is also a biscuit in the oven as of March 1989, and we hope they will have another child in early September of this year. My third son is James Dillard McDonald. He went to the University of Virginia for his undergraduate work. After working in Washington for a few years he is now a senior in law school at the University of Florida. He will graduate this year. P: Is he married? M: He is not married. Of my first set of stepchildren, the oldest is Mary Linda Caton, who lives in the vicinity of Orlando and has one child named Courtney. The second is named Charles Monroe Collins, and he has two daughters--one named Brooke, and the other Ashley. He is the controller for a small oil supply firm with a transportation company and some oil production of its own. He lives in Seminole, Oklahoma. The third daughter is named Cindy Langston. She is divorced, and she is teaching school in the Kissimmee school district. Fourth is Rodger Edward Collins. He is the office manager for Ebasco in Dallas, Texas. He is married but has no children. Of my second set of stepchildren, the oldest is Greg Poole III. He is currently in Los Angeles working on an M.B.A. at the University of Southern California. The second is Alyson Poole, and she has just gotten a job with Steven Spielberg in Los Angeles as a production assistant on his films. Alyson is not married. The third is named Kenan Poole, and he is working in Atlanta; he is not married. The fourth is Ashton Poole. He is not married. He is a senior at the University of North Carolina. P: Out of that whole group you have one here at the University of Florida. Congratulations! M: The interesting thing was that my first wife's parents had a long history at the University of Virginia. My wife's mother's people included members from the first faculty at the University of Virginia, where a forebearer was the professor of law picked by Thomas Jefferson. That continued all the way down to members of the family who then shifted over to being doctors and were on the medical faculty there. My wife's father was the third in his family to attend both the University of Virginia and the University of Virginia law school. My youngest son was the only one of thirteen grandchildren to get into the University of Virginia. [laughter] P: Marshall, I wanted to ask you about your membership on the President's Special Commission on Aging. And you were involved in this insurance company. Do the two things go together? Also, which president set up this special commission? 87