wells, roy wilkins. this part of the movement kind of symbolizes different agendas as well. you had people preaching for better equality when it came to jobs and economic development and education, and then you have people like ida b. wells here who, at a very young age, at 14, was already a schoolteacher. but her passion was to actually publ publicize the atrocities. she would write stories about the lynchings and she would public photographs about the black men who were lynched throughout the south. in this particular segment, we learn more about the passion of phillip randolph, that whole movement to get the sleeping car porters decent wages, the black men who worked on the trains. they would work about 400 hours a month and would bring home about $70 a month. they were basically on call 24 hours a day on these trains. and mr. randolph was passionate about getting americanized for fair labor wages and they became the brotherhood of sleeping car porters. what you see here is a uniform from the marccus garvey movemen. this is marcus garvey in this photograph here from liber