These civil right leader risked and willing to lose their live in the name of freedom and equality. At the height of the Civil Right Movement Andrew Goodman volunteered to take part in Freedom Summers of 1964, a registration project in Mississippi to expand black voting in the South. Goodman and James Chaney and Michael Schwerner traveled to Meridian, Mississippi only later to be killed by Ku Klux Klan members. Goodman’s activism continues today through the Andrew Goodman Foundation. Bayard Rustin is another important civil rights leader. Rustin met the civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1950s and began working with King. At first Martin Luther King had not embraced nonviolence until Rustin persuaded boycott leaders about Gandhian nonviolent direct protest. He assisted King with the boycott of segregated buses in Montgomery, Alabama and Rustin was the one who organized the March on Washington. Despite with all his achievements Rustin had been silence and beaten for his sexuality. These civil rights leaders inspired other leaders and risked their lives for the sake of equality and freedom. They wanted to the Civil Rights Movement to change