and i worked at night and i took 9 credit hours at merritt college. i was a design major. and one day i got interested in all of this civil rights stuff. walked across the street and guys over there all themselves the afro-american association come here today to tell it like it is. i walked over and started listening and i saw a guy i knew. william brumfield. i walked up i said william you part of this group. he said yeah, bobby. i said so william, what is this, some kind of communist stuff, afro america, what is that. you have to imagine now, this is 1962. phrases and references to black folks as african-american didn't exist. black folk still called themselves colored. colored and colored. you know what i mean. i'm just saying there i was listening to these guys, i asked william, what do you mean communist stuff. i said you are a socialist. they told me. your brother, told me you was a socialist. and i says i thought the fbi was going to arrest you one day. so he looked at me and he knew something about my history, he says bobby, who are the sioux. i said the name sioux