Of D'Army Bailey. He was with the City Council of Berkeley and he had gotten into a little trouble. He was involved with the Black Panthers and he had gotten involved with the police and they wanted to recall him from his position on the City Council. So I was on that committee to help him. Anyway I guess I didn't get real political until I went to college. I think that's the time. Well although when I was very young, like 12 and no 13, when I was 13 was in '68, during the People's Park thing. I think Ronald Reagan was the governor. And they had a problem there with the County Sheriff's because they were using buckshot. And they also had a problem because they dropped tear gas into the Willard Junior High School and I was the president of the student body there. Actually what happened was they missed People's Park from the helicopter. They misdiagnosed the fact that it was five blocks, in the area, blocks, but further up Telegraph Avenue towards Southgate. Willard was here, the People's Park is here, Southgate is there. So I guess they missed. And they dropped tear gas on 12 and 13-year-olds. And we had to turn the school out, and let it out. And of course all the students were angry. So we all went up and joined the mob. And we all were tear gassed already. So we started turning over cars. And so I don't know if that was political or just a reaction to the state throwing tear gas on some children. I don't know. You can call that political. I think that's just survival perhaps.