I felt panic when I got the photo assignment. I was an 18-year-old part-time reporter and photographer with only a couple of months experience. Sports editor Mike Kilgore handed me a piece of paper with an assignment for later that night — and I had no idea how to do what he wanted.
The assignment was simple. I was to shoot pictures of a basketball game at Cordova High School, a small school about 10 or 15 miles outside of town. But I had never covered a basketball game. I had no idea what to shoot — and I told Mike that.
“Oh, you’ll be fine,” he told me. “Just get in a position to one side or the other behind the basket and shoot what feels right.”
The game was a blur to me. Since I didn’t know what I was doing, I shot several rolls of film, hoping for one usable photo. I felt as though I was in way over my head. The gym was badly lit. I didn’t know a soul there. I couldn’t move the camera fast enough to catch the action.
I walked out feeling like a failure. I was scared to turn my film in.

THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Munchkin, the dog who vanished without a trace
If you made an error yesterday, it’s ‘foolish consistency’ to stick with it
Storms can end without warning, bringing hope of blue skies ahead
If you aren’t free to to be a bigot if you choose, you’re not really free
Shallow thinking and arrogance led to ruin of once-great society
What does it take to hold thug with a badge accountable for murder?
How one woman’s grand gesture for love turned into a nightmare
What demons cause us to abandon one who offers what we need?