he said, i'm setting a voting rights case in macon county down for trial sometime in early march in opa-locka. and i said, well, we'll be ready. and we knew there was some preparation to be done. and so another lawyer, dave norman, and i went down to tuskegee, alabama, to help review voting records. at that time just while i was there, i got a call and said that ann had delivered our third child. a number of the secretaries in the justice -- the civil rights division and burt's wife violet didn't think it was the right thing that i should be out of town at a time when my wife was about ready to deliver a baby. so, then you go forward two years and ann is pregnant again and it's at the time of birmingham. and i was just embargoed from going out of town. until the baby was born. but birmingham was tough. there was a lot to do. so, as soon as the baby was born, i went south again. and i probably stayed in the south several weeks or maybe more. i can't remember. so, when i came back to washington and was having a meeting of my colleagues in the civil rights division, burke marshall walked in. he