Yes. We were playing and I went to the manager to find out - I forgot to ask how much we were making. He said, "Six dollars. " I said, "Oh, no. " So I waited till intermission. Intermission was around 11:30 so I refused to play. The place was jammed and packed. I refused to play at all. I said, "No, I'm not going to play any more. You'll have to give us more money. You'll have to at least ( WILLIAMS give me $20 and the boys $15. " So they had to do it. We didn't know that the delegate from the union was there. So after the gig was over they had us up, you know, the Board. Out of town musicians was working below scale; they had been doing it for a long time, but they thought that I should become a member, a special kind of member because I stopped the dance... That's the only thing that saved me. So they had all of us at a Board meeting and they were going to fine us for working this gig. So that's the only thing that saved all of us, was that I stopped and I told them. Whoever was there told them, "This woman is somebody great to have in the union because she stopped them at 11:30. She told them, you have to give us a raise or we aren't going to play any more. " That raised the salary of that particular place. So that's how I became a union member.