[laughter] >> bulkeley is an interesting figure because he goes to yale in the late 40's if he's at yale and he wouldn't have been an outsider most places in america. he believes the liberalism of professors really dominate not just the campus but the academic offerings of there's a kind of intellectual orthodoxy at yale constructed by these liberal professors and you don't have much room to stray outside of that and he comes to school from a very conservative family that half of it has troops in the deep south and the other not but a very conservative catholic white family with a very conservative politics and so he brings them with him and feels very much that he is a rebel against that i believe liberal culture. >> we've been talking quite a bit know about the 50's. what is the effect of this? this white rebellion? >> and begins to grow our of the 60's and people make the leap from being interested in people they see as different into imagining themselves as rebels or outsiders, too and you see folks making the leap particularly young white college students through the revival is an i