[inaudible] on the reverse side when you come to the south, and i've interviewed, they're all dead now, but many sleeper car porters that worked with a. philip randolph and a. philip randolph was from the same town. but in anything them, they talked about, this is way after 1919, in the '20s how, when black servicemen did come back into southwick served, they did not go to chicago, whatever, quite often they had a hard time because they had, one, then around white women. and as a feckless they'd use guns anyway rather than just hunting bassam. >> then before world war i it started, there actually have been, the idea of recruiting black soldiers was disputed by white congressmen in the south had said wait a minute, you're going to train black people to shoot guns? let's not do that. [inaudible] >> right. but i have a letter in the book from a man, a black soldier comes back to arkansas, and he rides that he comes home and he is sneered at by white businessmen who didn't go fight, by the way. and he's so disgusted that he moved to st. louis and he said i felt safer in the trenches that i did in arkansas. that was a c