or send them to walter negel, he lives here in new york city. i shouldn't speak for walter. [laughter] i'm sure both of us would be more than willing to receive those letters. i hope that answers part of your question. >> if it does. and just another one after that. in terms of when martin luther king was assassinated and it was the relationship with the garbage strike and a whole move in terms of the economic justice which i know you said the thing about, you know, we get stuck in places, but i think there's a whole corporate, um, a corporate media that wants us to be stuck in a place, and they highlight what we pay attention to. >> right. >> so it is important to pay attention to the other speeches. so as kind of a follow-up of what someone asked earlier in terms of your reading, was there any communication in terms of an economic, an economic direction in the conversations between bayard and martin luther king? >> great question. early on, very early on bayard is encouraging dr. king to see linkages between economic justice and racism. he's doing this in the 1950s. he's a