My life Story: 1977

1977
“Two roads diverged into a wood, and I, I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference”–Robert Frost.
A poster just like this one used to hang on the wall of my bedroom at home the year I started college.

All in all, 1977 was a milestone year. I completed my first year of college while working all the while (earning $2,348 for the year), I went to New York by myself, I learned how to drive, opened my own bank account, and I moved out of my parents’ house.

Included in this post are events that meant something to me. By this point in my life, I considered myself a bit of a bohemian with a politcally radical bent, and began to shy away from a lof of stuff that was super popular in American culture. I acknowledge that there were several other key events that occurred this particular year that aren’t included here, but they didn’t really impact me nor was I interested in them. I wasn’t interested in seeing Star Wars, for example, nor did I care much for Saturday Night Fever or Donna Summer, even though I loved to dance. Also, Elvis died this year, but I was never a big fan. My sister had told me that he once said that he didn’t like Mexicans, that he’d rather date a dog before he dated a Mexican girl. That was enough to keep me away. As far as I was concerned, he was a second rate singer who ripped off the music of the Black community and made tons of money in the process.

The first important decision I ever made in my life was to attend Salpointe. Choosing to leave Salpointe early to attend the University of Arizona was the second most important decision. I was 17 when I started at the U of A. I lived at home, and had a job at Fry’s Food Stores as a carry out clerk. My friends Richard, Sylvia, Rose and Terri were still all away at college. It didn’t matter, however. I was going to college too!

It was a new beginning in Washington too!
Signing up for classes meant having to stand in long lines in the Gittings Building and Bear Down gym with hundreds of other students.

My classes started on January 13, two days before my 18th birthday. I had initially signed up for five classes. They included Freshman English, The Chicano in American Society (Sociology 71), An Introduction to Anthropology, An Introduction to Logic and Mexican American Literature. 15 units was a lot to handle, especially given that I worked half time at the grocery store, so I quickly decided to drop the Mexican American literature class because it would be taught all in Spanish, and I had a feeling I would struggle with it, even though I had just taken the Spanish proficiency exam and had passed it with flying colors. My friend Richard’s sister Ana was in my sociology class, which made things easier, as I didn’t really have many friends around when I started at the UofA. I really liked my Freshman English teacher, Sally Perper, who was a former journalist. I wrote an essay on the Rolling Thunder Revue tour that brought Bob Dylan and Joan Baez together again and I got an “A” on it. I did pretty well overall in all of my English and literature courses. I could’ve been an English major.

I had also found a job at the University of Arizona Library at the beginning of the semester. A woman named Jeannette Bahr, who had worked at Salpointe the previous Fall semester, helped me get the position. Her husband, Steve Bahr, managed the Library’s Media Center, and my job was to staff the front service counter, to re-shelve materials and to clean filmstrips and records. I didn’t last very long, because I really didn’t like it, and because the staff that worked there weren’t very nice to me, so by March I had quit. Working at Fry’s was sufficient, and taking all those classes kept me quite busy.

The new UA Library, 1977.
Interior of the new library.
I could always count on my sister to remember my birthday.
The first page of the syllabus for the sociology class, “The Chicano In American Society”. This was my favorite class.
Dr. Juarez didn’t stay at the UofA, but went on to teach in Texas. Too bad. He was a great teacher.

I loved this book.
This one was good too!
This series first aired in January, 1977. I watched what I could, but had to work most nights, so I missed a lot of it. Many years later, I later got to meet Alex Haley in person.
After the death of Richard Heakin, less than a year before, on February 7, 1977, a little over a year before I came out, The City Council passed the nation’s first anti-discrimination ordinance protecting gay people from discrimination.
This was a great show. A friend of mine went to Russia a few years later and brought me back a balalaika.
Linda made the cover of TIME! Wow!
I bought this when it came out early in the year. I love Janis Ian.

The full album is available on Youtube. You can listen to it here too:

I began to buy lots of music recordings once I started my job at Fry’s the previous year. I had a great time exploring all the used and new record stores and spent a lot of money on albums. I loved the folk singers from the 60s especially, and a variety of contemporary male and female pop vocalists. I wasn’t crazy about hard rock, funk or disco, which became all the rage when I was in college. Around this time, I bought albums by Joni Mitchell, Judy Collins, Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Linda Ronstadt, James Taylor, Rita Coolidge, and Janis Ian. When Janis Ian came to town, I went to her concert. I particularly liked the opening act, Tom Chapin, brother of Harry Chapin, but both performers were amazing. I also attended a Russian balalaika concert with my friend Ana around this time.

Another wonderful show.
Rita Coolidge had several big hits on this album, including Higher and Higher, and We’re All Alone. She’s another one that I just absolutely love.
Love this song…

In late March, my brother Fred got married. I was a member of the wedding party, and my sister Becky came home from New Jersey for the occasion. My mom was feeling a lot better by 1977, and she participated as well. Many relatives from out of town also showed up, and we had a wonderful time. The wedding was held at St. Ambrose Church, and the reception took place at the Fireman’s Union Hall. There was food galore and a live band. The after party took place at my brother Carlos’s house and it lasted until the wee hours of the morning. I should’ve had my hair cut for the occasion, but never got around to it. The best part of the whole thing was having my sister Becky home. I told her I wanted to go visit her once the school semester ended. It was a promise I was to keep. May was just around the corner.

My mom and dad, with my brother Rudy’s daughter, Yvonne, at Fred’s wedding.
Mom, me and my sister Becky.
Elaine, Charles and my Dad
My wedding partner and I. What cheesy smiles. I’ve since forgotten her name.
My dad and all his siblings at Fred’s wedding. They would soon be together again in Needles where another group photo of them came out in the local paper.
I wrote a lot in my journal this particular year. This is a snippet of some of it.

Working and going to school kept me quite busy. At home, I finally had my own bedroom and desk so that I could study. Life was never peaceful at home as people were always coming and going, but I managed. My grades were okay. The semester flew right by and I ended up with a solid “B” average.

My first college report card.
The great Joan Crawford, one of Hollywood’s leading ladies of the Golden age of cinema, died at the age of 69 on May 10, 1977

Once school was over, I decided it was time to keep my promise and go see my sister in New Jersey. Greyhound Bus Lines was advertising $100 round-trip tickets to anywhere in the USA, so I decided that is how I would get to the New York area. Becky lived in a small town called Cranford, New Jersey, just outside of Newark, which was just 20 minutes away from New York City. It would take me two and a half days to get there and two and a half days to return. The route on the way there took me through the South, all the way through Texas to Arkansas, Tennessee,  Virginia, Delaware, Pennsylvania and finally New Jersey. The route home cut through the middle of Pennsyvania to Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, to Tucson. While my parents didn’t like that I’d be traveling alone, I was up to the challenge and felt completely fearless. Now that I think back on it, a lot of stuff could’ve gone wrong, but I made it there and back with no problems at all.

It cost me $100 round trip to go to New York and back.

The things that stick out for me on the trip to New York included a stop in a town called Van Horn, Texas, where the jukebox included a couple of songs by Emmylou Harris. I was just thrilled to be able to play her music on a jukebox in what seemed like the middle of nowhere. The songs I played were from her recent album, Luxury Liner. I think I played two songs, but can’t remember both, although I know for sure that the title of one of them was “You’re Supposed to Be Feeling Good”. I also remember how long it took to get through Texas and how boring most of it was. A couple of passengers who sat next to me at various points turned out to be born again Christians and they both tried to “save” me, but I was a good Catholic kid, and wouldn’t buy what they had to offer. Once we finally got to the eastern side of the state, things began to change, and there were rolling hills and short, stumpy trees everywhere. Arkansas was pretty lush too, but by then it had started to get dark and I couldn’t see much by that point. As we headed into Memphis and then Nashville the following morning, I became awestruck at how beautiful and green everything was. I’d never seen such beautiful countryside in all my life, especially in Tennessee. The mist just hung in the air, all the way to the ground, and there were miles and miles of lush, green hills and trees all around. When we got to Nashville, I ordered breakfast at the Greyhound station restaurant, and it was the first time I’d ever tasted grits. I had no idea what to expect, and I must admit, I disliked them immediately. They probably would’ve tasted much better with some butter and salt, but I had no idea what to do with them. Yuck. I still don’t like them.

Van Horn is about 2 hours east of El Paso and 7 1/2 hours west of Dallas. If you blink, you miss it.

The trip from Tennessee through Virginia was quite scenic. We arrived in Washginton DC late at night, and it was one of the only times I felt scared and out of place. I was in need of a bath, and felt itchy and uncomfortable. I was also carrying too much stuff, including a styrofoam ice chest that my parents had packed full of food for me. The food was all gone by the time I got to DC, so I ditched the ice chest and felt much better. The rest of the trip was okay. I remember that Delaware was just beautiful with lots of farms and lush green countryside everywhere.

The countryside was absolutely gorgeous.
Best known as being the home of “The Boss”, Bruce Springsteen.

When I got to Newark, I was expecting my sister’s husband to be there waiting for me, but he was nowhere to be found. I waited for what seemed an eternity, and it was the second time I felt frightened. What else could I do but wait?  It was pretty creepy, but Paco, my sister’s husband, eventually showed up, and all was well. We drove straight to Cranford, and there was my sister Becky waiting for me.

How I ended up with this is beyond me…
I didn’t get to go to the Statue of Liberty on this trip, but I bought this postcard while I was there in New York.
New York City in 1977 was a wild place indeed. 42nd St was filled with all kinds of interesting people!
42nd St.

My sister and her husband pulled out all the stops for me and for a whole week, took me all over the place. We went to New York City at least twice  and had Chinese food in Chinatown, and Italian food in Little Italy. We went up to the top of the Empire State Building, to Times Square  and St. Patrick’s Cathedral. I even got them to take me to Greenwich Village to find Gerde’s Folk City, the club where Bob Dylan first played in the early 1960s and where he met Joan Baez. That was a real thrill. They also took me for a long drive down the Jersey shore to Asbury Park, and then to Menlo Park, the home of Thomas Alva Edison. We also ate at the best restaurant I’ve ever been to, a seafood place called Long John’s, Ltd. It was incredible. I’ll never forget that meal.

Going up to the top was one of the highlights of my trip.
We ate at an Italian cafeteria, where I had the best deep dish pizza I’ve ever tasted.
Gerde’s Folk City, where Bob Dylan first performed when he arrived in New York.
St Patrick’s Cathedral. What a beautiful church!
Long John’s Ltd.
The most amazing restaurant I’ve ever been to.
We visited the famous arcade. My sister’s husband knew Bruce Springsteen and she got to meet him once at the Stone Pony, where he used to perform.
There were lots of farms and rolling hills everywhere in Pennsylvania, but it took forever to get through the state.
It took forever to get through this state too. Don’t remember much but a lot of corn fields and some trees.
We crossed the Mississippi twice, of course, first at Memphis and then at St. Louis.

The trip home was not as exciting as the trip to New York. Pennsylvania is a beautiful state, but I have to admit that Ohio, Indiana and Illinois were almost as boring as Texas. There were nothing but cornfields everywhere, it seemed, and it took forever to get through it all. But, all in all, I had a wonderful time. I’ll never forget that trip. I’ve been to New York only one other time since then, and would love to go back again for another visit. There’s still so much I want to see!

It was good to be home after two and a half days on the road without a shower.
I was on my way to see my sister Becky at this time in New Jersey. Had I arrived a couple days earlier, I might have been able to see this show. Oh well. I got to Ms. Baez almost exactly two months later in Tucson. I did keep a copy of the review of this show that I got when I was in New York.
I saved this review from the New York Daily News. I stumbled upon it when I was visiting my sister Becky in New Jersey. Joan performed in the city on May 25 and 26 while I was on the road headed to New Jersey, so I didn’t get to see her concert. This review came out on May 28.
Had I stayed at Salpointe, this would’ve been my graduation too. Sylvia was an exchange student and a friend of the Cruz’s. I was in New York when this event took place.
I saw this film with my friends Richard, Ronnie and Sandy. It was hilarious and so bad and nasty. The ad appeared in the Arizona Daily Star, on June 17, 1977.
She dedicated this song to Stevie Wonder. One of my faves.

During the summer, I attended my very first Joan Baez concert. She had just released a new album titled “Blowin’ Away”. It was different from most of her other albums in that many of the songs were played to the accompaniment of a rock band. I went to the show with my dear friend Rose, and we had a great time. I was totally in love with Joan Baez, and would remain an ardent fan for life. This was the first of many of her concerts that I would attend.

July 16, 1977 review in the Arizona Daily Star.
I bought this album soon after its release in June. I love, “Bartender Blues”, the duet he does with Linda Ronstadt and the song “Handyman”, which was a big hit for Taylor.
Linda Ronstadt sings harmony on the George Jones inspired honky tonk tune.
I paid for my first semester’s tuition myself, but was able to get financial assistance soon thereafter.

 I also took a class during the summer, my first psychology course. I wanted to major in psychology, and I did well in the class, but my enthusiasm for the subject would eventually fade and my grades in the next couple of psychology courses would drop. My buddy Richard was home from college, and I helped get him a job at Fry’s. He ended up not going back to Colorado, but enrolling at the U of A. It was good to have him back home. While we weren’t as close as we were in high school, we remained the best of friends over the years. 

My first psychology class. I didn’t do as well in subsequent courses. I later came to regret majoring in this area of study, but I got through it nevertheless.
“Simple Things” by Carole King was released on July 1, 1977. My friend Sylvia and I would listen to it a lot. This is a very “spiritual” album, but many critics panned it at the time.
The title song. It packed a lot of meaning for me at the time.

I was very “religious” 18 year old during this point in my life, and I was still battling my attraction to men. I thought if I prayed hard enough and was a good person, it would all go away, and I’d find me a nice girl to marry. Ha! That didn’t happen. What I did end up doing was falling for another guy. This time, he was an older man in his late 30’s, married with children my age and younger, who worked at the grocery store. His name was Jim. He was the sweetest person one could ever meet, and was very kind and generous to me. He was from Missouri and had been in the Air Force. He even liked Joan Baez. I became so “attached” to him that I joined his church for a while. He was Southern Baptist. It was an eye opening experience. The Baptists are, in general, a pretty conservative bunch of people. The minister of the church we attended drove a gold Cadillac and was not much interested in the teachings of Jesus. He was more attuned to the writings of St. Paul and the notion of salvation from sin through grace and baptism, and in making sure his congregants all donated to the church regularly. It’s called “tithing” and you weren’t a good Christian unless you gave at least 10% of your earnings to the church. The members of the congregation were all Anglos who lived on Tucson’s far east side, and some were outwardly racist. I clearly didn’t fit in, and eventually stopped attending services with Jim and his wife. Jim ended up leaving Fry’s, and we drifted apart after a while, but I sure fell hard for him. He surely must’ve known I was attracted to him, but he never let on. He treated me like a son.

More from my journal.
Wow. I had just been in New York less than two months before this happened.
The Jerusalem Bible is the version of the Holy Bible that I preferred. The baptist preacher at Jim’s church was not pleased. The King James version was the only one that he acknowledged as being legitimate.

It was sometime this year, I’m not sure exactly when, that I was reading a novel titled Saint Francis, by Nikos Kazantzakis one night at Winchell’s Donut shop on 22nd street. I was the only customer in the store, and suddenly a guy appeared with a gun, and he robbed the place. I knew something was up, and dared not make a move. I sat perfectly still with this book in my hands pretending to read it. When the guy had left and the cops arrived the clerk informed them that the robber had his gun pointed at me. I had no idea because I was seated facing the back wall.

I wanted to be just like him. He was my hero.

Just before the Fall semester started, I moved out of my parents’ house into an apartment in a complex near the University. Another friend of mine from Fry’s told me that his wife, who managed the apartments, was looking for someone to help do maintenance there. The deal was I’d get free rent if I helped clean vacated units. I lasted two whole weeks. I liked living there, but I hated the work. Some of those apartments were downright disgusting and filthy. It was nasty work so I quit and moved back home. I still had my job at Fry’s,  and that was enough for me.

I had a harder time my second semester, but did okay overall.
I fondly remember going through this workbook and completing all of the assignments. This work was part of what we all had to do our freshman year in English class. Little did I know at the time that my life’s calling would be librarianship. This workbook got me off to a great start.
My brother Charles and his wife Elaine.

I was still determined to move out of my parents’ house, so sometime during the Fall semester, I moved in with my brother Charles and his family. They lived on Calle Aragon, on the south side of town, near my Aunt Mary’s old house in the Elvira neighborhood. I opened a bank account and was driving by this time, using my dad’s old beat up pickup truck. Going to school and then to work and back to Charles’s, whose house was far away from both, took its toll on me, but I stayed there with him and his family until the end of the semester.

My brother’s children Gabie, Valerie and Marcus in 1977, a few months before I moved in with them.
Released on September 6, 1977.
When the Rolling Stones came to Tucson in the late 70’s Linda Ronstadt showed up to sing this song with them. Too bad I missed it!
Released on October 1, 1977. What an intense film!
Released as a single in October, 1977, this song became a big hit for Paul Simon. I just loved it.
I was a member of a book club and chose this one to read at one point. I knew nothing of Liv Ullman’s life, and didn’t know much about her. I finally saw some of her better known movies much later, in the 90s. She’s a great actress. She appeared in Autumn Sonata with Ingrid Bergman in the mid-60s. It’s an amazing film.
My mom and dad bought this for me in early October. It changed my life in many ways.

During this period, I continued to buy records. Linda Ronstadt and Jackson Browne came out with new albums, as did Dolly Parton. I loved her album. It was called “Here You Come Again”. I also continued reading a lot. One book in particular, titled “Your Erroneous Zones,” had a huge impact on me. It was a self-help book essentially, written by a man named Wayne Dyer, and in it he discussed the futility of things like worry, guilt, and living to please others, and he emphasized the importance of living in the present moment. It was an eye-opener and it helped me begin the process of self-acceptance. I often credit it for saving my life.

Released on October 5, 1977, I just loved this album, Dolly’s big crossover effort.
This is so corny, but it’s classic Dolly.

The following event happened just five months before I decided to come out of the closet.


Anita Bryant gets hit in the face with a pie by gay activist Thom Higgins, at a press conference in Des Moines, Iowa, on October 14, 1977.

According to BusinessInsider.com, “In 1977, singer Anita Bryant led a campaign, called “Save Our Children,” to overturn an anti-discrimination ordinance in Dade County, Florida. Bryant was the spokesperson for the Florida Citrus Commission, and gay activists and celebrity allies called for a boycott of Florida orange juice. At a press conference on October 14, 1977, Bryant was hit in the face with a banana cream pie by an activist posing as a reporter. She led numerous successful efforts to repeal gay-rights ordinances in cities across America but failed with the Briggs Initiative, which would have banned gay teachers in California public schools”.

Released on October 25, 1977, Garfunkels third solo album, Watermark, included the following song, which has become one of my very favorites.

Less than a month after Anita Bryant was hit on the face with a pie, on November 8, 1977, Harvey Milk became the first openly gay politician to be elected to public office in California. He helped lead the effort to defeat the Briggs Initiative and then won a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. He was sworn into office in early January, 1978.

Elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, Harvey Milk would spearheaded the effort to end discrimination against the LGBT community, but he would be assassinated less than a year later by fellow Board of Supervisors member Dan White.
Released on November 16, 1977, this album included the big hit, “Our Love”. Natalie Cole was an amazingly soulful performer. I have most of her recordings.
“Our Love” is my favorite Natalie Cole song.
Released on 11/18/77. Shirley MacLaine and Anne Bancroft tear it up!

My brother Fred and his wife Ruth had a baby they named Edessa in September. She would be the first in a new crop of family members that would include my niece Estrella and my nephew Anthony, who were born the following year.

My dad and Edessa. He sure loved his grandchildren.
Released on November 30, 1977, I saw this when it first came out.
I loved this album when it came out. Released on December 6, 1977.
I didn’t know what this song was really referring to until much later in life.
Exposing myself to feminist thought at the age of 18…
Released on 12-12-77.
From the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack. I liked this song. I didn’t care for the Bee Gees, however and they dominated the soundtrack to the movie.

The Fall school semester was a rough one for me. I had two psychology classes and didn’t do very well in them. I got C’s in both. One of the classes was on statistics, and I got really lost. I was usually pretty good in math, but I felt like the instructor was a lousy teacher. I didn’t do so bad in my other classes, however, and  got an A in my English class and an A in general biology.  I also got a B in volleyball, which even though I didn’t ace, I enjoyed a lot.

At the end of the year, I decided to apply to live in a dorm room at the University the following semester. I also bought my very first car, a homely looking 1964 Buick Special. It had seen better days, and was not very reliable, but it was all mine, and I drove if for 3 years, until 1982.

I was with my mom when she bought this album at Southgate. She loved Lucha Villa. I would later become a huge fan myself and have acquired most of her albums over time. I would also play her music on my radio show on a regular basis.
This song reminds me of my mom. It’s very sad.

1978 would prove to be even more significant as I turned 19, moved into my own apartment, and slowly but surely started accepting the fact that I was gay.

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