Well this is what I looked like back in the day and this is Jim Bevel, who was also one of our colleagues and we used to sing together and we went to jail together many times. And he was from Itta Bena, Mississippi. In fact, on the freedom rides, when we got out of jail, we got out at the same time because we went in the same time. You had to get permission to stay in Jackson or stay in Mississippi because the agreement was that when the freedom riders got out of jail, they would immediately get on the next flight and get out of town. They didn't want all these freedom riders hanging around Jackson, Mississippi. But Bevel was already from Mississippi, so we had to go and get permission for him to stay. And I went with him and said that I was visiting him for the summer. Well, actually, my real motive was to get some people from Jackson, Mississippi on the freedom rides. Because the Governor, Ross Pineda, had come out in the newspaper, headlines congratulating the black people in Mississippi and Jackson for not getting involved with these outside agitators, freedom riders. And that was an insult, so Jim Bevel and I stayed out. When we got out of jail, we stayed there in Jackson, Mississippi and started recruiting. In two weeks, we recruited 42 people to go on the freedom rides. And we just went and hit the streets, and we hit the baseball diamond, and we hit the basketball court. We recruited gang members and we had sort of an unorthodox way of dealing with it. We ask them if they wanted to fight, and they said, well, I don't mind fighting. And so we said, we're going downtown to fight segregation, so, would you willing to do that? They say, well yes. We say, you may get arrested. Some of them say, well, I've been to jail all ready. Okay, so, that's how we did it. But, the thing we did was we had to have strict requirements because we did not want them to get in jail and then change their minds, or say they were duped, something like that, because they wanted to get out. So, we took them through an intensive, all day workshop. And then, if they were ready to go, okay? And Bevel took the most difficult part and that was to tell them all the things that might happen to them if they get on this freedom ride and be arrested. They could never get a job in Mississippi. With that on their record, their parents could lose their jobs, okay? They could be denied the opportunity to go to school. And they may have to leave town. So if they were willing to suffer and accept that, okay? Then, that's what would happen to them. And I talked about all of the positive things and the reason why they should go on the freedom rides, and the benefits there would be in terms of building their own character and standing up for something that they believed in, and participating in the cause for freedom. And then, the real requirement was they had to show up six o'clock AM the next day. So those who were late, they had to wait until the next day. We had to make sure they were willing to go to jail. And they did, in large numbers. A number of these people were from Mississippi and they are people that we recruited to go on the freedom rides. They just didn't know how to hook up. So we are able to take them down and let them go to the bus station. It was inexpensive because they didn't have to buy a ticket. They just walked into the bus station waiting room and they were arrested by Captain Ray who would say, move on. They didn't move on, he would arrest them, after saying it three times. So, these represent the many people who decided to take a stand against the segregated busing. And one of the things that people don't even realize, the lunchroom was segregated, okay? And blacks were not allowed to go in there. The waiting room, restrooms, but guess what else? You couldn't even buy a ticket at the same ticket counter in the bus station. The ticket counter was segregated. So, therefore, there was literally no contact. So when they had the opportunity to walk into that white waiting room and stand up for what they believed, they grew up over night.