 I took about four roles at the march. People kept gathering in increasing numbers towards the middle of the day, and apparently a lot of them were coming directly by bus from wherever, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Florida, Virginia. A group of people marching with pickets. And a couple of them are holding large signs indicating that they were such and such an organization, church, union, whatever it was, from Danville, Virginia. First of all, there was no unified march. There were lots of individual marches. People who probably had consolidation either due to their membership in a church, their membership in some group, including SNCC, unions, Philip Randolph, I believe, was a union leader, I don't remember exactly. And this is leading up to, obviously their target was the space, the reflecting pool essentially in front of the Lincoln Memorial. That's where they had the platform where the speakers and singers and other people spoke from. They had separate tents for giving out pickets, separate tents for the news media, and maybe other things. And the march more or less kept on schedule. There was a lot of speakers. A Philip Randolph, Martin Luther King Jr., some big ones they also had. Lots of other, John Lewis, who was just mentioned in the New York Times today. The news media were very good. They had taken a lot of care, a lot of preparation. They had booms to put TV cameras, still cameras, camera men on top to get into a large view. And in the lead-up to the formal schedule, there were a lot of informal things, including a little, actually, platform, some of which were the back of a U-Haul trainer, the people singing. There was civil rights songs. There was singing in one of these venues by Joan Baez and Bob Dylan. There were police all over the place, and people were not intending to be violent. There were no incidents. Sometimes people say, what could I do as one person? And there's a lot of people thinking that. If you get them all together, you've got a force.