Washington street, and two or three families come into this area from one of the arab countries. They normally lived in the neighborhoods that were close to black neighborhoods in greenville, because they, too, were discriminated against to some degree. But greenville was still at that time filled with the kind of bigotry that most of us had learned to live with and expect. Black people during that time new their place and they stayed in it. We as children coming up, we knew our place, it was the way things were. It was the way things had always been. I can recall as a child hearing stories about willie earle, who was a young black man who was lynched in greenville by a mob of white cabdrivers. He was taken out of a jail and take it over to pickens county, but the lynching took place right in greenville. And i can remember hearing everybody talk about what happened to willie earle. And when we as children would think about being afraid of anything, we would think about what happened to