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The Dominican sect, because I found, I went to Catholic school too for a couple of years, here in New Jersey though. But I find and found that usually the missionaries were the ones who were great teachers and priests, you know, the missionaries. But was that under the Dominican order? Yeah, I got the nuns, were Dominican, at St. Edmunds. I don't know, that was south, if they were Dominican or not. But see, it just can't college, and the high school, they were both, the principals were nuns, I remember that. But at St. Thomas, you know, those were like, brother and sister colleges where I live, this came college at St. Thomas, because back when they had the girls, girls separated from the boys. You know, you couldn't go to St. Edmunds High School, because that was all girls. You had to go to the boys high school. And even in Florida here, they had a Macalanoa South, where they were all on the same campus, but the boys and girls were separated. And even in college, they had two separate colleges, one boys and one girls. But then it all got put together, and then it was not a Macalanoa High School, La Salle High School, it was a Macalanoa La Salle High School. And Biscayne College and St. Thomas Villanova were segregated, so they let men attend Biscayne and let women in St. Thomas. And that happened between 1968 and 1969 when they stopped separating the classes between boys and girls. They were really strict. They were really strict.

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