Discusses the events of the 4,000 African American students who marched to jail to secure their freedom in May 1963.
Content Note
"I want to go to jail" -- Audrey Faye Hendricks : "There wasn't a bombing that I wasn't at" -- Washington Booker III : "I was too rambunctious to be a little black kid in the South. That put mein a position to be killed" -- James W. Stewart : "No. I am not going to be confined" -- Arnetta Streeter : "We needed to do something right then" -- Collision course : "We shall march until victory is won" -- Project C : "Overwhelmed by a feeling of hopelessness -- The foot soldiers : "We got to use what we got" -- May 2. D-Day : "They're coming out!" -- May 3. Double D-Day : "You wondered how people could be so cruel -- Views from other sides : what were they thinking? -- May 4-6, 1963 : "Deliver us from evil" -- May 7-10, 1963 : "Nothing was said-- about the children" -- May 11-May 23 : it was the worst of times, it was the best of times -- Freedom and fury : the walls fall down.