We were marching since we were babies and all we did was make Jane Fonda famous.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I marched back then - I was in a civil-rights musical, Fly Blackbird, and we met Martin Luther King.
Really, I'm only alive out of curiosity. I'm very curious about where we're all marching.
For me the march was a labor - a labor of love - but I was busy handing out flyers for the National Association of Black Social Workers, so I really wasn't standing in the crowd listening and observing. I was busy.
We weren't radical chic. Jane Fonda embarrassed me. We belonged to no political parties. Basically, we were vaudevillians.
We march on because all lives matter, not to be judged by the color of their skin.
I was a sports fan, but I also went to peace marches.
We asked Jane Fonda if she would like to meet American pilots in Hanoi, but she refused, she didn't want to.
I don't view myself as marching to any right-wing drummer.
I was proud to march beside some of the most notable Civil Rights activists, such as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Rev. Jesse Jackson, and Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., from Selma to Montgomery.
Marching with over a million women in support of our reproductive rights was one of the most empowering things I have done, both as a woman and as a Member of Congress.