and again and each time the dream was a promise out of our ancient articles of faith. phrases from the constitution, lines from the great anthem of the nation, guarantees from the bill of rights, all ending with a vision that they might one day all come true. he was full of the symbolism of lincoln and gandhi and the cadences of the bible, militant and sad and he sent the crowd away feeling that the long journal he been worthwhile. what a great piece of reporting, james restin, like he really nailed it, and i wanted to read that specifically because the flip side of the kind of hostile press role that we saw in that montage is that there is no question that at a certain point the northern white establishment press particularly, which had unprecedented kind of monopoly of the public's attention in the 1960s came to see what the true nature of southern segregation was, and that coverage really changed perceptions, wouldn't you say, bob? >> i absolutely agree with that. what i think is different now, you're talking about the mainstream press.