"Well, it was mainly the Němeček's trial. That was a huge event. I knew a few of the affected, Mr. Nekola, he was a barber, we used to go to him, and he ended up in Jáchymov, but there he became the barber for the whole camp, because there was some prison standard about how they could have long hair. Mostly it was just bald. And he used to cut our hair, it was modern then, it was called English lawn, for boys. Then they locked him up, he started shaving first, then cutting, and then he started doing the English lawn for the prisoners, because it still complied wih the prison norm. And the guards started coming to him, so they let him, he had a special big brush for that, it was heavy, he always told us when he was doing it, 'Hold your head.' He would have twisted our heads off when he was fixing our hair. So they let his wife send it to him there, so he worked there. And he was such a well-known provocateur. I, when I got married, I lived across the street from the Black Horse, in this townhouse, and across the street was this barber shop, hair salon, and it had a shop window facing the street. There were three barbers there. We were always waiting for him, the other ones had nothing to do, they were smoking, and we were waiting for our turn at his place, because he was provoking. He'd say, 'Boys, man, this potato beetle, what are these Americans doing to us, we don't have bread, the women are queueing for meat, it would be all different.' And all that kind of talk. And when he saw some official going into a barber shop, or a soldier, a policeman, he would wait for him to open the door, and he'd start, 'Hey, I'm telling you, we'll never have it like we have it now...' Everybody knew. Then there was a Mr. Žemla and there was a canine trainer, I knew him well. And that was distorted information at the time. The way it was presented was that this Němeček was an agent, that he had contacted all these tradesmen and then turned them in. But in reality, he was really persecuted, he was from Čáslav, he was a confectioner, and since he knew them here, well, one gave him two hundred crowns, another let him stay overnight, and finally it was revealed here by telling a taxi driver, I knew him too and his daughter as well. He told the cops that he [Němeček] had ordered a taxi to Čáslav at some time and which way they were going to go, and they faked a crash, so the taxi driver had to stop, and when he stopped, the cops jumped out and picked him up again, because he was already on the run. Well, the official story here was that he was an agent provocateur. So I know. Then there was the big trial, the state trial, here in the theatre, it was for invited only. Normal people didn't get in, it was just loyal people, soldiers, officers, teachers, and officials of all kinds."