.

00:05:01 Mrs. Maggie Berry
As a child, I didn't have no well no employment. Well, we worked in gardens a lot. That was all the importance there. But when I grew up, I would, I worked at the...oh what was that? Danville Laundry, I think it was. I worked there for a while when I was about 16 years old. Worked there for a while and that’s about all I done until I grew up a little bit older, and then I got other jobs.

00:05:35 April
And those other jobs were here in Danville? 00:05:39 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No--I well--I think they were in Lexington. I think we had moved to Lexington then and I worked at UK Medical Center in Saint Joseph.

00:05:53 April
So you moved from Danville to Lexington, do you live in Danville now?

00:05:58 Mrs. Maggie Berry I do, yes.

00:06:00 April
Was there anything—oh or--how old were you when you moved back to Danville?

00:06:06 Mrs. Maggie Berry
I think I was about...about 55. I believe we stayed in Lexington for a while, about 30 years.

00:06:17 April
When you came back, was Danville any different as to where--when it was in your childhood?

00:06:23 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Not a lot. I mean, it's still a lot of crazy stuff here and I think we got a little bit more privilege now than we did back when I was coming up, but it's...it's not to me. It's not the same, but it's...it's to me. It's not gotten any better to me. It's seem like each year, in each time it gets worse and worse.

00:06:51 April Wow.

bad, and there's are some good things here that happen. But I can't say it's a lot.

00:07:22 April
Some of the hard things that you mentioned were going to school and having--you couldn't ride the bus as you had to walk to school.

00:07:27 Mrs. Maggie Berry Yes.

00:07:28 Mr. Michael Hughes I was gonna say, what school did you attend?

00:07:30 Mrs. Maggie Berry Bates School.

00:07:28 Mr. Michael Hughes All 12 years? Did you graduate?

00:07:31 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Uh-uh, I didn't finish. It was ten out of 10 years. Because we started, we didn't have well, we only went to Bate school. We didn't have another school to go to. It was all Bate.

00:08:00 Mr. Charles Grey
Do you know what the distance is between Bate and Lebanon Pike?

00:08:03 Stevie Berry
Oh, I’d say 4 miles. [Inaudible] Probably, at the time, it was a good four miles.

00:08:20 Mr. Charles Grey That’s 8 miles.

00:08:20 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Four there and four back here. But this meant like rain, snow, sleet, or hail, you had to do it. You had to. I mean, you went to school and if you had to walk--we didn't have a way—I mean, we didn't have cars that back--my parents didn't, and we walked there and back every day. Sometimes we cut through the railroads, and then sometimes we cut through, go through

00:09:11 Dr. Shenton
You want to talk a little bit about your experience at Bates School? What was going to Bate School like? What were teachers like and your friends like?

00:09:12 Mrs. Maggie Berry
School, it was great. I loved Bates school. It was good. Teachers were really good and--and it was a good school. I don't think, I don't think they tell us enough history. And I loved history but seem like we just we got left out of a lot of stuff with doing history time.

00:09:50 Dr. Shenton
What was their approach to teaching history then? You said you wished it were different? What was it like? What was it like to learn history in the way they were teaching it to you?

00:09:43 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Yeah, I can’t remember, it's been so long ago. I can't remember. I know some of the things that I have learned since I've been grown that happened. Before when we were in school, we weren't taught that. It's a lot of stuff that we didn't get taught in school at that time.

00:10:11 April
Who all were--who all were your friends in school?

00:10:16 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Who were they? You want me calling names?

00:10:30 April
You can say their name if you remember.

00:10:22 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Well, one friend was Lucille Snodgrass...and Eugenia Mukes, Isabel Kenley. Oh gosh, I can’t think of a lot of ‘em. That’s enough.

00:11:00 April
Did you get to see them outside of school? Other than in school.

00:11:19 Dr. Shenton
Were those all people that lived near you, and you walked to school with them? And so, did you see them in your neighborhood? Or did you see them when you were near home?

00:11:29 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No, the only one that did walk to school with all of us from where we lived at--her name was Dory Simpson. But the rest of the girls lived in town.

00:11:40 Dr. Shenton
So, you lived outside of town. Was your home situated by itself or was it in a neighborhood setting? Or was it more of a farm setting?

00:11:42 Mrs. Maggie Berry
It was in a neighborhood, yeah.

00:11:43 Dr. Shenton
And what was that neighborhood like? If you had to describe it, how did people interact with each other in the neighborhood? What was the neighborhood like?

00:11:49 Mrs. Maggie Berry
It was beautiful. Everybody took care of everybody. I mean, you know, the neighbors were all great. The neighbors took care of the other neighbors’ children and everyone they—they just got along great. I mean, it was just one big, good family. It was a good life where we lived at.

00:12:23 April
Did you get to see your neighbors outside of your community? Was there anything else that you would get to see them in?

00:12:29 Mrs. Maggie Berry No, not really, no.

00:12:37 April
Were there any churches around in the neighborhood that everyone attended?

00:12:32 Mr. Michael Hughes
Is that where you had membership?

00:12:35 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No, I did not. I didn't get my membership until--when I married Raymond--my gosh, it's been so long ago. It's been about 56 years ago. He was--he was a Methodist. And so, when I married him then I changed to Methodist and I've been there ever since.

00:13:18 Dr. Shenton
What other kinds of functions was the church responsible for when you were growing up? Was it a place where you got to be social with other people? And how did–what other kinds of events did the church run?

00:13:21 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Yes, we did--it was very. It was wonderful. It's always I love my church and it's always been a wonderful church to belong to. My kids all went there. We got the whole family, went there and it was a good church. It still is a good church. I love it.

00:13:50 Dr. Shenton
And was it the same with your neighborhood church growing up? Was it—was it difficult? What was it like back then, the neighborhood church?

00:13:53 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No, the neighborhood church was on Lebanon Pike, Bethel Baptist Church, where I went as a kid. And of course, when we got grown, we went our own way. And so, we got married and done just moved away. And that's when I joined Saint James.

00:14:29 April
I'd like to go back to the friend you had who--his parents owned a business--in your childhood?

00:14:30 Mrs. Maggie Berry Oh, the after school?

00:14:31 April Yes.

00:14:40 April And it was a business, is that what you had mentioned?

00:14:48 Mrs. Maggie Berry It was a restaurant, yes.

00:14:54 April
Do you remember the name it was? Can you spell that out for me?

00:14:55 Mrs. Maggie Berry
The name of what--the restaurant?

00:14:58 Mr. Michael Hughes It was under his name.

00:14:59 April Okay, it was under his name.

00:15:01 Mr. Michael Hughes
Arthur Napier. Yeah, yeah, it was just Arthur Napier’s Restaurant. He didn’t have no formal--

00:14:59 Mrs. Maggie Berry Right.

00:14:59 Mr. Charles Grey
He didn’t have no sign out. I don't think.

00:15:18 Mr. Michael Hughes
I was gonna say, do you remember any other restaurants—do you remember any of the other restaurants that were on 2nd street?

00:15:31 Mrs. Maggie Berry
I do. I remember. What the term ladies name?

00:15:40 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Miss Emma Turner. And I don't seem like I can't remember anymore. I remember where they were and who you know, who–who was in them and who run ‘em, but I can't remember the name of them.

00:15:45 Mr. Michael Hughes But you knew it was quite a few.

00:15:47 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Oh yeah, up and down 2nd St., you knew all the restaurants.

00:15:58 Dr. Shenton
What other kinds of establishments were on 2nd St back then that you remember, that you either went to or that you know other people went to? What else was Second Street like? Can you give us a picture of what Second Street used to be like?

00:16:25 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Well, yes, I can't in my mind, but 2nd St was Second Street. It had a lot of restaurants…is all I can remember. Had a lot of restaurants. That was a good Second Street then, it was everybody. That's where everyone went and it was 2nd St.

00:16:47 Dr. Shenton
Well, there's always a lot of people out on 2nd Street, right?

00:16:38 Mrs. Maggie Berry Oh yes.

00:16:38 Dr. Shenton
What did it feel like to walk down 2nd St when you were younger? What did it–what would it look like? What did it feel like?

00:16:56 Mrs. Maggie Berry
It felt great. It felt good. I mean, that's where all your friends went. And after we grew up, we could go out and hang around 2nd St. and it was–it was a good street. Everyone lived there on 2nd St. Couldn't wait till the weekend.

00:17:13 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Swingland, Hollywood. Yeah, we and I'm–

00:17:14 Mr. Michael Hughes Do you remember the red top?

00:17:31 Mrs. Maggie Berry
I remember red top and I remember…Ponderosa. I remember that.

00:17:39 Dr. Shenton
What would people do in those places? What did it feel like to be in those places, and what did it–what did you do on the weekends there?

00:17:45 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Just have fun. I mean, you know, good clean fun. Back then it was. It was really good clean fun. There was always music, sometimes bands and we just had fun. It was a good place. It was. I like it–to talk about that…back then because it was so clean. I mean, you didn't hear no drugs, you didn't hear nothing. I mean, everybody drink, yes, true. Everybody drink, but it was just clean fun without drugs. That was my–that's my good thinking of how it was back then. If it wasn’t, I didn't know anything about it.

00:18:24 Mr. Michael Hughes
The ballpark. Did you attend any of the baseball games?

00:18:28 Mrs. Maggie Berry
I remember the ballpark, yeah.

00:18:30 Mr. Michael Hughes Baseball games or just hanging out?

00:18:49 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Just hanging out, not really thinking about a ball, just hanging out. Girls and I just hanging out.

00:18:45 Dr. Shenton
And what were the teams playing, who was–?

Mrs. Maggie Berry  We just hung out because there was some place to go, you know.

00:19:20 Dr. Shenton
And where was it? Where were they playing those games? Where did you go?

00:19:25 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Oh well, I guess we went back to 2nd St. Swingland Hollywood. We sure didn't go home, that's for sure. Oh gosh.

00:19:54 April
Besides 2nd St., and going to maybe not to watch baseball, but just to hang out around baseball, is there anything else that you and your friends–or were those your two main spots?

00:19:53 Mrs. Maggie Berry Yeah, there was all.

00:20:20 April
So you've told me about the places that you went to. Is there places that you made sure to stay away from, that you never even went to?

00:20:09 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No, not really. It was two places, not many places where you had to stay away from. I mean, it seemed like all the places we went it was, you know, probably something going on, but we wasn't in–I was never into it. It just wasn't that–I mean everything, it's just not a whole lot–much going on back there in those days.

00:20:43 Dr. Shenton
What were your impressions of Centre College growing up in Danville? Did your family have any thoughts or did they talk about Centre College in a particular kind of a way back then?

00:20:55 Mrs. Maggie Berry No, not really.

00:21:03 Dr. Shenton
Do you have any thoughts about Centre College and its relationship to the community now or as you got older?Do you have any thoughts about the relationship there?

00:21:13 Mrs. Maggie Berry I think it's wonderful now. I think it's wonderful we have Centre College.

00:21:25 Dr. Shenton
Did you know anyone who worked there in any jobs at Centre over the course of your life and how they talked about or thought about Centre College?

00:21:48 Mrs. Maggie Berry No, I didn't know anyone that worked there.

00:22:05 Mr. Michael Hughes Urban renewal

00:22:10 Dr. Shenton
So 2nd St. went through the process of urban renewal right when in 1973 they ended up knocking it–knocking most of the buildings down on 2nd St. How was your relationship to that process in Daville?

00:22:30 Mrs. Maggie Berry
It was very hard. It was very very hard because they took my mom's house too, and I think that the Black people got treated really, really bad. There's one thing that I cannot forget. When they come through, they just swept every Black person's property off the street. It was terrible. They had–everybody had a hard time. Black people had a hard time with that.

00:22:45 Dr. Shenton
Can you talk about the process of your mother's house being taken? Can you talk about what that process was like, either for you or maybe how your mom talked about it?

00:22:55 Mrs. Maggie Berry
My mom was–had deceased at that time and I lived in Lexington. And coming back and forth to see about it and I don't know what happened. I–we didn't, we didn't get no, we didn't get no funds out of it. We didn't get nothing out of–they just took the house.

00:23:30 Mr. Michael Hughes Where was that located?

00:23:41 Mr. Michael Hughes Yeah, on Lebanon Pike.

00:24:00 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Fairview St. on Lebanon Pike. It was right behind the Vermont Johnson and Eddie Walker. Remember all that?

00:23:41 Charles Grey Is that where those apartments is now?

00:24:03 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Huh? Right, that’s that first building, all the way down. That's where my momma’s house was.

00:23:53 Mr. Michael Hughes
And you–didn't, they didn't–you didn't receive no–they just took it and nobody contacted you?

00:24:15 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No one, no. We didn't receive anything. We did know when people call and told us about it, we came over there and by that time the house was gone.

00:24:18 Dr. Shenton Do you know what year that was?

00:24:22 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No, I don't remember. It's been a long time ago though, 'cause…My mom. I think my mom died in 60 or 65 or 70 or something like that. And it's been a long time coming.

00:24:43 Mr. Michael Hughes
She was already gone when urban renewal came through?

00:25:00 Mrs. Maggie Berry Mmhmm.

00:25:01 Mr. Michael Hughes She’d already passed?

00:25:10 Dr. Shenton
But they took your family property before they not they knocked down any of the buildings on 2nd Street–is that right? So that happened before 2nd St.?

00:25:18 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No, I think the 2nd St was first. I think it was first. All in the same time, about the same time.

00:25:33 Dr. Shenton
So how did you end up finding out about it then? So do you know if everyone contacted you and what they were saying was going on?

00:25:24 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Uh, I think one of the neighbors. I can't remember the lady’s name. Miss Rosetta Ford or…? I think it was her–I can't remember who it was.

00:25:56 Mr. Michael Hughes Was this sitting behind Miss Rosetta’s house?

00:26:00 Mrs. Maggie Berry Yes, it was.

00:26:04 Mr. Michael Hughes OK.

00:25:45 Mrs. Maggie Berry
I think that’s who it was, Miss Rosetta. I think she got–contacted us and told me.

00:26:16 April
Your neighbors also went through that process?

00:26:18 Mrs. Maggie Berry They did.

00:26:03 April
And did you ever keep in contact? Did you see them after?

00:26:30 Dr. Shenton
Do you know if anybody else in the neighborhood was compensated for their properties during the urban renewal process or not?

00:26:37 Mrs. Maggie Berry
I…well, I know, yes. I think a lady named Miss Jo Eddie Walker. I think that happened to her. And I don't really know, it was so many people. I just can't remember all of them.

00:26:45 Dr. Shenton
And where did people move to after their properties were taken? Do you know where where they went to?

00:26:51 Mrs. Maggie Berry
I have no idea 'cause I know I was living in Lexington when it happened, so that's where–we were in Lexington. Most of me and my family, but other folks that lost their home. I don't know where they went.

00:27:08 Dr. Shenton
And what did they replace? Where your house was, where your property was, what's there now?

00:27:40 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Apartments. I can't remember the name. I don't know the name of them but–

00:27:44 Mr. Michael Hughes Walker Court, I think.

00:27:47 Mrs. Maggie Berry Walker court, yeah.

00:28:04 Dr. Shenton
Do you have any other memories of that time related to urban renewal? Anything that you would like to to say about that, about that time or any other memories that you would like to relate?

Mrs. Maggie Berry lived where I lived at. Great people. Wonderful people. Took care of each other, it was just a great, great little set up out there.

00:28:28 Mr. Michael Hughes Put about 5 more minutes then.

00:28:30 Dr. Shenton
Yeah, OK. So another big event in the middle of the 20th century was the school desegregation process, and I know you went to base school for all 10 years of your education. Is that right?

00:29:02 Mrs. Maggie Berry Yes.

00:29:16 Dr. Shenton
And then your children maybe they lived through an era where they went to both segregated and then non-segregated schools? Or were they born later than that?

00:29:23 Mrs. Maggie Berry
I don't know–my oldest–I don't know. I think they all went to the same school. I can't remember.

[Inaudible]

00:29:30 Dr. Shenton
Did you have any opinion or any thoughts on that process in Danville? What that looked like for the African American community in Danville, and you know, what was it like to watch people go through that process of desegregation in schools?

00:29:30 Mrs. Maggie Berry
Well, it was hard. It was really very very hard for me and it's heartbreaking for me to see the things–I mean I, I just couldn't ever understand the difference. I mean why? Why, why are we so different? Why were we so different than, you know, I–that just puzzled me. It just puzzled me why? If our skin is so much different than other people, and we’re just not liked. What have we done in this world that you don't like us? I mean, I just–I just never could understand that and I still don't understand it. It hurts a lot to to have to live like that and go through that because with me being almost 86 years old, you know, I'm just 15 years away from slavery, and that it happened 100 years ago, so I'm right in the middle of that. It was–it's…it was very hard coming up–it was, it was very, very hard. And to get called those names every day, every day. It was–it was horrible. It was horrible.Those are two things that will stay in my mind and my heart that I will never forget, ever.

00:31:00 Dr. Shenton
And what was your impression of when your children did go to school, they went to school in Danville? Or did they go to school in Lexington?

00:31:02 Mrs. Maggie Berry
No, they went–well, they went to school in Danville some parts. When they got older, we moved to Lexington, they went to school in Lexington. Didn't have a problem at all in Lexington.

00:31:16 Dr. Shenton
Did you have any thoughts or impressions about what it was like for them in terms of it being different for you to go to school in a segregated school versus your children going to school with white children?

00:31:26 Mrs. Maggie Berry
And yeah, I was very afraid for one thing. Hoping that they didn't have to go through what I went through with it. I don't know they they complained some, but I guess you know they made it the best they could.

00:31:55 Dr. Shenton
So here's, what other topics do you think we should ask, Miss Berry about? Anything else that we need to get on the record?

00:32:02 Mr. Michael Hughes
She's done just such, she's done this great I think. I don't know. I really don't think, you know. She took us back to where the–those hard times, you know we didn't [inaudible] Charles, you got anything?

00:32:24 Mr. Grey Charles
No, I just I'd just like to say that. Her brother and I were good friends–Charles Berry. And I used to go to their house about every Sunday between James' house and their house, and like she said, talk about good people. I would go out there and eat and might eat over there. It was a good community. And I've been known her for a long time and she was always good to everybody. I mean she was, she would just make it better, Maggie Berry. But I–I appreciate hearing this. I really do.

00:33:25 Mr. Michael Hughes
I do too. 'Cause I grew up the same way knowing, Miss Maggie Bear is, you know, a special person still. Still is a beautiful, beautiful spirit, you know. And when I see her every Sunday just about, we attend church together and–but it's just good to get conversation with people that live in those years, and saw things that we didn't see but knew existed, you know.

00:33:40 Mrs. Maggie Berry Thank you, thank you.

00:33:34 Dr. Shenton
Mr. Grey, do you want to talk a little bit about what those visits to Mrs. Berry's house were like? Want to give us a picture of that?

00:33:40 Mr. Charles Grey
Yeah, my home life wasn't all that good. My home life was not all that good. And to have friends to get away from it was a blessing. And Charles and Willie, they were my friends and come by friends. And then I go to the Johnson house. They were my friends. And I could go to Lebanon Pike. And they used to have feuds between the Danville town people and Lebanon Pike people. They used to fight and get in disagreements, but I could always go there and they never treat me any different. And I–I really–Maggie, don't know me like I know her. But I do remember her and she was always nice. She was always nice. And that meant a lot to a young person to have people just looking out for you like she says and ‘say don't do this, so you better watch yourself’ or something so, thank you, Maggie.

00:34:50 Mrs. Maggie Berry You’re welcome.

00:34:54 Mr. Michael Hughes
I say, my wife and her family always just so you know, thought about, you know, Miss Maggie and, I always talked highly of her, you know, so I just want to say thank you. For coming in and–

00:35:10 Mrs. Maggie Berry Thank you. You’re welcome.

00:35:12 Mr. Michael Hughes And giving us insight, you know.

00:35:15 Mrs. Maggie Berry It's my pleasure.

00:35:16 Mr. Stevie Berry
As her son, she did a very good job raising her 5–6–my five other siblings. Yes, I know all you all–Mr. Davis has seen Mrs. Maggie Berry’s best spirit. But believe me, us siblings have seen her worst spirit. So, I can go all the way back to Baywood homes when I was probably four or five years old. It's been 60 years ago. And my favorite time of the week was Friday. [Inaudible] Mama and my step dad Raymond would have some parties and I would come and sneak down the steps and they’d be there dancing. I’d be over there rolling with them. Soon they turn their head, I sneak over and grab one of your [inaudible] blue ribbons. [Inaudible] She gone caught me on the step, knocked out. I done passed out. She caught me, ‘get your tail up in that bed.’ Them was some of the most beautiful times alright, down in Baywood homes for me. I just want to share it with you all as well. And I like where the interview went. The interview went well.

00:37:00 Mrs. Maggie Berry Can I take these out?

00:37:01 Mr. Michael Hughes Yeah, if you want.

00:37:07 Dr. Shenton
All right, well thank you Mrs. Berry, thank you so much.

00:37:08 April Thank you so much.

00:37:09 Mrs. Maggie Berry Thank you.