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                           Text in American Literature book is selection from Anne Moody's Autobiography  Coming of Age in Mississippi. In
                           the selection, she tells of her participation in the 1963 sit-in at a segregated Woolworth's lunch counter in Jackson, Mississippi.
                            The selection is an eyewitness report. This autobiography is Moody's true account of her experiences as a college student
                           in the civil rights movement of the 1960's.    
                           
                           The Jackson Sit-In By Anne Moody From  Coming of Age in Mississippi
                           I had become very friendly with my social science professor, John Salter, who was in charge of NAACP activities
                           on campus. All during the year, while the NAACP conducted a boycott of the downtown stores in Jackson, I had been one of Salter's
                           most faithful canvassers and church speakers. During the last week of school, he told me that sit-in demostrations were about
                           to start in Jackson and that he wanted me to be the spokesman for a team that would sit-in at Woolworth's lunch counter. The
                           two other demonstrators would be classmates of mine, Memphis and Pearlena. Pearlena was a dedicated NAACP worker, but Memphis
                           had not been very involved in the Movement on campus. It seemed that the organization had had a rough time finding students
                           who were in a position to go to jail. I had nothing to lose one way or the other. Around ten o’clock the morning of
                           the demonstrations, NAACP headquarters alerted the news services. As a result, the police department was also informed, but
                           neither the policemen nor the newsmen knew exactly where or when the demonstrations would start. They stationed themselves
                           along Capitol Street and waited. To divert attention from the sit-in at Woolworth's, the picketing started at J.C. Penney's
                           a good fifteen minutes before. The pickets were allowed to walk up and down in front of the store three or four times before
                           they were arrested. At exactly 11  A.M., Pearlena, Memphis, and I entered Woolworth's from the rear entrance. We separated
                           as soon as we stepped into the store and made small purchases from various counters. Pearlena had given Memphis her watch.
                           He was to let us know when it was 11:14. At 11:14 we were to join him near the lunch counter and at exactly 11: 15 we were
                           to take seats at it. Seconds before 11:15 we were occupying three seats at the previously segregated Woolworth's lunch counter.
                           In the beginning the waitresses seemed to ignore us, as if they really didn't know what was going on. Our waitress walked
                           past us a couple of times before she noticed we had started to write our own orders down and realized we wanted service. She
                           asked us what we wanted. We began to read to her from our order slips. She told us that we would be served at the back counter,
                           which was for Negroes. "We would like to be served here," I said. The waitress. started to repeat what she had said, then
                           stopped in the middle of the sentence. She turned the lights out behind the counter, and she and the other waitresses almost
                           ran to  the back of the store, deserting all their white customers. I guess they thought that violence would start immediately
                           after the whites at the counter realized what was going on. There were five or six other people at the counter. A couple of
                           them just got up and walked away. A girl sitting next to me finished her banana split before leaving. A middle-aged white
                           woman who had not yet been served rose from her seat and came over to us. "I'd like to stay here with you," she said, "but
                           my husband is waiting." The newsmen came in just as she was leaving. They must have discovered what was going on shortly after
                           some of the people began to leave the store. One of the newsmen ran behind the woman who spoke to us and asked her to identify
                           herself. She refused to give her name, but said she was a native of Vicksburg and a former resident of California. When asked
                           why she had said what she had said to us, she replied, "I am-in sympathy with the Negro movement." By this time a crowd of
                           cameramen and reporters had gathered around us taking pictures and asking questions, such as Where were we from? Why did we
                           sit-in? What organization sponsored it? Were we students? From what school? How were we classified? I told them that we were
                           all students at Tougaloo College, that we were represented by no particular organization, and that we planned to stay there
                           even after the store closed. "All we want is service," was my reply to one of them. After they had finished probing for about
                           twenty minutes, they were almost ready to leave. At noon, students from a nearby white high school started pouring in to Woolworth's.
                           When they first saw us they were sort of surprised. They didn't know how to react. A few started to heckle and the newsmen
                           became interested again. Then the white students started chanting all kinds of anti-Negro slogans. We were called a little
                           bit of everything. The rest of the seats except the three we were occupying had been roped off to prevent others from sitting
                           down. A couple of the boys took one end of the rope and made it into a hang- man's noose. Several attempts were made to put
                           it around our necks. The crowds grew as more students and adults came in for lunch. We kept our eyes straight forward and
                           did not look at the crowd except for occasional glances to see what was going on. All of a sudden I saw a face I remembered-the
                           drunkard from the bus station sit-in. My eyes lingered on him just long enough for us to recognize each other. Today he was
                           drunk too, so I don't think he remembered where he had seen me before. He took out a knife, opened it, put it in his pocket,
                           and then began to pace the floor. At this point, I told Memphis and Pearlena what was going on. Memphis suggested that we
                           pray. We bowed our heads, and all hell broke loose. A man rushed forward, threw Memphis from his seat, and slapped my face.
                           Then another man who worked in the store threw me against an adjoining counter. Down on my knees on the floor, I saw Memphis
                           lying near the lunch counter with blood running out of the corners of his mouth. As he tried to protect his face, the man
                           who'd thrown him down kept kicking him against the head. If he had worn hard-soled shoes instead of sneakers, the first kick
                           probably would have killed Memphis. Finally a man dressed in plain clothes identified himself as a police officer and arrested
                           Memphis and his attacker. Pearlena had been thrown to the floor. She and I got back on our stools after Memphis was arrested.
                           There were some white Tougaloo teachers in the crowd. They asked Pearlena and me if we wanted to leave. They said that things
                           were getting too rough. We didn't know what to do. While we were trying to make up our minds, we were joined by Joan Trumpauer.
                           Now there were three of us and we were integrated. The crowd began to chant, "Communists, Communists,' Communists." Some old
                           man in the crowd ordered the students to take us off the stools. "Which one should I get first?" a big husky boy said. "That
                           white nigger," the old man said. The boy lifted Joan from the counter by her waist and carried her out of the store.Simultaneously,
                           I was snatched from my stool by two high school students. I was dragged about thirty feet toward the door by my hair when
                           someone made them turn me loose. As I was getting up off the floor, I saw Joan coming back inside. We started back to the
                           center of the counter to join Pearlena. Lois Chaffee, a white Tougaloo faculty member, was now sitting next to her. So Joan
                           and I just climbed across the rope at the front end of the counter and sat down. There were now four of us, two whites and
                           two Negroes, all women. The mob started smearing us with ketchup, mustard, sugar, pies, and everything on the counter. Soon
                           Joan and I were joined by John Salter, but the moment he sat down he was hit on the jaw with what appeared to be brass knuckles.
                           Blood gushed from his face and someone threw salt into the open wound. Ed King, Tougaloo's chaplain, rushed to him. At the
                           other end of the counter, Lois and Pearlena were joined by George Raymond, a CORE field worker and a student from Jackson
                           State College. Then a Negro high school boy sat down next to me. The mob took spray paint from the counter and sprayed it
                           on the new demonstrators. The high school student had on a white shirt; the word "nigger" was written on his back with red
                           spray paint. We sat there for three hours taking a beating when the manager decided to close the store because the mob had
                           begun to go wild with stuff from other counters. He begged and begged everyone to leave. But even after fifteen minutes of
                           begging, no one budged. Theywould not leave until we did. Then Dr. Beittel, the president of Tougaloo College, came running
                           in. He said he had just heard what was happening.About ninety policemen were standing outside the store; they had been watching
                           the wholething through the windows, but had not come in to stop the mob or do anything. resident Beittel went outside and
                           asked Captain Ray to come and escort us out. The captain refused, stating the manager had to invite him in before he could
                           enter the premises, so Dr. Beittel himself brought us out. He had told the police that they had better protect us after we
                           were outside the store. When we got outside, the policemen formed a single line that blocked the mob from us. However, they
                           were allowed to throw at us everything they had collected. Within ten minutes, we were picked up by Reverend King in his station
                           wagon and taken to the NAACP headquarters on Lynch Street. After the sit-in, all I could think of was how sick Mississippi
                           whites were. They believed so much in the segregated Southern way of life, they would kill to preserve it. I sat there in
                           the NAACP office and thought of how many times they had killed when this way of life was threatened. I knew that the killing
                           had just begun. "Many more will die before it is over with," I thought. Before the sit-in, I had always hated the whites in
                           Mississippi. Now I knew it was impossible for me to hate sickness. The whites had a disease, an incurable disease in its final
                           stage. What were our chances against such a disease? I thought of the students, the young Negroes who had just begun to protest,
                           as young interns. When these young interns got older, I thought, they would be the best doctors in the world for social problems
                             
                         
                        
                        
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