That's where he had a nest, a boomerang, I'd say, to bust out. They were young then, and they were all experimenting. They had all these halls, which you don't have in them other towns. You had 15 to 20 black halls, and that's not counting the clubs. The Lions Club, the Bulls Club, the Saints and Sinners Club. There was another club. There was the Bears Club, or did that . . . that fizzled out. Bulls and bears, as in the stock exchange. They say if the market's good, they call it the bulls, or the bears. It's a term they use in stock [? (inaudible)]. There's some of these black cats that work for the cotton exchange and the sugar exchange. There was big things down here, because Louisiana was a great rice and sugar market. Shipped that rice and sugar all over the world. I get away from my point. You got to keep me up on my point, what I'm talking about. So that's where the two clubs were called, bulls and . . . cats worked for the . . . it was a term they used, the bulls and the bears. The Bulls continued, became a famous club uptown, the most famous. And the Bears fizzled out. So you had all these places to play, all this amusement, because people worked hard here, and then they played hard. Worked hard and they played hard, and they . . . there were instruments and there was experiment, because you had all these hell of a trumpet players here. Manuel Perez. King Oliver. Freddie Keppard. Arnold Metoyer.