greatest generation, although there are blacks in alexandria are quite proud of having a mural on one of the buildings on leet of one of their own that became a tuskegee airman. but on lee street there's a big wreath of flowers so, so when i met the members and talked to the members of the african-american community in alexandria who lived in that area at the time, i said, what's that wreath about? they said that's anna compton's wreath. she was a black woman every year would take a wreath there because she was alive and comet ratehe war. how? by comet rating the black soldiers she knew were killed regardless of what the government said. i saw letters for years after that back and forth with the defense department and everything. civil rights activists in alex san dria, arguing for more disclosure of what happened and the government saying, nothing happened in terms of death in my opinion it was never resolved one way or the other. the point is when you look at localities where people suffered and died, either suffered from race simple, from trauma, grief, post traumatic stress syndrome, the war is not so go