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119 Chapter 6 “The Beginning of Change in Mississippi” Pearlena Lewis didn’t sleep very well the night before the sit-in.1 Her feelings were a jumble: somewhat anxious though also excited, Lewis felt honored that,despite her youth,Medgar Evers had chosen her for a key role in the demonstration. She awoke early and gave her family no warning of what she was about to do; she had told Evers she felt“of age to make [this] decision myself.” She had gotten her hair done the day before and decided to wear a simple blue and white knit outfit: “nice, but not overly dressed,” she recalled. (In the early 1960s, students still dressed up for civil rights demonstrations to show their respectability.) Lewis left the house early and joined Evers and Lillian Louie at the NAACP offices adjacent to the Masonic Temple.2 It was a warm, muggy Mississippi morning, with clouds rolling in from the west and a thunderstorm expected later in the day.3 Lewis confided to Louie her mixed emotions. “I wasn’t frightened,” she would recollect years later. “It was just a matter of not knowing what would happen.”4 The Tougaloo crowd arrived at the Masonic Temple about 9:30 that morning and reviewed the agreed-upon plan once more. Lewis, Memphis Norman , and Annie Moody would be driven to a spot convenient to Woolworth’s Capitol Street entrance. They would enter the store at 11:00, browse separately for some small items to purchase, and then, at precisely 11:15, converge on the lunch counter. Lewis gave her watch to Norman so he would know when to give the signal for them to take their seats.5 Salter also went over plans for the second demonstration, scheduled for 11:30, just up the street from Woolworth’s near one of the busiest downtown intersections. Though the picketing would be done by an integrated group, white and black picketers would be driven to the scene separately so as not to raise suspicion. Carrying their signs in paper bags, the groups would arrive at the agreed-upon spot from two different directions,then pull out the signs and begin walking up and down before another targeted store. Both the picketing and the sit-in strategies contained an element of surprise, a favorite Salter tactic . Additionally, to ensure the police didn’t figure things out too quickly and arrest the protesters before the media arrived, more young people—including George Raymond—would leave the Masonic Temple at intervals to act as decoys ,walking up and down Capitol Street,entering stores or window-shopping 120   “The Beginning of Change in Mississippi” at will.The police would have to follow everyone leaving the temple and would not know which students were the demonstrators.6 It was Evers’s job to handle the media. He called the local newspapers and TV stations around 10:30 to tell them to expect some action on Capitol Street within the hour. As on other occasions, the media contacted the police, who were thus on full alert when the groups left the Masonic Temple ten minutes later, split up, stepped into cars, and headed toward the downtown area.7 NAACP regular James Wells drove Lewis,Norman,and Moody in his green station wagon.If Lewis didn’t admit to being frightened on the trip downtown, Norman surely did. “We were all three so afraid,” he recalled. “This was the moment of truth.”8 They entered Woolworth’s exactly at 11:00, then separated and wandered around the store. Norman remembered buying a fountain pen and some batteries. As with other sit-ins, the idea was to establish that black customers’ money was accepted everywhere in the store except at the lunch counter. This discrepancy could theoretically provide a source of discussion with waitresses, store managers, newsmen, and hecklers and might even have some legal bearing for future court rulings. At precisely 11:15, Moody, Norman, and Lewis took their seats in the middle of the fifty-two-seat lunch counter. Norman recalled choosing that spot because there were several empty seats together. Lewis and Norman sat side by side. Moody dropped her handbag and sweater on the seat to the right of Norman ,which had a large lemonade maker right in front of it,and sat on the next stool over.9 Once in position, the students first attempted to place an order. When the waitresses pretended the new customers weren’t...

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