and the train was named the nancy hank's. anyone know who nancy hank's was abraham lincoln's mother. you got it. you're pretty good. so, you know a yankee on that train, you probably looked it up. okay. so we only have an hour. yeah. and you got a few questions? yeah. yeah, i have. so i need to shut up fewer than i wrote. let me tell you terms of number. so you're nine years old. you're walking down that dirt road. you come to the part of town that whites don't go to. well, particularly white kids. white kids got your friend with you. and you see that shack of a schoolhouse where black kids went school? it made an impression. you. right. and that impression, that first glimpse. that was your first exposure, i believe that that impressions stuck with you your whole life. that's unusual. you know, lots of people have impressions with a nine or ten and they change when they're a teenager in their twenties. why do you think that was? well, that was because ed took what we learned in sunday school about loving your neighbor as you