All posts by jrdiaz@arizona.edu

The Chicano Connection on KXCI : 1983 Archive

The Chicano Connection, December 8, 1983. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, December 9, 1983. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection, December 15, 1983. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, December 16, 1983. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection, December 22, 1983. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, December 23, 1983. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection, December 29, 1983. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, December 30, 1983. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection on KXCI : 1984 Archive

The Chicano Connection, January 5, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, January 6, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, Jan/Feb, 1984–exact date unknown. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection, Jan/Feb, 1984, exact date unknown #1. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection, Jan/Feb, 1984 exact date unkown #2. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection, February 23, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, February 24, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, June 22, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, June 29, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, August 17, 1984, Part 1. (Audio only).

The Morning Music Mix, August 17, 1984, Part 2. (Audio only).

The Morning Music Mix, September 14, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, September 21, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, October 12, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, October 26, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, November 2, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, November 30, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, December 21, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix Date Unknown #1. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix: Date Unknown #2. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection on KXCI : 1986 Archive

The Chicano Connection Revisited, June 5, 1986. (Playlist only).

Music From The Living Loom Show, Gay Pride/Father’s Day Program with guest hosts Bob Diaz and Jamie Anderson July 4, 1986. Part 1. (Audio only).

Music From The Living Loom Show, Gay Pride/Father’s Day Program with guest hosts Bob Diaz and Jamie Anderson, July 4, 1986. Part 2. (Audio only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, July 31, 1986. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, September 25, 1986. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, October 2, 1986. (Playlist only.)

The Chicano Connection Revisited, October 16, 1986. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, Date unknown #1. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, Date unknown #2. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, Date unknown #3. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, Date unknown #3. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, Date unknown #4. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, Date unknown #5. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, Date unknown #6. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection Revisited, Date unknown #7. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection on KXCI : 2013 Archive

January 2, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

January 9 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

January 16, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

Martin Luther King Day Show, (01/17/13) Part 1, Part 2, Part 3

February 6, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

February 20, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

March 6, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

March 20, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

March 27, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

April 3, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

April 10, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

April17, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

May 1, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

May 8, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

May 22, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

May 29, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

June 5, 2013: Part 1, Part 2

June 12, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

June 19, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

July 24, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

July 31, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

August 7, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

August 14, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

August 21, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

August 28, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

September 4, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

September 11, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

September 18, 2013 Show: An evening of Corridos and Folk Music Part 1, Part 2

September 25, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 2, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 9, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 16, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 23, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 30, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

November 6, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

November 13, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

Bud and Travis and Other Folkies on the Chicano Connection (11/20/13)

November 27, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

December 4, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

December 11, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

December 18, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

December 25, 2013 Show: Part 1, Part 2

The Chicano Connection on KXCI : 2014 Archive

2014

January 1, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2

January 8, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2

January 15, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2

February 12, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2

February 19, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2

February 26, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 5, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 12, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 19, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 26, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

Celebrating Cesar Chavez Day on KXCI (03/31/14)

April 2, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 9, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 16, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 23, 2014 Show; Part 1, Part 2.

April 30, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 7, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 14, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 21, Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 28 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 4, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 11, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

An all Reggae Program (06/15/14) Part 1, Part 2

Celebrating my Mom’s birthday, (06/18/14) Part 1, Part 2

July 2, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 9, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 16, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 23, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 30, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 6, 2014: Part 1, Part 2.

August 13, 2014: Part 1, Part 2.

August 27, 2014: Part 1, Part 2.

September 3, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 10, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 24, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 1, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 8, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 15, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 22, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 29, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

November 5, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

November 26, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 3, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 10, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 17, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 24, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 31, 2014 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

The Chicano Connection on KXCI : 2015 Archive

January 7, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2

January 14, 2015 Show:Part 1, Part 2

January 21, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2

February 4, 2015 Part 1, Part 2

February 18, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

February 25, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 4, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 11, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 18, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 25, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 1, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 8, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 15, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 22, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 29, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 6, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 13, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 20, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 27, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 3, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 10, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 17, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 24, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 1, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 8, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 15, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 22, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 29, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 5, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 12, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 19, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 26, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 2, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 9, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 16, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 23, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 30, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 7, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 21, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2 .

October 28, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

November 4, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

November 11, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

November 18, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

November 25, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 9, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 16, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 23, 2015 Shoe: Part 1, Part 2.

December 30, 2015 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

The Chicano Connection on KXCI : 2016 Archive

January 6, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

January 13, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

January 20, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

February 3, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

February 17, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

February 24, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 2, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 9, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 23, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 30, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 6, 2016: Part 1, Part 2.

April 13, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 20, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 27, 2016 Show. Part 1, Part 2.

May 4, 2016 Show. Part 1, Part 2.

May 18, 2016 Show: Part 1,Part 2.

May 25, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 1, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 8, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 22, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 6, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 13, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 20, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 17, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 24, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 31, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 7, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 14, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 21, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 28, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 12, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 19, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 26, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2

Post-Election Blues on the Chicano Connection (11/09/16)

December 7, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 14, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 21, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 28, 2016 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

The Chicano Connection on KXCI : 2017 Archive

January 4, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

January 11, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

January 18, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

January 25, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

February 1, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

February 8, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

February 15, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

February 22, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

March 1, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

March 8, 2107 Show: Part 1, Part 2

March 15, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

March 22, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

March 29, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

April 5, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

April 12, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

April 19, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

April 26, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

May 3, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

May 10, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

May 17, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

May 24, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

May 31, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

June 14, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

July 5, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

July 12, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

July 19, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

August 2, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

August 9, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

August 16, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

August 23, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

August 30, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

September 13, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

September 20, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 4, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 11, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 18, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

October 25, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

November 1, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

November 8, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

November 15, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

November 22, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

November 29, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

December 6, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

December 13, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

December 20, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

December 27, 2017 Show: Part 1, Part 2

The Chicano Connection on KXCI : 2018 Archive

American Country and Latin Folk Music on the Chicano Connection (01/03/18)

January 10, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

A Night of Jazz on the Chicano Connection (01/17/18)

January 24, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

January 31, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

February 7, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

February 14, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

February 21, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

February 28, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 7, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 14, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 21, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 28, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 4, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 11, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 18, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 25, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 2, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 9, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 16, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 23, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 30, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 20, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 27, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 4, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 11, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 18, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

July 25, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 1, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 8, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 22, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

The Chicano Connection, (09/05/18)

September 12, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

A fun, danceable mess of a show! (09/19/18)

Remembering Woody Guthrie on the Chicano Connection (10/03/18)

October 10, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 24, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 31, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

November 7, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

November 14, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

The Chicano Connection, (11/21/18)

November 28, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 5, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 12, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 19, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

December 26, 2018 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

The Chicano Connection on KXCI: 2019 Archive

January 2, 2019 Show–An evening of upbeat, positive music (all in English): Part 1, Part 2.

January 9 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

A Celebration of the Music of Jose Alfredo Jimenez On The Chicano Connection (01/16/19)

January 23, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

Reggae and Soul Music on the Chicano Connection (02/06/19)

February 13, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

February 27, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 6, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 13, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 20, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

March 27, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 3, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 10, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

April 17, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 1, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 8, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 15, 2019 Show: Let’s Dance! Part 1, Part 2.

May 22, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

May 29, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

June 5, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2

June 12, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2

June 26, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2

Freedom and the 4th of July on the Chicano Connection (07/03/19)

July 10, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2

A Celebration of the Music of Linda Ronstadt and Billie Holiday on the Chicano Connection (07/17/19)

Venting a little on the Chicano Connection (07/24/19)

August 21, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

August 28, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 4, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 11, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 18, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

September 25, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 2, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

October 30, 2019 Show: Life and Death, Saints and Sinners, Good and Evil. Part 1, Part 2.

November 6, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

November 20, 2019 Show: Music of the Mexican Revolution and dance music. Part 1, Part 2.

November 27, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2.

Music of the 60’s from My Brother Rudy’s Record Collection (12/04/19). Part 1, Part 2.

December 11, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2

December 18, 2019 Show: Part 1, Part 2

Christmas Show (12/25/19) Part 1, Part 2

The Chicano Connection on KXCI: 2020 Archive

New Year’s Day Show (01/01/20) Part 1, Part 2

Celebrating Martin Luther King Jr’s Birthday on the Chicano Connection (01/15/2020)

January 22, 2020 Show Part 1, Part 2

January 29,2020: Country music and the songs of Cuco Sanchez, Part 1, Part 2.

It’s Time for a Dance Party on the Chicano Connection (02/12/20)

Pura Salsa on the Chicano Connection (02/19/20)

Those Oldies But Goodies: My very last radio show on KXCI (02/26/20)

My Life Story: 1988

Things to know up front:

You can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Click the back arrow key to return to the post.

Every chapter in My Life Story includes information about me, my work, my family and my friends. It also includes information about events that took place locally and nationally, etc. that I thought important enough to include. You’ll also find that I’ve included films, musicians and recordings/videos, in addition to books that were released in a given year.

While I have included many personal photos, most of the graphic content included below is borrowed from the Internet. I do not claim to own this material. I am just adding it for educational purposes. If the owners of any of the content in the “My Life Story” series want their stuff removed, I am happy to oblige. My email address is jrdiaz@arizona.edu. Thanks!

As the new year began, I was still trying to adjust to my new surroundings. I continued to feel out of place, and wasn’t very happy, but I held on because I didn’t want to waste the once in a lifetime opportunity I had before me. Michigan was a very highly regarded school and a great place to work, supposedly, and I knew I was very lucky to have a job there. Winter was tough, however, and seemed to drag on forever. The sun rarely ever came out, and the weather was always cold, gray and cloudy. My first full winter in Ann Arbor was challenging. My skin was so pale, I had to convince some people I was of Mexican American descent. I heard comments like, you don’t look like a Mexican. Oh well, I’d tell them. I am a Mexican whether you think so or not.

My job continued to consist of spending time at the reference desk, answering questions, and helping students find resources for their research, conducting instruction sessions on how to use the Library for students in English, Psychology, and other courses, and selecting materials for the collection. I also continued to learn the new technologies that were coming our way. The Library’s new automated library system, called Mirlyn, for example, was about to go live in the Fall, and I participated in a series of training sessions that covered the ins and outs of the system. I also had a couple of fun projects assigned to me. One was called the Rolodex Task Force. The work required that we verify and update information, kept on a giant rolodex, that was used at the Graduate Library’s reference desk. I got to know a lot about the various libraries on campus and about resources and organizations in and around the University.

 I also began to manage the Undergraduate Library’s Peer Information Counseling program in the Spring. In a nutshell, Peer Information Counselors were students of color who worked at the reference desk as reference assistants. They received extensive training, and were there to help other students of color feel more comfortable and welcomed as they approached the reference desk and used the library. Darlene Nichols, an African American librarian colleague, had been running the program since 1985, but wanted to hand it off. I eventually was given responsibility for it. I was assigned the task of getting a newsletter out and hiring new students. By the Fall I was managing the entire program by myself. I have to admit that at first, I was resistant to taking on this assignment, because I felt that it was being given to me only because I was a minority, and it just wouldn’t look good for a white person to manage it. Oh well. I got over it, and enjoyed working with the students I hired and trained. They were bright and engaged and eager to learn.

I went home to Tucson for vacation in February. I spent a lot of time with my old friends and with my family, and I got my portrait done in pencil at IBT’s, a gay bar on 4th Avenue, by an artist named T. Barr Stevens. I brought it home as a gift to my mom. She was very ill, but I didn’t realize how sick she really was or that she wouldn’t make it until the end of the year. Sometime in the Spring after I had returned back to Ann Arbor, my older brother Charles called me and suggested that I might think about coming back home for a while. He told me that our mom didn’t have long to live. I decided that I couldn’t leave my job. I had bills to pay and felt stuck, and Brent would not have been able to make it on his own in Ann Arbor. He would have had to move back to Muskegon. I also didn’t believe that my mom was so ill. To this day, I regret my decision to stay put and not go home. It breaks my heart to think that I could’ve spent more time with my mom in her last days, and that I chose not to.  Dammit. It made my life at Michigan even more difficult, as I was unhappy as it was. I began to really dislike my job and Ann Arbor. The counseling that I participated in did nothing to help. It was a complete waste of time and money.

In early March, I participated in facilitator training on leading discussions among the staff about the issue of racism. The training was provided by Dr. Frances Kendall, a consultant from California who specialized in diversity training. She took the stance that if you were born and raised in the US, then you were racist, whether you knew it or not or agreed to it or not. She argued that our culture and its institutions were built to benefit wealthy white men, and that they hadn’t changed much at all since they were founded. Thus, racism was “institutional.” And built into our social structure.  Her work was all about helping people realize this. Her goal was to help people acknowledge their prejudices and work towards getting rid of them through dialogue, education and self-awareness. I was among several staff members who participated in the training she provided. Most of the participants were from the Graduate Library and were managers or administrators, and being in this group felt a bit intimidating, but I stuck it out and tried my best to learn and participate fully. A couple of weeks after we received the initial training, Dr. Kendall was brought in again and gave an all staff presentation on the issue of racism and the challenges of overcoming it. Another person, Vivian Sykes, an African American librarian from San Francisco,  also spoke about her personal experiences with racism in librarianship. Both presentations were hard hitting, and it left a lot of the nearly all-white staff feeling very uncomfortable. Once the presentations were given, the staff was then required to participate in a series of small group discussions, and I, as one of the group facilitators, helped to lead these.  

After the training was completed, some members of the facilitator group formed the Library Diversity Task Force, with the intention of continuing our discussions about the issues.  We wanted to build  momentum among the staff for learning and for cultural change.  It was at this time that I got to know my dear friend Karen Downing. We hit it off and became inseparable, and we worked together on several projects, including producing a diversity film festival for the Library staff that took place in the Fall and planning events for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day the following January.

In May, I attended my first conference while at Michigan. It was called LOEX, which is short for Library Orientation Exchange, and was focused on library instruction and improving teaching. The conference was held at Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green Ohio, just about an hour’s drive south of Ann Arbor. I attended a workshop, Reaching and Teaching Diverse Library Users, conducted by Louise Greenfield. I had met Louise when I was a graduate student, and would later work with her at Arizona. My colleague Linda TerHaar, gave a presentation on the PIC program and my supervisor  also gave a presentation. I didn’t do anything but attend various programs and poster sessions. In my free time, I visited the library on campus and was in heaven because I found they had a bunch of Aretha Franklin 45s from her days at Columbia in their collection. They have one of the best popular music collections in the world.

In the Spring, I attended some lectures featuring several very interesting speakers. They included Angela Davis, Cesar Chavez and the writers Cherrie Moraga, who co-edited, along with Gloria Anzaldua, the groundbreaking book, “This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color”, and Rudolfo Acuna, who was the author of Occupied America, a Chicano history book I had read back in college. It was at these events that I started meeting other Chicanos and Latinos, including a graduate student named Raul Villa. He was studying in the American Culture program, and was from Nogales, Arizona. He had a girlfriend named Eileen, and she and I became good friends and remained so even after Raul left. Raul introduced me to several other Chicano and Latino students, including a medical student named Roberto Tostado, and other students who were enrolled in the law school. Unfortunately, Raul and I didn’t always get along, and he left Michigan at the end of the Spring semester to complete his graduate studies at UC Santa Cruz. He would continue to write to me, however, for more than a year, but we eventually lost touch. He now resides in Los Angeles and is a professor at Occidental College.

In the Spring, Brent’s dad got sick and was diagnosed with a brain tumor. He was told he didn’t have long to live so the family decided that he should receive experimental treatment in the Bahamas. It was expensive and promising, but it didn’t work, and he died later in the year, just a month after my mom died. Brent spent a lot of time with his parents both in Twin Lake and the Bahamas this particular year and I went home a total of four times, once in the Spring and three times in the winter. It was a tough time for the two of us, and we struggled to keep things together.

In late October, my sister Irene called me to tell me that our mom was in the hospital and didn’t have long to live. I rushed back home and stayed for about a week, and stupidly convinced myself that my mom was getting better, so I flew back to Michigan. A week later, I got another call and this time, it was definite. Mom didn’t have but a day or two left to live. She died on November 2, at University Hospital in Tucson sometime in the early evening. It was the saddest moment of my life. I cried like a baby at her funeral and felt like I wanted to die too. Thank goodness my friend Richard was there for me. He knew how much I loved my mom. She was my hero. Even though she had her problems, I loved her dearly, and I know she loved me unconditionally. I was her last and favorite child.

I went back to my job in Ann Arbor after having stayed with my dad and family for a couple more weeks after we buried our mom, and I did my best to resume my life as it had been before she died. But it wasn’t the same. I was a mess, emotionally, spiritually and physically. I didn’t know how I’d get through the coming months, but I suppose I managed. Brent’s dad died in mid-December, so we had another sad tragedy on our hands to contend with. Christmas came along, and I went back home again. It was a rough time for the family. Although we took a family portrait at this time, and we all looked like we were happy together, one of my brothers was getting out of control, drinking and fighting with anyone he encountered. He even fought with our dad one night while I was visiting, and we had to have him arrested.

Because I had to go back home several times, I ended up going into more debt by the end of the year. There was no way I could go back home the following year. I even missed my best friend Richard’s wedding in January, and it made me feel very bad. Winter was in full swing again, and the sun was nowhere to be found. God, how I missed it.

My work calendar
This film had a great soundtrack. Released on 1/15/88

I turned 29 on January 15, 1988, and received several birthday cards from my friends and family back home, including my Teatro friends Liliana, Pernela and Scott, and my college friend, Tim Moles. It was a rough time for me, as I didn’t get to go home for Christmas, and things weren’t turning out so well at work. It was nice to hear from my friends and family. Winter time in Ann Arbor was cold and gray in more ways than one.

A birthday card from my dear friend Liliana Gambarte. We were in Teatro Libertad together.
A birthday card from Scott and Pernela, my Teatro Libertad friends.

Here’s a birthday letter from my good friend Tim.

A birthday card from my sister Irene.

My friend Richard wrote to me several times in 1988. Below is another of many letters I received from him while I lived in Michigan.

A birthday letter from my friend Richard.
This is a birthday card from my co-workers at the library.

The letter below, from my mom, is one of my prized possessions. She sent it to me for my birthday, January, 1988. The photos she refers to can be found at the tail end of the 1987 entry of My Life Story.

Mom and Dad.
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductees Bob Dylan, The Beach Boys and the Beatles, Jan. 19, 1988.
Another letter from Richard. In this one he updates me on what’s happening with Arizona’s crazy governor Ev Mecham, and he also mentions Emily, his future wife, for the first time.
Cherrie Moraga visited the University of Michigan campus on February 10. She and Gloria Anzaldua co-edited the popular book, “This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color.” Moraga, a lesbian Chicana feminist, would go on to publish more essays and plays over the years.
A David Hockney print
Denise and Mike wrote several letters and postcards to me and Brent while we lived in Michigan, but they never did make it over for a visit.
I had a rough time, and continued seeing a counselor for the rest of the year. It didn’t help at all.
Another card from my sister Irene. She and Becky both sent me lots of cards.
I got to tour the Ann Arbor Public Library as a participant of the University Library’s new staff orientation program. I visited it quite a bit. They had a great collection of music on cd.
Downtown Tucson in the 1980s. I spent my vacation there from 2/18 to 2/28. The city seemed to have grown considerably since I had last been home. There was traffic everywhere.
While in Tucson, I went to a local gay bar on 4th Avenue, and an artist was doing portraits, so I decided to have mine done.
This is one of my very favorite movies. I love the soundtrack. The film was released on February 26, 1988. It would be a few months before I actually saw it, however. Below is photo of John Waters, the director of the film and an excerpt from a review that appeared in Rolling Stone on March 24, 1988.
In early March, Dr. Frances E. Kendall was hired to do anti-racism work with the Library staff. I was chosen to participate as a discussion facilitator, and attended a number of training sessions with Dr. Kendall. This was the beginning of my work in the area of “diversity”. The group that participated in the facilitator training later went on to become the Library Diversity Committee. I was a member of it for over 4 years.

Harris Glenn Milstead, otherwise known as Divine, shown alongside Jerry Stiller in a scene from the movie “Hairspray”, passed away on March 7, 1988. Divine was in many of John Waters’ films, including Pink Flamingos, Polyester and Lust in the Dust. She performed in Ann Arbor at the Nectarine Ballroom shortly before she died. I should’ve gone to see her, but didn’t.
This is a wonderful movie, with positive portrayals of Latinos, for a change. It was released on March 11, 1988.
Brent’s family. His dad had just been diagnosed with brain cancer. The following months would be difficult for the family.
Released on March 18, 1988. Another excellent film, but they could’ve done a better job casting real Latinos/Mexicanos in some of the roles. Hollywood gets things wrong more often than not.
March 19, 1988. This was the second time I got to see Angela Davis speak. I had seen her several years earlier when I was an undergraduate at the University of Arizona. I would see her again a couple of years later in Ann Arbor. She’s a fascinating speaker and writer.
Rudy Acuna came to campus and spoke at the following symposium a day after Angela Davis spoke, on March 20, 1988.
Released on March 23, 1988. One of my favorites.
The critics at Rolling Stone magazine were always hard on Joni Mitchell. This was a great album. They’re full of it.
I’d never heard of Pedro Almodovar before. What a talented director. Antonio Banderas is in this film as is Carmen Maura. A wonderful comedy, released on March 26, 1988. For a while there, I watched every one of his movies.
Released on March 30, 1988.
This was a fun event that had been taking place in Ann Arbor for almost two decades, but there were police all over the place, so one had to be very careful. I used to have a t-shirt, but I wore it out.
I finally bought a car, a rather worn out version of the one above, a 1974 Corolla 4 door. Mine was rusted around the edges and looked much duller because of its age. Cars do not last long in Michigan weather, because the roads are salted and salt causes rust. This one eventually fell apart on me. I drove over a speed bump one day and the chassis split in two, it was so badly rusted.
My picture came out in the daily student newspaper. It accompanied the article below.
Released on 4/15/88. What a great debut album. Talkin’ about a revolution was a hit! Couldn’t believe it. See review below.
From the Ann Arbor News.
My sister Becky sent me cards and letters on a regular basis throughout the seventies and into the eighties after I left home. I still have all of them.
My cousin Turi was one of Cesar Chavez’s assistants, and he coordinated a big fundraiser for him in Detroit. Turi lived in Dearborn with his family. He brought his mom, my Aunt Helen out to help cater the event. This was the second time I got to meet Mr. Chavez.
This was a wonderful recording, released on April 26, 1988. . Brent and I would get to see kd lang live later in the coming year. The highlight of the night was when she sang the Roy Orbison song, Crying.

Here’s a live version of “Crying”.

My first professional conference while at Michigan was called LOEX, (short for Library Orientation Exchange). It took place in early May at Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green Ohio, about an hour’s drive south of Ann Arbor. I and several colleagues, including Linda TerHaar, Lynn Westbrook and Barb Hoppe attended. Bowling Green was a very nice, well-kept, small college town. The Library at the University had an outstanding popular music collection, and I visited it while there.

Bowling Green. It was a lovely little town.
Louise Greenfield, a librarian from the University of Arizona whom I had met when I was a graduate student, conducted this workshop. I would later work with her again after I moved back to Arizona.

One of my colleagues, Linda TerHaar, gave a presentation on what we called the PIC Program. PIC was short for Peer Information Counselors. Another colleague, Darlene Nichols, who oversaw the program up until mid-Spring, developed the handouts. In January, I was strongly encouraged to take over coordination of the program, and by this point, had started managing it. I probably should have been the one to do the presentation, but my supervisor chose Linda instead. This was yet another example of her denying me opportunities to participate in professional activities. It would be another year before I was “allowed” to attend ALA.

Bowling Green State University’s Jerome Library– a wonderful place. I visited the music library while there. Here’s a description of it. “With almost a million recordings, the Music Library & Bill Schurk Sound Archives (MLBSSA) is the largest collection of popular music in an academic library in North America. Our recordings include 45s, 78s, 33s, LPs, reel-to-reel tapes, cassette tapes and CDs. The sound recording collection is supported by books, scores, video/film, hard-to-find periodicals, fanzines, promotional material and archival collections”.
These are a couple of the handouts I picked up at the Library on my visit.
Denise and Mike, my two crazy friends, were quite talented. Denise had openings all over the place. This one took place in Santa Barbara.
More correspondence from my buddy Richard.
King Sunny Ade’ represents African and World music at its finest.
King Sunny Ade
I know I was at this concert, but I remember very little about it…
From the Ann Arbor News, May 16, 1988.
Chet Baker was a great jazz musician. He played trumpet and sang. I played his music quite a bit when I was with KXCI. He died on May 13, 1988.

Here’s one of Chet Baker’s songs that I would play on my show all the time.

Becky, my Mom and Irene, early June 1988.
My sister Becky holding our nephew Jose’, my brother Fred’s newborn son.
A postcard from Brent’s mom. The Bahamas.
One of my very favorite comedies. It opened on June 10, 1988.
Another card from my friend Denise. She and Mike had moved to New York by this time.
Released on 6-15-88. I love baseball movies. Susan Sarandon is also one of my very favorite actresses. Below is a review from Time Magazine, June 20, 1988. .
Yet another card from Richard. We both missed each other a lot.
Seeing Sarah Vaughan was a dream come true and the highlight of my summer. Her concert took place on July 2, 1988. She died two years later. I was lucky to have been able to see her perform.
A letter I wrote to my parents. I found it later, after I had moved back home in 1992.
Lake Michigan. Brent tried his best to help his parents out during his father’s illness.
This paper was used as a guide for the Library in reaching its goals to become a multicultural organization.
A rare journal entry. I wrote more when I was in my early 20s than I did during this period of my life.
Another great album from Dwight Yoakam, released on August 2, 1988. Streets of Bakersfield as a big, big hit and included the vocals of Buck Owens and the accordion playing of the great Flaco Jimenez.
This tv program aired on PBS on August 22 as part of the American Masters series. I was in heaven for sure!
Seeing Pete Seeger was one of the highlight’s of my time in Ann Arbor. He’s been one of my heroes for a very long time.
This was another fun concert. I love Pete Seeger and have many of his recordings.
Oh wow, I just love this album. Etta’s big comeback, released on September 26, 1988.

I love this song…

This folk album, recorded all in Spanish, by Los Lobos, was released in September, 1988. It’s reminiscent of their very first album, Los Lobos del Este de Los Angeles/Just Another Band from East L.A, released 10 years earlier. They play a lot of son jarocho on this disc.

Here’s the title cut.

I tried to get involved with the campus gay community, but it was not an easy group to become a part of. There were some very, very radical women running things and they were not welcoming at all.
Brent spent time in the Bahamas with his parents.

Another day when I was visiting my mom, a week or so before she passed away, a nurse came in and my mom called to her and said, “hi honey. Do you know who Ray Charles is? Well he can park his shoes under my bed any time!”. The nurse said, “that’s nice Mrs. Diaz” and rolled her eyes, or something like that, and then she left the room. I turned to my mom and said, “oh ma, why did you say that? How embarrassing!” She shot back, “well, I would’ve said Vicente Fernandez, mijo, but this pendejita wouldn’t have known who I was talking about!” I still crack up thinking about it, and remember it like it was yesterday…

My mom.
St. Ambrose Church was filled to capacity during the services for my mom. She was special to many people.
Me, Rudy and Becky at our parent’s house the day of our mom’s funeral.
With the family after the funeral.
These two cards are just a sampling of the dozens of sympathy cards I received from my colleagues at Michigan and friends from back home. Everyone was very supportive.
One of my very first Lucha Villa cassettes. I bought it shortly after my mom died.

This song, from the above anthology, just breaks me up.

A few days after my mom died, I went to the swap meet to see if I could find some good Mexican music so that I could play it in her memory. I knew she loved Mexican rancheras, and that she particularly enjoyed the music of Lola Beltran and Lucha Villa, so I looked around for some of their recordings at the various booths that sold Mexican music. Man, did I luck out! I found a cassette with the above photo on it that day and brought it home. Simply titled “Lucha VIlla”, it was a greatest hits anthology and it included some of her earliest and best known recordings from the early 60s to the mid 70s, including several songs written by Jose Alfredo Jimenez. My dad heard it and said to me, “this is a gift from your mother”. Every song hit hard and seemed to be about my parents relationship. From this point on, I was hooked on this woman’s music and on Mexican mariachi and rancheras in general. I’ve since traveled all over the US and Mexico collecting her music, and I now have practically everything she’s ever released on lp, 45, cassette and cd. I also have several of her films. She was a great actress too. Now that Youtube is available, one can listen to most of her recordings there, and even watch her many movies. Back when I started collecting her material, however, there was no Youtube, and finding her recordings required perseverence and dedication as most of it was out of print. Back in 2011, I created two websites devoted to her music. One covers her output in the 60s, and the other in the 70s. Included are all her albums and movies from each decade. I now have them linked as two pdf documents. You can see them here (60s)and here (70s).

I’m not sure I got to vote this time around as I was in Tucson when the election for president. took place. I found the cards below at a novelty shop in Ann Arbor.
Michael Dukakis
Stevie Wonder is all over this album. It’s great. Released on November 22, 1988.

My favorite song from the album…

The following song is from the movie, Scrooged, which premiered on November 23, 1988. I love both the original version by Jackie DeShannon and this version by Annie Lennox and Al Green. What a match!

This was the second time I got to see Buffy Ste. Marie. I would see her again one more time before I left Ann Arbor and came back to Tucson, and then again in San Francisco at one of the ALA Conferences. I just love this woman!
The great Roy Orbison died on December 6, 1988. He was a great vocalist and songwriter. His biggest hit was “Pretty Woman”.
This film premiered on December 14, 1988. It’s a powerful film with great performances by Anne Bancroft and Harvey Fierstein.
A complicated film. One has to pay close attention in this one. It premiered on December 16, 1988.
Dustin Hoffman is an amazing actor. This film was also released on December 16.
Brent’s dad was a nice man. At first, he had some trouble accepting our relationship, but he eventually came around.
What a sad movie. Released on December 21st.
William Hurt was in Kiss of the Spiderwoman, so I just had to see this one too. It premiered on December 23.
Artwork by Ana Elias, my friend Richard’s sister.
I received a lot of Christmas cards this particular year. Here’s a small sample of them. The one above was from Richard’s sister-in-law Sarah, who was married to Albert, Richard’s older brother.
Maria Hoopes was very kind to me when I was a graduate student. She stayed in touch too.
Home for the holidays, with my sister Becky and my dad.
Goofing around with Becky and Richard.
Richard, you’re hurting me you brute! Ha ha ha.
Taking this was a bittersweet experience. Our mom was gone. She always wanted us to have a family portrait like this.
Becky and I at a Christmas party hosted by her boss.

The Borderlands and the Mexican Revolution with Dr. Oscar Martinez / Program, November 10, 2010

Oscar J. Martinez, PhD, received his doctorate in history from the University of California, Los Angeles. His research focus is on the political, economic and social history of the U.S.-Mexico borderlands, and he examines broad themes such as the evolution of the Mexican northern frontier cities, the Mexican Revolution along the border, and borderlands culture. He is the author of several books, including “Troublesome Border” and “Fragments of the Mexican Revolution: Personal Accounts from the Border”. His most recent book, “Why Mexico is Poorer than the United States”, is an examination of economic development in Mexico as contrasted to that of the United States. His lecture for this program assessed the role of the U.S. Mexico borderlands in the Mexican Revolution with an emphasis on controversies, disturbances, and battles that affected the history of Mexico and the United States.

Dr. Oscar J. Martinez, Regents Professor of History, The University of Arizona

Some works by Dr. Martinez: These titles link to the University of Arizona Library catalog.

Troublesome border, 1988, 2006.

Border people : life and society in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands, 1994.

U.S.-Mexico borderlands : historical and contemporary perspectives, 1996.

Mexican-origin people in the United States : a topical history, 2001.

Mexico’s uneven development : the geographical and historical context of inequality, 2016.

Stunted dreams : How the United States shaped Mexico’s destiny, 2017.

Ciudad Juárez Saga of a Legendary Border City, 2018.

Stories and Music of the Revolution / Exhibition, September 9-December 20, 2010

Introduction:

The Mexican Revolution had a profound impact on the people of Mexico. In my own family, for example, my grandfather Antonio Diaz Palacios, a Spaniard who had migrated to Mexico from Asturias at the turn of the century, was forced to flee Mexico when revolutionary forces overtook Zacatecas in 1914. He and his wife Zeferina Torres, a native of Zacatecas, and their infant son, Raul, made their way north to Arizona and settled first in Ray, Arizona, and then moved up to the Verde Valley region of the state, where they resided for many years. Another relative, Raul Rascon, my mom’s tio and mayor of San Miguel Horcasitas, Sonora was hanged shortly after the revolution, during the Cristero rebellion, or so I’ve been told.

I’ve always been fascinated by the stories my father told me about my grandfather Antonio and what happened to him in Mexico, and as I grew older, I became very interested in the history of Mexico, and quite fond of Mexican folk music, particularly the corridos of the Mexican Revolution. In time, my interest in the genre led me to acquire a sizeable collection of books and recordings, and I when I became the librarian for music, dance and theater in 2000, I used my budding expertise to enhance the collections in the Fine Arts Library, by purchasing for the collection sound recordings, films, books and scores that featured the corrido and other forms of Mexican music. I also made sure to showcase this music on my radio show on KXCI on a regular basis.

“Stories and Music of the Revolution” was the first project where I worked with Special Collections staff to produce an exhibit and corresponding programming. I had not joined the department yet, as I was still a member of the Research Support Services team. I was invited to co-curate this exhibit with Veronica Reyes-Escudero and was responsible for coordinating two of the 5 programs held in conjunction with the exhibit. I was offered a transfer to Special Collections the following year, and accepted it. The success of this exhibit and these events, in my opinion, helped me get the new gig as coordinator of exhibits and events in Special Collections, but who knows for sure? After 12 years at the Fine Arts Library, it was a welcomed change.

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The above program was designed by Marty Taylor, the Library’s graphic artist.
Video promo by UA News, an interview with exhibition co-curator, Bob Diaz.

Lectures Series brochure

Photos of the exhibit:

Below is a sampling of photos taken of the exhibit. My sections of the exhibit were focused on the Mexican corrido.

Sound recordings from my personal collection, plus broadsides and books from Special Collections.
Portrait of Francisco Madero and the corrido “La Muerte de Madero, part 2.
Listening station, corridos of the Revolution.
Yours truly discussing the exhibit with Carla Stoffle, Dean of the Libraries and a visitor.
Visitors viewing the exhibit on opening night.

Press coverage:

UA NEWS STORY

Special Collections Brings Mexican Revolution to Life

To commemorate the centennial of the Mexican Revolution, the Mexican Consulate in Tucson has collaborated with the UA to create an exhibit on the border experience during the revolution.

By Rebecca Ruiz-McGill, University Communications

Aug. 31, 2010

The Mexican Revolution of 1910 brought on a decade of unrest for people living on or near the border.

Songs, memoirs, journals and newspapers of the time talk of battles fought on both sides of the border, and families shared stories on how troops with various affiliations would seek food, refuge and water from ranchers, who in their best interest shared what they could with impartiality to sides.

This year, 2010, marks both Mexico’s bicentennial of independence from Spain in 1810 and the centennial of its revolution in 1910. To commemorate, the Mexican Consulate in Tucson has collaborated with the University of Arizona to create an exhibit on the border experience during the revolution.

A partnership between fine arts librarian Bob Diaz and Special Collections librarian Veronica Reyes brings the revolution to life. The exhibit features unofficial correspondence among citizens, reminiscences written years after the incidents, photographs, broadsides, sound recordings, government circulars and wood-block engravings that speak to the turbulent years – from 1910-1920 – of the revolution.

Stories & Music of the Revolution: A Commemorative Exhibit on the Centennial of Mexico’s Revolutionwill beon display from Sept. 9 to Dec. 20 in the gallery at Special Collections, 1510 E. University Blvd.

The exhibit will also host monthly lectures featuring UA experts of the era. All lectures will take place in Special Collections and feature:

  • The social context of Mexico’s Epic Revolution with William Beezley, a UA professor in the department of history. Sept. 22 from 7-8:30 p.m.
  • A regional overview of the First Centennial of Independence by Luis Edgardo Coronado Guel, a doctoral candidate in the UA history department. Oct. 6 from 3-4:30 p.m.
  • An exploration of the literature of the era titled Writing on the Edge by Latin American Studies research associate Tom Miller. Oct. 26 from 3-4:30 p.m.
  • An overview of personal accounts of the Borderland Battles that defined relationships between the U.S. and Mexico by Regents’ Professor of History Oscar Martinez. Nov. 10 from 3-4:30 p.m.
  • An overview of Mexican corridos – songs dedicated to defining the values, issues and ideas of the revolution – presented by Raquel Rubio Goldsmith, a lecturer in the UA department of Mexican American and Raza studies, and professor Celestino Fernandez, director of undergraduate studies in the UA department of sociology. Nov. 18 from 7-8:30 p.m.


Stories & Music of the Revolution draws from Special Collections’ expansive Borderlands materials to recreate the revolution as experienced from two perspectives: those fighting for agrarian, economic, and other societal reforms, and those seeking to stabilize the nation or remain in power.  

“Special Collections is a treasure trove for all things related to the border,” said Bob Diaz, who helped curate the display. “Visually for the exhibit, we used broadsides with images that depict what was occurring politically at the time and in the battlefield. We also display original written accounts of the time, and we are thrilled to be able to exhibit the music of the era with sound recordings, prints and sheet music.”

The materials on display were selected from a variety of collections including the papers of journalist, playwright, and women’s rights advocate Sophie Treadwell; George Hunt, Arizona’s first governor; and the Arizona, Southwest and Borderlands photograph collection.

Sound recordings, corrido lyrics and sheet music drawn from the University Libraries’ fine arts holdings and personal collections complement the materials selected from Special Collections.

News Story from La Estrella De Tucson, a supplement to the Arizona Daily Star. Sept. 10-16, 2010.

From the Latino Archive to Your PC, with Dr. Nicolas Kanellos / Program, April 4, 2012

Promotional poster by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

In his ongoing efforts to bring Hispanic literature to mainstream audiences, Kanellos also initiated the Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage project, started in 1992 by Arte Público Press. This ten-year multimillion-dollar project represents the first coordinated, national attempt to recover, index and publish lost Latino writings that date from the American colonial period through 1960.

“Arte Público Press and the Legacy of Latino Publishing in the U.S.” showcases a sampling of Arte Público’s non-fiction titles, novels, children’s books, young adult titles, and publications in the areas of drama, theatre and poetry. A selection of publisher’s catalogs, book covers and photographs—all on loan from the press—complement the items from Special Collections. The exhibit also includes material preserved through the efforts of the “Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage Project” and documents Kanellos’s more than four decades of professional contributions to the field.

Dr. Nichola Kanellos speaking in Special Collections.
Professor Albrecht Classen with Dr. Kanellos at the reception.
Dr. Kanellos with an attendee after his talk.

Life, Family and the Arizona Mining Community: A Gendered Perspective with Dr. Anna O’Leary / Program, March 6, 2012

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Promotional material designed by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

Talk – ‘Life, Family and the Arizona Mining Community: A Gendered Perspective |UA News…

Dr. Anny Ochoa O’Leary, head of the UA Department of Mexican American Studies

Anna Ochoa O’Leary, a professor in the University of Arizona department of Mexican American and Raza Studies, delivers the closing lecture held in conjunction with “Company Town: Arizona’s Copper Mining Communities During 100 Years of Statehood,” an exhibition at the Science-Engineering Library. The lecture will be titled “Life, Family and the Arizona Mining Community: A Gendered Perspective.”

Professor Ochoa O’Leary lived in Clifton, Ariz. during the copper mine strike of 1983. Ochoa O’Leary was also the president of the Morenci Miners Women’s Auxiliary in Clifton from 1985 to 1986. According to Ochoa O’Leary, the strike forever changed the lives of families who experienced it, as well as the social nexus that helped define the Clifton-Morenci communities.

The great Arizona copper strike against Phelps Dodge was a three-year struggle that ended with the decertification of 13 unions in 1986. During the course of events, the women of the community stepped outside the traditional roles that for generations had centered on the procurement and distribution of material resources to families. Faced with new challenges but encouraged by politics of equality, the women of the Morenci Miners Women’s Auxiliary came to contribute to political mobilization that received local, national and international attention.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, SEE ALSO:

*March 6, 2012: Life, Family and the Arizona Mining Community | Special Collections

*Transcript of Dr. O’Leary’s lecture (from Barriozona website)

40 Years of Tucson Meet Yourself: An Evening with Jim Griffith / Program, September 12, 2013

Promotional material designed by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

“Join us for the opening lecture of Special Collections newest exhibition “40 Years of Tucson Meet Yourself” on Sept. 12 from 6 p.m.-8:30 p.m. The evening includes a discussion about the early days of Tucson Meet Yourself featuring Dr. Jim Griffith, retired UA professor, former director of the Southwest Center and founder and former director of Tucson Meet Yourself.

A panel of notable festival volunteers and friends, including Dan Madden, Loma Griffith, Debbie Friesen, Fred Klein, Richard Morales and Gary Tenen, will also share stories and reminiscences of Tucson Meet Yourself from its earliest days and how it evolved into the largest folk life festival in the Southwest.

This lecture will be at Special Collections. It is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served. For more information, contact Bob Diaz at diazj@u.library.arizona.edu.”

Listen to the program audio here:

A panel discussion with Tucson Meet Yourself volunteers, including Jim and Loma Griffith

40 Years of Tucson Meet Yourself: Folklife and Culture, with Dr. Maribel Alvarez / Program, November 19, 2013

Promotional material by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

The second program associated with this exhibition featured Dr. Maribel Alvarez, professor of Anthropology and executive director of the Southwest Folklife Alliance.

Here is the news release for the event:

“40 Years of Tucson Meet Yourself: Folklife and Culture”

Date: November 19, 2013

Times: 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Location:   Special Collections

Contact: Bob Diaz

Description:

Join us for the final lecture accompanying Special Collections’ current exhibition, “40 Years of Tucson Meet Yourself.” Maribel Alvarez, research professor for the UA Southwest Center and Tucson Meet Yourself program director, will share stories of Tucson’s folklife and culture and how they manifest themselves in every day life.

The following biographical snapshot of Dr. Alvarez is borrowed from the University of Arizona Southwest Center’s webpage:

“Maribel Alvarez, Ph.D., is an anthropologist, folklorist, curator, and community arts expert who has documented the practice of more than a dozen of the country’s leading emerging and alternative artistic organizations. She is Associate Dean for Community Engagement for the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, is the Jim Griffith Chair in Public Folklore and Associate Research Social Scientist in the Southwest Center, and Associate Research Professor in the School of Anthropology.  She founded, and until recently served as executive director of the Southwest Folklife Alliance, an independent nonprofit affiliated with the University of Arizona. 

She teaches courses on methods of cultural analysis, with particular emphasis on objects, oral narratives, foodways, and visual cultures of the US-Mexico border. In the last few years, Maribel has written and published essays about poetry and food, intangible heritage, nonprofits and cultural policy, the theory of arts participation, artisans and patrimony in Mexico, and popular culture and stereotypes. In 2009 she was a Fulbright Fellow conducting research in rural Mexico.  Maribel was the co-founder and executive director for seven years of MACLA–Movimiento de Arte y Cultura Latino Americana, a contemporary, alternative urban arts center in San Jose, once described as a “lab for intelligent cultural interventions.” Maribel is a trustee of the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress; in addition, she has served as faculty for ten years at the National Association of Latino Arts and Culture’s summer Leadership Institute in San Antonio, TX. Currently, she is completing two book manuscripts for the University of Arizona Press, one on the verbal arts and lore of workers in the Mexican Curios cottage industry at the US-Mexico border, and another on the cultural history of wheat and flour mills in the state of Sonora in northern Mexico. Maribel was born in Cuba and came to the United States at the age of seven; she lived in Puerto Rico for eleven years before moving to California in 1980, where she became active in the Chicano arts community and multicultural arts movement of that decade.”

Teatro Libertad: Reflection and Discussion / Program, October 1, 2013

Special Collections, University Libraries

September 25, 2013

Join us on October 1 from 6:00 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. in Special Collections for an evening of reflection and discussion with members of Teatro Libertad, a local street theatre company from the 1970s. A viewing of select scenes from La Vida Del Cobre (The Life of Copper), one of the group’s plays, accompanies the talk.

Former members of Teatro Libertad together again

Click here to see videographer Brenda Limon’s filmed version of highlights of the program.

Teatro Libertad is featured in a new exhibit on display from Sept. 3, 2013 – Jan. 12, 2014 at the UA Main Library. Formed in 1975 by seven local actors and musicians – Scott Egan, Barclay Goldsmith, Teresa Jones, Arturo Martinez, Pancho Medina, Arnold Palacios, and Sylviana Wood – the group was influenced by the tradition of teatro Chicano, the Chicano movement of the 60s and 70s, and with inspiration from El Teatro Campesino – a group formed by Luis Valdez in the early 1960s.

Former Teatro member Scott Egan

Teatro Libertad tackled real life, everyday issues as experienced by the Chicano community in Tucson and the Southwest. Using satire, comedy, and music, the group wrote and performed their plays with the goal of getting people to think about issues such as unemployment, union organization, race, and cultural identity. Among the plays written and performed by Teatro Libertad were Los Peregrinos, El Vacil de 76, Los Pelados, La Jefita, Semilla Sembrada and La Vida Del Cobre.

It was a packed house

The bilingual, multicultural group relied on simple stage sets and props – old boxes, masks, and signs – when performing in local neighborhood centers throughout Tucson and in Mexico City, San Diego, Santa Barbara, and New York. The group also performed – sometimes from a flatbed truck – in Arizona’s mining towns for striking miners or farmworkers.

Audience members included a who’s who of the Chicano community

More than 25 performers participated in the all-volunteer Teatro Libertad during the group’s 14-year run. Additional members included Pamela Bartholomew, Olivia Beauford, Bob Diaz, Lilliana Gambarte, Pernela Jones, Jean McClelland, Juan Villegas, and a host of others.

The event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served.

Barclay Goldsmith and Teresa Jones, former Teatro members

Click here to see the entire program, recorded on camera by Antonio Arroyo.

Arturo Martinez and Silviana Wood
Teatro Libertad members on the cover of La Estrella de Tucson
Another write up about the group, by Ernesto Portillo, Jr.

50 Years: Tucson’s African American Community / Program, January 15, 2013

Publicity material by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries
  • Jan. 15: “50 Years: Tucson’s African American Community will be held 7-9 p.m. A screening of the documentary film “In Their Own Words: The 1960s Civil Rights Movement in Tucson” and a panel discussion with Charles Ford, former Tucson Vice Mayor and retired Tucson Unified School District principal, and Cressworth Lander, a native Tucsonan and president of the Dunbar Coalition.
Dr. Charles Ford and Mr. Cressworth Lander, the evening’s featured speakers

The video below offers an abbreviated version of the program.

50 Years: Tucson’s Native American Community–Indian Law Cases, Arizona and the Supreme Court / Program, February 12, 2013

Publicity material by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

Feb. 12: “50 Years: Tucson’s Native American Community” will be held 4-6 p.m. A discussion about Arizona, the Supreme Court and legal cases affecting and involving tribal members law cases, Arizona during the civil rights era with Robert A. Williams, Jr., the E. Thomas Sullivan Professor of Law and American Indian Studies at the UA James E. Rogers College of Law. https://www.youtube.com/embed/G593uE4SQdE?version=3&rel=1&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&fs=1&hl=en-US&autohide=2&wmode=transparent

UA Law Professor Rob Williams

50 Years: Tucson’s LBGTQ Community / Program, March 7, 2013

Publicity material by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

March 7: “50 Years: Tucson’s LGBTQ Community” will be held 7-9 p.m. A discussion with Adela Licona, an associate professor in the UA’s English department; Stephen Russell, who directs the Frances McClelland Institute; and Jamie Lee, a doctoral student in the UA School of Information Resources and Library Science.

Stephen Russell, Adela Licona and Jamie Lee, the evening’s featured speakers

50 Years: Tucson’s Mexican American Community / Program, April 29, 2013

Publicity material by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries

April 29: “50 Years: Tucson’s Mexican American Community” is a discussion with Lupe Castillo, a faculty member at Pima Community College, and Margo Cowan, a Pima County public defender.

Click here to listen to the audio of this program.

Guadalupe Castillo and Margo Cowan, the program’s featured guests

Filming Pulp Poetry: Ray Bradbury and “It Came From Outer Space”, with Bradley Schauer / Program, April 8, 2014.

Promotional material designed by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries
Dr. Bradley Schauer

From the UA News Service:

In this is the final lecture accompanying Special Collections’ “Mars Madness” exhibition, Bradley Schauer, assistant professor in the UA School of Theatre, Film and Television, explores “Filming Pulp Poetry: Ray Bradbury and It Came From Outer Space.”

In 1953, Universal Studios – known for its horror films – released its first science fiction feature of the ’50s, “It Came From Outer Space,” written by prominent science fiction writer Ray Bradbury. Based in part on Bradbury’s childhood memories of living in Tucson, “It Came From Outer Space” is a haunting and beautiful film that challenges easy assumptions about ’50s science fiction films being “schlocky” or campy.

Schauer will detail the production history of the film, discussing how Bradbury and the filmmakers were able to create an eerie and poetic film while still giving science fiction fans the scares and thrills they expected from the genre.”

A selection of additional film posters…

Celebrating Excellence: Women in Anthropology Panel Discussion / Program, March 31, 2015

From the UA News Service: Join us for the second talk accompanying two concurrent exhibitions: “Celebrating Excellence: Women in Anthropology”, on display in the Main Library, and “Celebrating Excellence: 100 Years of UA Anthropology”, on display in Special Collections.

In this panel discussion, four distinguished female faculty members from the UA School of Anthropology share their perspectives on impact of their research and their professional experiences in the field of anthropology.

Panel Speakers:

Jennifer Roth-Gordon, Associate Professor, Anthropology
Stacey Tecot, Assistant Professor, Anthropology
Marcela Vasquez-Leon, Associate Professor, Anthropology & Associate Research Anthropologist, Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology
Mary Voyatzis, Professor, Anthropology

Our speakers

UA Anthropology: A Century of Continuity Amid Change, with Dr. Diane Austin / Program, February 12, 2015

“Join us as Diane Austin, Professor and Director of the School of Anthropology and Research Anthropologist with the Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology (BARA) opens Special Collections’ newest exhibition.

The presentation will highlight some of the key historical and current challenges addressed by University of Arizona anthropologists”

Dr. Diane Austin, head of the Anthropology Dept
The opening drew a nice sized crowd
Dr. Austin speaking to guests
Guests viewing the exhibition

The Wilderness Act Opening Event, Featuring Meg Weesner / Program, September 2, 2014

EVENT SCHEDULE

5:30: Welcoming Remarks by Karen Williams, Dean of The University of Arizona Libraries

5:45: Brief remarks from our guest elected officials Tucson Mayor Jonathon Rothschild and Pima County Board of Supervisors Chairperson, Richard Elias

6:00: Presentation by Meg Weesner, retired National Park Service Ranger

6:45: Reception

Welcome to the opening event for the “Wilderness Act: Arizonans Keeping It Wild for 50 Years” exhibition.

 It has been a great pleasure to work with my co-curator and tonight’s featured speaker, Meg Weesner,  on this exhibit, which celebrates the 50th Anniversary of the signing of the Wilderness Act and acknowledges the work of three key figures in the environmental movement: Stewart Udall, Morris K. Udall, and Edward Abbey, as well as the works of early and modern wilderness thinkers and writers.

I’d like to thank  Kevin Dahl, program manager of the field office of the National Parks Conservation Association, and Special Collections student assistant Jarrod Mingus,  for their assistance with the exhibit. Curating this exhibit was indeed a labor of love,  and a true team effort!

Thanks also to  the Friends of the University Library and the Dean of the Library, Karen Williams for their support. 

I hope you take some time tonight to examine the documents and photos and to read the quotes and descriptions in each of the exhibit cases. I’m sure you will be pleasantly surprised to learn how fortunate we Arizonans are to have so much wilderness in our midst.

In gratitude,

Bob Diaz

Exhibits and Events Coordinator

Special Collections

LISTEN TO THE AUDIO OF THIS EVENT HERE. (Program starts at 14 minutes into the hour).

Lead curator and featured speaker Meg Weesner
Board of County Supervisors chair, Richard Elias
Tucson Mayor Jonathon Rothschild
Tucson mayor Jonathon Rothschild and other guests viewing the exhibition. Rothschild also spoke at our opening event.

Growing Up In Tucson Panel Discussion / Program, September 17, 2015.

This panel discussion is the second event being offered in conjunction with Special Collections’ exhibit, “Tucson: Growth, Change and Memories.” The exhibit, which explores various aspects of Tucson’s history and growth as an urban community, opens on Aug. 17 and runs through Jan. 14, 2016. The panel features an eclectic group of four Tucsonans, remembering life from the 1950s onward. Joining us to share their stories will be former City Councilwoman Molly McKasson, business owner Katya Peterson, newspaper columnist Ernesto Portillo, Jr., and Lydia Otero, Professor of Mexican American Studies.

Click here to listen to the program (it begins at 52:15 after the hour).

Professor Lydia Otero
Katya Peterson
Molly McKasson
Ernesto Portillo, Jr.
Another packed house
Alva Torres
Katya Peterson, Lydia Otero, Molly McKasson, Bob Diaz and Ernesto Portillo, Jr.
Visitors to our second event, “Growing Up in Tucson”

Two Steps Forward, One Step Back? The Mexican Community of Tucson, 1940-2015 / Program, August 18, 2015.

From the Special Collections website: “This lecture by renowned writer and professor Dr. Thomas E. Sheridan, is the opening event for Special Collections’ new exhibition, “Tucson: Growth, Change, and Memories.” The exhibition explores various aspects of Tucson’s history and growth as an urban community.

Sheridan is a Research Anthropologist at the Southwest Center, which is dedicated to documenting and interpreting the region’s natural and human cultures. He also serves as Professor of Anthropology in the University of Arizona School of Anthropology. He has conducted ethnographic and ethnohistoric research in the Southwest and northern Mexico since 1971 and directed the Mexican Heritage Project at the Arizona Historical Society from 1982-1984. He is the author of a number of works about the history of the region, including “Los Tucsonenses: The Mexican Community in Tucson, 1854-1941” and “Arizona: A History,” now in its second edition.

The evening’s lecture focuses on changes wrought in the Mexican community in the past 75 years as the result of rapid urbanization. The lecture will be followed by a reception.”

Tom Sheridan spoke to a packed house.
Tom Sheridan and Bob Diaz
This lady was shocked, but happy to find her car parked in front of the Otero House.
Opening night

Visions of the Borderlands: Three Women Writers Share Their Stories / Program, February 2, 2017.

“Visions of the Borderlands: Three Women Writers Share Their Stories”, featured the writers Denise Chavez, Patricia Preciado Martin, and Natalie Diaz. The program can be listened to in its entirety below.

Thursday, February 2, 2017 – 6:00pm

Click here to listen to the audio of program

Denise Chavez
Steve Hussman, Director of Special Collections introduces the program and panelists.
Patricia Preciado Martin and Natalie Diaz talking to attendees of the program.

From the UA News Service:

“Denise Chávez, Natalie Díaz and Patricia Preciado Martin are three celebrated authors whose novels, poems and oral histories provide unique perspectives and indigenous visions of the borderlands. Each of these writers will present samplings of their works that will broaden understanding of and appreciation for borderlands communities.

Natalie Diaz at the podium.
Patricia Preciado-Martin

Chávez, a native of Las Cruces, New Mexico is a novelist (“The Last of the Menu Girls,” “Loving Pedro Infante,” “The King and Queen of Comezon”), performance artist and bookseller whose award-winning works offer a portrayal of life in the U.S.-Mexico border region from a female, Mexican American perspective. Díaz, a native of Needles, California, grew up on the Fort Mohave Indian Reservation. She is a poet whose work “When My Brother Was an Aztec” has been awarded the Nimrod/Hardman Pablo Neruda Prize. Preciado Martin is a native Tucsonan, whose oral histories describe both urban and rural life in southwest Arizona as seen through the eyes of working class, Mexican American people”

Denise Chavez doing her thing.
Natalie Diaz

1968: From the My Lai Massacre to Yellow Submarine / September 6, 2018.

1968: From the My Lai Massacre to Yellow Submarine featuring Tom Miller

Tom Miller
Tom Miller’s press pass for the 1968 Democratic Convention, from the Tom Miller Collections, Special Collections.

Special Collections, The University of Arizona Libraries

September 6, 2018

From the UA News Service:

Where were you – or your parents – 50 years ago? Many people took part in the anti-Vietnam war movement, hoping to bring pressure on the government to pull out of Vietnam through underground presses and demonstrations. According to Miller, the critically acclaimed writer and author of “Cuba, Hot and Cold” and “The Panama Hat Trail,” the underground press was a “joyously sloppy endeavor made up of people who knew little about journalism but had strong feelings about the war and the cultural life it spawned.” Miller, who witnessed the violence surrounding the 1968 Chicago Democratic National Convention in the aftermath of the Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. assassinations, will present a talk about his activities in the underground press and how the rest of the country reacted to the anti-war movement.

In 2002, the University of Arizona Special Collections acquired Miller’s archives, and some materials from this collection will be included in the “1968 in America” exhibit.

Listen to the audio of Tom’s program here.

Tom Miller showing his draft card to the audience.

1968: A Closer Look At Its Impact / October 2, 2018

1968: A Closer Look At Its Impact, featuring Guadalupe Castillo, Gregory McNamee, Ted Warmbrand and Barbea Williams.

October 2, 2018, Special Collections, The University of Arizona Libraries

From the UA News Service:

International and national issues hit home hard in 1968. The war in Vietnam escalated, the draft was in full swing and many cities and college campuses felt the political and racial tensions rising. Join us for a panel discussion with activists, teachers, musicians and writers who remember 1968 and explore topics including the arts, the conflicts and everyday life. Learn about the impact that “Desert Solitaire: A Season in the Wilderness” – Edward Abbey’s autobiographical work published in 1968 – had on this country and the broader world. Hear stories about what life was like in Tucson for women and people of color during this pivotal year. Remember some of the popular protest music with local troubadour Ted Warmbrand.

Panelists:

Guadalupe Castillo: Retired Chican@ Studies educator, community organizer and activist.

Ted Warmbrand: Music historian, folksinger, storyteller, activist, and concert promoter.

Barbea Williams: Dance educator, founder and director of the Barbea Williams Performing Company, adjunct lecturer in the UA School of Dance.

Gregory McNamee: Tucson based author and adjunct lecturer, Eller School of Management.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM HERE

“Judith Chafee: Geographical Powers”. January 23, 2018

Program: “Judith Chafee: Geographical Powers featuring Christoper Domin, January 23, 2018, Special Collections The University of Arizona Libraries

Promotional material designed by Marty Taylor, University of Arizona Libraries
UA professor of Architecture, Christopher Domin

From the UA News Service: “Christopher Domin, an award-winning architect, author and professor of architecture at the University of Arizona’s College of Architecture, Planning & Landscape Architecture, examines Judith Chafee’s impact on architectural style and the growing movement for more environmentally conscious building practices and structures.

Domin is the author of the book, “Paul Rudolph: The Florida Houses” (2002: Princeton Architectural Press), and co-author of “Powerhouse: The LIfe and Work of Judith Chafee (2019: Princeton Architectural Press,–see below).

For more information see:

Judith Chafee: Iconoclast Exhibition (January 22-July 6, 2018).

“Judith Chafee: Breaking Barriers in a Man’s World”. March 13, 2018. Program held in conjunction with the above exhibit.

The Judith Chafee Papers Page–Special Collections, The University of Arizona Libraries

The Judith Chafee Papers Collection Guide

Powerhouse: The LIfe and Work of Judith Chafee

Christopher Domin and Kathryn McGuire, authors

“Powerhouse is the first book on the singular life and career of American architect Judith Chafee (1932-1998). Chafee was an unrepentant modernist on the forefront of sustainable design. Her architecture shows great sensitivity to place, especially the desert landscapes of Arizona. Chafee was also a social justice advocate and a highly respected woman in a male-dominated profession. After graduating from the Yale University Architecture School, where her advisor was Paul Rudolph, she went on to work in the offices of legends including Rudolph, Walter Gropius, Eero Saarinen, and Edward Larrabee Barnes. In addition to her architectural legacy, her decades of teaching helped shape a generation of architects. Chafee’s drawings and archival images of her work are complemented by stunning photography by Ezra Stoller and Bill Timmerman”. –from the Princeton Architectural Press site.

“Judith Chafee: Breaking Barriers in a Man’s World”. March 13, 2018.

Program: “Judith Chafee: Breaking Barriers in a Man’s World with featured speakers: Kathryn McGuire, Corky Poster, Darci Hazelbaker and Aletheia Ida. March 13 2018, Special Collections, The University of Arizona Libraries ”

From the UA News Service: “Darci Hazelbaker and Aletheia Ida, both of the University of Arizona’s College of Architecture, Planning and Landscape Architecture, join local architects Kathy McGuire and Corky Poster to reminisce about Judith Chafee’s impact on the profession, both as a visionary architect and as a female in a male-dominated profession. McGuire and Poster both worked for Chafee, and are sure to share some memorable stories about Chafee and her work”.

For more information see:

Judith Chafee: Iconoclast Exhibition (January 22-July 6, 2018).

“Judith Chafee: Geographical Powers”. January 23, 2018. Program held in conjunction with the above exhibit.

The Judith Chafee Papers Page–Special Collections, The University of Arizona Libraries

The Judith Chafee Papers Collection Guide

Powerhouse: The LIfe and Work of Judith Chafee

Christopher Domin and Kathryn McGuire, authors

“Powerhouse is the first book on the singular life and career of American architect Judith Chafee (1932-1998). Chafee was an unrepentant modernist on the forefront of sustainable design. Her architecture shows great sensitivity to place, especially the desert landscapes of Arizona. Chafee was also a social justice advocate and a highly respected woman in a male-dominated profession. After graduating from the Yale University Architecture School, where her advisor was Paul Rudolph, she went on to work in the offices of legends including Rudolph, Walter Gropius, Eero Saarinen, and Edward Larrabee Barnes. In addition to her architectural legacy, her decades of teaching helped shape a generation of architects. Chafee’s drawings and archival images of her work are complemented by stunning photography by Ezra Stoller and Bill Timmerman”. –from the Princeton Architectural Press site.

What’s in a name?: LGBTQ+ and Latinx perspectives on access terminology–challenges and solutions / Program, June 26, 2021

In 2020, I was appointed to the American Library Association’s Rainbow Roundtable (formerly the ALA LGBT Task Force) program planning committee. Last summer, the committee brainstormed programming ideas, and I came up with the idea of having a panel discussion on the term Latinx and its relevance to discussions about access terminology. I argued that this was an important discussion to have because it dealt with folks who are nonbinary–trans people essentially, and that it would help raise awareness of the issues in the broader queer community. After discussing the idea with the rest of the committee, we agreed to expand the focus some to include the broader LGBTQ+ community as well as the Latinx community. I did the bulk of the work on this program, including identifying speakers, submitting the program proposal to ALA on behalf of the RRT program planning committee, and following through on the remaining work once the program was approved. I received a lot of support from my colleague Susan Wood, a fellow member of the committee. She helped me with the program description and agreed to moderate the program, which was a huge help. The program took place virtually on a Saturday afternoon and drew a crowd of over 600 viewers. We received very positive feedback and everyone involved agreed that the program was a success.

Saturday, June 26, 2021

4:00 PM – 5:00 PM CT

ALA Unit/Subunit: RRT

Over fifty years ago, Sanford Berman spoke up about serious problems with some of the word choices employed by the creators of Library of Congress subject headings. Some terms were downright offensive to different groups, while others were antiquated, and some necessary terms simply didn’t exist. Over the years, Berman and many others, including Ellen Greenblatt and Hope Olson, have worked tirelessly to raise awareness among catalogers and librarians of the need for more culturally sensitive, modern terminology. The struggle continues to this day, particularly when addressing terminology that describes diverse populations, such as trans people, queer people, immigrants, and people of color. In this session, we will discuss progress, share ongoing concerns and consider potential strategies for further improvement.

A news article about the program by Carrie Smith, appeared in American Libraries magazine on July 26, 2021. It provides an excellent summary of the panel discussion. The article is titled, “What’s in a Naming Term? Subject headings and inclusion for LGBTQ+ and Latinx communities“. Click here to read it.

Click here to view the program. Then click the button that says “video”. (Available only to ALA members who attended the conference. You must sign in with your email address and ALA Conference access code to view the video). For more information contact Bob at joserobertodiaz@cox.net.

Moderator(s)

Susan Wood

Associate Professor of Library Services
Suffolk County Community College

Speaker(s)

Jamie A. Lee

Associate Professor
The University of Arizona
Tucson, Arizona

Emily Drabinski

Interim Chief Librarian
The Graduate Center, CUNY
New York, New York

 Andrea Guzman

Library Assistant
The Oakland Public Library
Oakland, California

Learning Objectives:

  • • Upon completion, participant will be able to identify the key issues and challenges related to subject headings, metadata and cultural sensitivity.
  • • Upon completion, participant will be able to have a deeper understanding of the power of words in librarianship and the need to be vigilant and strategic in addressing inequity.
  • • Upon completion, participant will be able to identify problems with controlled vocabularies that affect access to materials, by, for and about people in marginalized communities.

Click here to see comments and questions brought up during the program.

Remembering Richard Elias: A Virtual Tribute, March 28, 2021

I participated in this tribute to my best friend Richard Elias back in late March, on the anniversary of Richard’s passing. The program was produced by Andres Cano, one of Richard’s dearest friends, and hosted by Ernesto Portillo, Jr. It includes heartfelt reminiscences by a number of people whose lives Richard touched in one way or another. I thought I would add it to my web page as a blog entry. Following this tribute are a couple more audio/visual stories about Richard that I found here and there. Enjoy!

Remembering Richard Elias: Arizona Public Media’s tribute

KGUN 9 Extended Interview with Richard Elias / October, 2016

Mix Tape for Richard Elias, Christmas 1987

Richard

I put this mix of music together in December, 1987 as a Christmas and birthday gift for my best friend, Richard Elias. This was my very first Christmas away from home, and I was feeling very sad at the time. I really missed him. This mix of music is, in a way, a chronological look at our friendship since high school. When he listened to the tape, he told me it hit him like a freight train. I figured it might. Our friendship only got stronger over the years, and damn, I miss him now more than ever. He’ll always be in my heart.

Joan Baez: Brothers in Arms
James Taylor: You’ve Got a Friend
Paul Simon: Kodachrome
Jackie DeShannon: Put A Little Love in Your Heart
Rumel Fuentes: Soy Chicano
Rufus and Chaka Khan: Jive Talkin’
Stevie Wonder: I Wish
Aretha Franklin: Border Song
The Eagles: My Man
The Dusty Chaps: Honky Tonk Music
Linda Ronstadt: Colorado
The Byrds: You’re Still on My Mind
Cat Stevens: Randy
Steve Forbert: Tonight I Feel So Far Away From Home
The Beatles I’m Looking Through You
Joni Mitchell: The Last Time I Saw Richard
Neil Young: Walk On
Jackson Browne: Farther On
Joan Armatrading: Friends
Hank Williams: I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry
Bob Dylan: One of Us Must Know (Sooner or Later)
Nina Simone: Everything Must Change
Bruce Springsteen: Used Cars
Dolly Parton: Detroit City
Van Morrison: Spirit
Santana: Brotherhood

My Life Story: 1987

Things to know up front:

You can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Click the back arrow key to return to the post.

Every chapter in My Life Story includes information about me, my work, my family and my friends. It also includes information about events that took place locally and nationally, etc. that I thought important enough to include. You’ll also find that I’ve included films, musicians and recordings/videos, in addition to books that were released in a given year.

While I have included many personal photos, most of the graphic content included below is borrowed from the Internet. I do not claim to own this material. I am just adding it for educational purposes. If the owners of any of the content in the “My Life Story” series want their stuff removed, I am happy to oblige. My email address is jrdiaz@arizona.edu. Thanks!

1987 marked the beginning of my career as a librarian. I had been attending school since I was five years old, and after 22 years was finally ready to do a job that I desired, one for which I had studied and had been trained to do. I was very idealistic and I still believed that I could do my part to change the world. My social/political perspective was leftist, feminist, pro-gay, Chicano, and socialist. I believed in equal rights for women and minorities and in spreading the wealth so that more people than just the rich could prosper. I believed in free education, multiculturalism and in the promotion of global consciousness. I wanted everyone to embrace socialism, as I did not value the acquisition of wealth and I thought that capitalism was deadly. Instead, I valued the acquisition of knowledge, the attainment of wisdom, and the search for truth and meaning in life. I was pro-love, pro-choice and anti-war. I didn’t believe in so-called “professional neutrality” or in the ideology of Manifest Destiny and all the lies about how if only one worked hard enough one could attain the American dream. To me, that story of “America” was one big fat lie. Freedom of thought, freedom of expression, and celebrating our human diversity were what I was all about. My goals as a budding professional were to do whatever I could to turn people on to reading and learning, to help them develop the ability to think critically about themselves and the world around them so that they could improve their lives and the lives of their families. I wanted people to learn to challenge the power structure and work towards changing society as a whole for the better.  

While I focused my studies on academic librarianship in college, and had every intention of working in an academic setting after I graduated, a public services librarian job in Nogales became available, and I needed a job badly, so after applying for the position and interviewing for it, the job was offered to me. I accepted it, thinking I could have a positive impact working with children in a predominantly Mexicano community. It was an opportunity to live out my ideals. I focused on doing outreach in the primary grades to children to help them develop a love of reading and learning, to give them all library cards, to help them feel welcomed at the public library. I did story hours where I read and sang to children, I did school presentations about using the library. I did mini concerts. I wrote my own songs. I bought books that were culturally relevant. I found that I had a natural talent for working with children, and just loved it. Within the first six months of my job, I had reached hundreds of students and organized numerous library events for the community. I even applied for and was awarded a grant from the State Library to do community programming, and I implemented a summer reading program. My bilingual skills were incredibly helpful, and I felt good about my work. Working on the U.S. Mexico border provided many opportunities to help bridge cultural understanding between American culture and Mexican culture.

Unfortunately, the work environment at the library was challenging, and at times overwhelming. The library director took a hands off approach to my work.  As the head librarian, she set the tone for the place, and because she had a variety of serious personal issues, it was not a very positive one. While some of the workers were competent and committed to what they were doing, others just went along for the ride. After a while, it became depressing and demoralizing. I was criticized for the outreach work I was doing. One library employee said she didn’t understand why I was giving kids library cards, because “they would just keep the books and not return them”.

Wow, I couldn’t believe it.  I felt stuck and sure would’ve benefitted from talking to someone older and wiser, but I didn’t like my supervisor. She was older, but not very wise. She was wrapped up in her own world, and didn’t seem to care much about the library or its employees. I needed encouragement, guidance, and feedback. I didn’t get any at all and as a result, I messed some things up along the way. I bought a computer, for example, that would soon become obsolete, I ordered books that nobody read, I stepped on people’s toes a few times and ruffled some feathers here and there. Had my supervisor been there to give me pointers about how to navigate the politics of the community, I probably would not have hit so many brick walls. I really did need guidance, and it just wasn’t there.

Nogales, Arizona was also a small town, although there were hundreds of thousands of people right across the border. Brent and I had to hide the fact that we were a couple a lot of the time. We were not in a gay-friendly environment at all. It was dangerous, in fact. We played with fire whenever we crossed the border, especially at night. Luckily, nothing bad happened.

Thankfully, my family and friends were just 60 miles away, so I didn’t feel too disconnected from them. They came down to visit us periodically, and we also went to Tucson on occasion either to visit or to attend concerts and other activities. While Brent and I didn’t have any close friends in Nogales, we didn’t really feel like we were all alone in a strange place because we were just an hour away from Tucson. Still, it was sometimes difficult. Whereas in Tucson, I had friends like Tim, Teresa and Richard that I could talk to and do things with, in Nogales, Brent and I had only each other, and there were times when we felt smothered by each other and we clashed. I didn’t realize until much later that there were some differences that we would never resolve, and eventually those differences had a negative impact on our relationship, to the point where we finally split up in 1990.

One thing I really missed was my radio show, which I had done practically every week from the end of 1983 to the end of 1986. While I continued to listen to music and buy records all the time while in Nogales, putting radio shows together was a great way to express myself, and I missed having that creative outlet. I had invested a lot of time and effort into learning all I could about Latin music especially. I had also built up a decent following of listeners, and I missed my radio friends. I would have to wait almost 20 years before I got the opportunity to go back to doing radio again.

While working in Nogales was great fun for a while, there were too many things that were wrong, so in June I decided to start job hunting and applied to a few jobs in academia, including one at the University of California at Santa Barbara and one at the University of Michigan. I was lucky enough to get interviewed for both positions. These were initially both phone interviews, and I didn’t do a great job with the one for the Santa Barbara job. However, I did much better with the Michigan interview, and even attended the American Library Association conference in San Francisco to meet Barbara MacAdam, the director of the Undergraduate Library. It was a quick trip and we met only briefly, but I must have made a good impression on Ms. MacAdam because I was soon offered an in-person interview. I flew to Ann Arbor and back twice, once to do the interview, and then again to find housing for me and Brent once I was offered the job.

While I was in San Francisco, I decided not to spend money attending the ALA conference. Instead, I met up with Ms. MacAdam and then did other stuff. For example, I witnessed my very first gay pride parade. It was a blast. I also spent time with my friend Mike Carroll, a friend whom I had met several years earlier in Tucson. We went bar hopping one day to a number of different Irish pubs scattered throughout the city, and even attended an artsy fartsy party with a bunch of his and his partner Denise’s artist friends. That scene just blew me away. Denise was out of town at the time, unfortunately.

Making the decision to move even further away from home was difficult, but Brent was from Michigan, and he really wanted to get back home, and I was young and adventurous, so I thought, why not? I didn’t know my mom was so ill at the time. Had I known, I likely would not have moved so far away. For a long time, I felt guilty and regretted having made the move to Michigan, as my mom passed away just a year after I had left Arizona. It sounds kind of petty, but Brent also made me give away some of my furniture and a sizeable chunk of my book collection before we left for Ann Arbor, and I resented having to do that. Fortunately, however, I found a local teacher who was willing to take the book collection off my hands. I knew she would put the books to good use.

The University of Michigan is a top ranked school. Its programs in law, medicine and business are among the best in the world, its sports teams are top notch and its library system is one of the biggest in the country. The school is located in Ann Arbor, Michigan, a town of just over 100,000 people, just an hour west from the great metropolis of Detroit. Brent grew up on the western side of the state in a small village called Twin Lake, just outside of Muskegon, which is right on Lake Michigan. He was familiar with region, while I had only visited briefly back in 1985. I had never been to Ann Arbor before, so moving there was a big deal and a real eye opener for me.

In early 1987, there was a great deal of racial tension on the University of Michigan campus, and efforts were made to provide a better environment for the school’s minority students. More students of color were recruited, and funding was made available for programs that supported them and for hiring more faculty and staff of color. Within the library system, efforts were also made to diversify the staff. It was in this context that I was hired. I had no idea, however, that this was the case, but I found out soon enough.

I was hired to work in the Undergraduate Library, and my job consisted of providing reference service and instruction for the undergraduate population. I also had collection development responsibilities. While the training I received in graduate school helped me feel confident enough to do reference work, I had to learn from scratch how to teach effectively, but luckily, I got a lot of practice and was able to attend several workshops on teaching offered by the campus Center for Research on Learning and Teaching. I enjoyed the collection development work a lot, and after having received the appropriate training, started work on a couple of projects that involved enhancing the Undergraduate Library’s collections of Chicano literature and LGBT literature. I also spent a lot of time this semester attending orientation sessions offered by various units both within the Undergraduate Library and the broader University Library system. I also learned how to use email and word processing software, and began to get practice doing online searching. The Library was just beginning its implementation of a new online catalog, called Mirlyn, and I also attended a number of updates on progress being made getting the system up and running. The first few months flew by.

I must admit, however, that I did not like my supervisor. She had previously worked at the University of Georgia as a reference librarian, and had joined the library staff a month after I had started. She was originally from Texas and had studied theater in college. The only child of academics, she thought quite highly of herself. Almost immediately, I felt like she had issues with my ethnicity and sexual orientation, and I very quickly began to feel like she was treating me like an “affirmative action” hire, as though I wasn’t intelligent enough or worthy enough to have been hired based on my own merit. It’s so demoralizing to have a supervisor who thinks you’re intellectually unfit for a job and that you don’t belong in it. I hated her. She held me back from participating in conferences (I didn’t get to attend ALA until June, 1989, almost two years after I had been hired) and other activities in which others on our staff were able to participate, noting that I was “too new”, for example to attend ALA. She also assumed that I did not know how to write, and insisted on having weekly meetings with me to gauge progress on my work . While my previous supervisor wasn’t around much and gave me free reign to do whatever I wanted, this one had to approve my every move. I could tell she was also homophobic and racist, and her anti-gay sentiments and bigotry revealed themselves in a variety of ways over time. We never did get along, in all the years that I worked with her. Had it not been for intervention on the part of the Library administration, I probably would have left Michigan the following year because of her.

Aside from my supervisor, the majority of the people I worked with were nice. Over time I became very close friends with several of my colleagues, and we are still friends to this day. I must admit, however, that I felt out of place a lot of the time. I missed my family and friends and didn’t realize I that would miss home so much. I was in a state of shock, really, for the first few months, and had trouble “finding my voice” and feeling confident about my abilities. After a while, I wasn’t sure I made the right choice about moving so far away from home. Brent and I were also still having our share of troubles. I started smoking marijuana again and drinking more than I should have, and that didn’t help at all. At Brent’s insistence, I ended up seeing a counselor before the year was over.

On the other hand, I liked Ann Arbor. While it was much smaller than Tucson, it had a lot going on culturally, and it was gay-friendly overall. There were lots of concerts, places to go out and listen to live bands, art fairs and other cultural activities happening all the time. There were also lots of used bookstores and record stores. Detroit, the center of a huge metropolitan area of over 4 million people, was just an hour away too. Brent and I had a lot of fun exploring the region. We found good Mexican food in a neighborhood called Mexicantown, we visited the Detroit Institute of the Arts, and explored Greektown. A cousin of mine who I had gone to Salpointe with also lived in Dearborn Heights with his wife and children, so I had at least some family in the area. Ann Arbor, however, did not have a sizeable Latino population, and the Mexican food was just awful.

Writing about this chapter in my life has been difficult. I’ve struggled with the fact that I moved from Nogales to Ann Arbor, leaving behind my culture, friends, family and work that I loved doing to a job that required me to “fit in” as a member of a very elite academic community in a place 2,000 miles away from home. Did I sell out? Some of my friends thought so, and they called me a Guppie or a Chuppie at times, but I don’t think I sold out. Not at all. The work I did in Nogales was heartfelt and important to me. The work I would do at Michigan was also important, but it was more intellectually demanding and required that I fit in with a different crowd of people, many of whom were quite honestly, intellectual snobs. The environment was competitive, and there were times when I felt like a bumbling fool, but I didn’t bend to the point where my values and ideals changed, and I tried to do work that made a difference. It would take a long time to finally feel comfortable at Michigan. Perhaps I never did completely reach that state. I don’t know. I do know, however, that I learned a great deal about myself and my capabilities, and that I was truly a child of the Southwest, a region that is home to my family and my culture, and a place that I longed to go back to as soon as I could. I did eventually, but it took almost six years.

Brent and I moved to Nogales the first week of January, 1987. I started my new job on January 5.
We moved to a duplex on Bristol Drive, just off Arizona State Route 82, the road to Patagonia. We were just a few miles away from the center of town.
Inside our apartment.
January 3, 1987. Aretha Franklin becomes the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
I started my new job on January 5, 1987.
My name tag
The Nogales Santa Cruz County Library on Grand Ave. designed by reknowned Arizona architect, Bennie Gonzales.
Another view of the library. Shortly after I left, a new wing was added.
“Downtown” Nogales, Az.
I turned 28 on January 15th. Where does the time go?
A birthday card from the staff of the Nogales Santa Cruz County Library. I had asked for the day off, but the director made me work that day. She wanted me to know who was the boss, I suppose.
Brent and I had spent Christmas day, 1986, getting blitzed on tequila in Nogales, Sonora and then we drove back to Tucson later that afternoon. Richard Elias then came over and took me with him to see our friends Ron and Sandy, and this is the photo Sandy took. I was shit faced…having a little fun before leaving Tucson and beginning my new adventure as a border town librarian in Nogie…
Another great Los Lobos album, released on January 19, 1987.

This is a great song.

My very first exhibit. Carol Smith, whose photo is below helped me with the design.
Carol Smith was a great colleague and friend who early on helped me navigate the office politics of the library. She is pictured here with her husband Don.
A fotonovela about the public library, produced by the staff of the Tucson Public Library.
I was interviewed several times on KMSB, Channel 11. Shari Karam was the host who did the interviews, and she would ask me questions about the programs I was producing at the Library. I think I visited with her five times altogether.
Almost immediately, I started doing outreach work with children and the schools. I hosted dozens of story hours and visited a number of schools within the first two months of the year.
My friend Ted taught me this song. It was a big hit with the kids.
I invited my buddy Ted Warmbrand to participate in the above program, which took place on February 14. His presence didn’t sit too well with the uptight lady who organized the event. His hair was too long or something…
Ted is a Pete Seeger scholar and has a vast repertoire of union songs.
I loved visiting the schools. The children were all eager to learn about the library.
Released in February, 1987.

My favorite song from this album…

This is another song I sang for the children during story hour. I loved singing this one.
This is a great recording by three of my absolute favorite singers. So glad they were finally able to put an album together, released on March 2, 1987.

This is such a beautiful tune. My theme song…

Another creepy movie that keeps your attention…Released on March 6, 1987.
More fan mail. I loved these kids.
I wrote this song sometime in the Spring.
ALA sold bookmarks like this in bulk. I bought a bunch of these for the kids and distributed them when I visited the schools.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the country, Larry Kramer founded ACT UP, the direct action organization that would push the envelope and force the government to start funding research on AIDS. Thousands upon thousands of gay men had already perished from the disease by the time the FDA paid any attention.

Larry Kramer, activist and author, and founder of ACT UP.
A letter from our friends Sandahbeth and Thaddeus. It was sent last Christmas, but didn’t make it to Nogales until mid-March.
I would cross the line at times and head over to my favorite birrieria for lunch on Elias Street. You entered a different world once you crossed over.
For the children. This was another one of several bookmarks I bought and gave away.
Brent’s sister Teresa and her husband Larry with their son Joshua and Uncle Jerry, Nogales Sonora, April 1987.
Brent and I, with Teresa’s son Joshua, April 1987.
Brent and his nephew Joshua in our living room, April 1987.
I attended my very first Arizona State Library Association conference on April 9, 1987 in Yuma Arizona and participated in a workshop by the Arizona State Library on grant writing.
Geoff Morgan issued several albums, all with positive messages about masculinity and feminism. Brent and I drove to Tucson to see him perform and we bought all four of his records. He signed each one for us.
A letter from my friend Annie Schmidt, May 13, 1987.
Even though I had already graduated, I was encouraged to attend this event, and I did.
I like this recording better than Whitney’s first one. Released on June 2, 1987.

I love this video.

Released in June 1987. This was Joan’s second book. The first, titled Daybreak was published in 1968. I’ve read this one at least twice.
Visiting the family in Tucson. From left to right are Gabie, my mom, me, my sister-in-law Elaine, my brother Charles and my niece Jacky.
San Francisco. My third trip there. I first visited in 1966 with my family, and then again in 1978.
I took a quick trip to San Francisco to meet the head of the Undergraduate Library at the University of Michigan. We met briefly, and then I got to see my very first gay pride parade.
My plane landed in Oakland, so I had to figure out how to get to downtown San Francisco on the BART.
Revelers at the Gay Pride Parade, San Francisco, June 28, 1987.
The Ukiah Daily Journal, June 28, 1987.
Notes to myself while in San Francisco.
Released June 30, 1987

The title cut put Los Lobos on the map. La Bamba was a huge hit.

Released on July 6, 1987.

My friend Tim gave me the 45 single. It’s a collector’s item. Touch of grey. Ha! It’s now a whole headful!

Released on July 7, 1987, Emmylou’s gospel album is one of my very favorites. I listen to this recording a lot.
Also released on July 7, 1987.

This song was fun.

My trip itinerary for my job interview at the University of Michigan Libraries.
Downtown Ann Arbor.
I stayed at The Campus Inn while in Ann Arbor for my job interview. It was just a few blocks away from the University of Michigan Undergraduate Library.
The Undergraduate Library, also affectionately known as the UGLi. It would be my home base for the next five and a half years.
I picked this up when I interviewed for the job in mid-July. While I missed the street fair this time around, I made sure to attend it in subsequent years.
Released on 7-24-87.
Ruben and I went to see Thaddeus and Sandahbeth one last time before we left Arizona.
My going away party at my brother Charles’s house. Shown left to right are me, Fred, my dad. Rudy, and Charles. My mom is seated.
Released July, 1987. Joan’s first album in the U.S. in over 8 years.
Released on 7/31/87. I’ve always had a weird fascination with vampire movies.
I got the job at Michigan! Wow.
My trip back to Ann Arbor to find housing. This was another quickie.
I didn’t have a lot of time to find housing on this quick trip.
I found a two bedroom apartment four miles away from campus at Spicetree Apartments, where I would live until 1992. It was halfway between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, in Pittsfield Township.
This concert took place shortly before I was to leave Arizona for Michigan. It had been five years since I’d last seen the Dead, and it would be another five before I would see them again in 1992. Fun times with Richard and the gang.
Released on 8-21-87, the day Brent and I left Nogales, Az. for Ann Arbor, Michigan.

The theme song to the movie…

This is the route we took to get to Ann Arbor. We were on the road from August 21 through the 24th.
Brent and I ended up living in a big apartment complex called Spicetree Apartments, on Washtenaw Ave, just east of Interstate 23, about halfway between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti in Pittsfield Township.
My first name tag at Michigan.
Check out my email address. This is my very first one. I didn’t have email in Nogales.
There sure was a lot to learn in this new job. The library system had over 20 divisional libraries scattered across the campus. Orientation would continue through the following semester.
Released on 9-18-87. Beautiful film.
The Law School was just south of the Undergraduate Library. I made friends with several students enrolled in the School and was able to spend time inside some of the offices located here.
These pro/con pamphlets covered controversial issues, and were distributed all over campus every month. Ann Arbor is home to the annual “Hash Bash”, which takes place every April 1st on the Diag, (in front of the Graduate LIbrary). Attitudes toward the drug have always been, at least since the 60’s, quite liberal.
Maria Hoopes, the librarian that I worked with during my internship in Library School sent me a thank you note for something I did for her. Can’t remember the details, but she notes she was happy that I finally got a good job…
Released on 10/1/87. My friend Doreen’s family was from the same neck of the woods where this was filmed in Denmark.
The interior of the Undergraduate Library.
Released 10-9-87

This album has so many great songs, but this one is memorable.

10-11-87

The NAMES project AIDS quilt.

The first display of the Project NAMES Aids Memorial Quilt was on the National Mall on October 11, 1987, during the National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights. Composed of nearly 2,000 panels, the Quilt was larger than a football field.

October 11, 1987
Ann Arbor was home to the original Borders Bookstore, on State Street, just a few blocks from the Undergraduate Library. I spent many hours and a lot of money there.
My friend Richard wrote to me several times in the Fall. This was one of his postcards. I thought his mention of Joe Biden being considered for the Supreme Court was very interesting.
Wow, what a movie! Faye Dunaway is amazing in this one.
This breezeway led to the Diag, a big courtyard area in the middle of campus. The Undergraduate Library was to the left of this building.
A concert preview from the Ann Arbor News
The Power Center, University of Michigan Campus.
She was a great performer, but the turnout was lousy, so she ended the concert early.

My favorite Mercedes Sosa song…

The Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library was right next door to the UGLi. This 8 story mess of a building was built in three sections at different times. The middle section, where the bookstacks were located was quite a challenge to navigate.
This was a groundbreaking work. It was released in October, 1987 by St. Martin’s Press.
Released 10-30-87

The song, “One More Try”, from this album was a gigantic hit.

November, 1987.
My colleague Darlene and I.
There were quite a few racial incidents on the Michigan campus in 1987. This one occurred later in the year, in November, while most of the others took place in the Spring.
The UGL reference desk. I spent many hours working here.
One of my projects during slow times at the reference desk was to review the reference resources in this book.

The following album by the Eurythmics was released on 11-9-87, and the song that follows, “I Need a Man”, was on it. Incredible stuff! I just love Annie Lennox!

Brent and I visited the Detroit Insitute of the Arts and saw this magnificent mural, titled “Detroit Industry” by Diego Rivera. It was just beautiful.
We also visited Greektown. The food there is amazing.
Trapper’s Alley was a multi-level mall in Greektown. It was filled with shops of all kinds and was a real pleasure to visit. It was right across the street from several excellent Greek restaurants.
My niece Estrella wrote to me just before Thanksgiving.
A postcard I sent to my parents in late November…
Released 11-24-87

This was one of the songs my mother just loved to sing.

Released 12-01-87

This is a wonderful tune.

Released on 12-8-87.
Released on 12-17-87.
A Christmas card from our friend Annie back home.
I put this mix tape together for my friend Richard Elias and sent it to him for his birthday and Christmas.

Here’s my blog entry, titled Mix Tape for Richard Elias, Christmas 1987 that includes all of the music from the tape.

My sister sent this to me for my birthday the following month. Her son Anthony wrote this letter to Santa…
Brent and I spent Christmas in Twin Lake with his family. Here I am getting out of our car. We had just arrived.
Brent and I opening presents in his sister Teresa’s living room, Christmas Day, 1987.
Brent reading to his nephew Joshua, Christmas 1987. .

Meanwhile, in Tucson, this happened. My first Christmas away from home and it snows!

I really missed my family. Here are a few photos taken at my parent’s house at Christmastime.

Christmas, 1987. My brother Charles is showing my mom a dance he learned while in Hawaii. He’s three sheets to the wind in this photo, according to my mom. She wrote me the following month for my birthday and sent this and the photos that follows to me.
My brother Charles, with an egg in his mouth. God only knows what he was doing…
Mom and Dad, Christmas 1987.
From my Nogales friends. They remembered me!

Joan Baez Live and On Film

Here are some videos of Joan Baez performing at various stages of her career and of other events where she is present.

Czechoslovakia 1989
San Francisco, 1991.
Joan Baez – All-Star 75th Birthday Celebration – Live 2016
February 2, 2017
There But For Fortune–Joan Baez in Latin America, 1982
Joan Baez Tribute at the 2020 Kennedy Center Honors

A note about recent changes to my website

Hello. This a quick heads up that I’ve reconfigured my website so that the first page you see is my Welcome To My World page, rather than my blog posts. If you are trying to find the posts I’ve written that are part of “My Life Story” series, you can go to the page with the same title and those posts will be listed there. Hopefully this will entice visitors to read my life story in chronological order rather than reverse chronological order. I encourage people who are interested in reading about my life to start at the beginning. That way things will make better sense, and it’ll give people a better understanding of how I met the people in my life and how my growth as a person has unfolded over time. Thanks for reading my stuff! I appreciate it. Feel free to leave comments as you see fit.

Peace,

Bob

My Life Story: 1986

Things to know up front:

You can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Click the back arrow key to return to the post.

Every chapter in My Life Story includes information about me, my work, my family and my friends. It also includes information about events that took place locally and nationally, etc. that I thought important enough to include. You’ll also find that I’ve included films, musicians and recordings/videos, in addition to books that were released in a given year.

While I have included many personal photos, most of the graphic content included below is borrowed from the Internet. I do not claim to own this material. I am just adding it for educational purposes. If the owners of any of the content in the “My Life Story” series want their stuff removed, I am happy to oblige. My email address is jrdiaz@arizona.edu. Thanks!

1986 was a year of ups and downs. It started off badly. My cousin Charlie Mendoza had just died in a tragic car accident in late December and my friend Dennis Krenek died on January 2. Charlie was only 19. He was my Aunt Helen’s son and was named after my brother Charles, who was in the Navy at the time he was born. He was a nice kid, very quiet and polite. My friend Dennis was only 33 when he succumbed to the AIDS virus. I had met him when I was with my first partner John back in 1978, and then later worked with him when I volunteered at the Southern Arizona Mental Health Center. He was an occupational therapist and a very good friend and mentor.  

In addition, at the beginning of the year, I was halfway through library school, still working at Fry’s and doing my radio show, and still with Brent, even though he continued to live and work up in Chandler. I kept very busy and juggled a lot of responsibilities. I missed Brent, but I made new friends early in the year. Thaddeus and Sandahbeth Spae showed up in my life in early January, and they hung out with me for about a month or so. They were musicians and gypsies, shady characters to some people, I’m sure, but nice people to me. Sandahbeth hailed from Virginia, had a gorgeous voice and could sing just about anything, from swinging jazz to blues to country music. Thaddeus was a hyper-active, multi-talented instrumentalist from the Northwest. Together they made an odd, but happy couple, and they called themselves “Amber Tide”. One day, on my birthday, I invited them to my parents house to hang out with me and my family, as my mom had made food and bought me a birthday cake. They graciously performed a few numbers, and we all had a blast. My mother was especially thrilled when Sandahbeth sang the Hank Williams tune, “Your Cheatin’ Heart” just for her. I can’t remember how long they stayed at my house. It might have been a month or more. I had to get them to move on eventually. My friend and landlord Ted thought they had stolen his son’s stereo equipment, as it went missing one day. Who knows? It’s possible they did it. I didn’t think so, but I was so naïve at the time, the possibility that these two roving gypsies would do something like that never crossed my mind.

I got increasingly jaded working at Fry’s. I took my job for granted and didn’t realize how good it was. I felt tied to the money as I was acquiring debt in the mid-80s, and I needed the job to pay my bills and keep a roof over my head. The company knew I was about to reach my 10-year anniversary, and thus close to getting vested with the Union’s pension plan, so I believe they were looking to get me fired. I was also active as a union steward and was busy recruiting new members, which didn’t help my cause at all. In mid-May, the unimaginable happened. I got fired for ringing out my own order during a break. One of the assistant managers, who didn’t like me, caught me doing this and informed me that it was against company policy and that he would see to it that I was terminated for it. I was devastated, because I didn’t have any savings. I was unemployed for a month and a half, I believe, until I finally found a job at Sears in the auto parts department in early July. It was humiliating. I hated that job, but it kept me alive until the end of the year.

While Brent and I were still a couple, it was hard maintaining a long distance relationship. We did our best to keep it together, especially when his parents came to town in April for a visit. We both spent a lot of time coming and going from Chandler to Tucson and back. After a while, he started having trouble at work, and he eventually was let go, so he moved back home from Phoenix sometime in May, if I’m not mistaken, and for a while we relied on his income as a tile setting assistant. Things were tight, but we managed.

During the first semester of 1986, I took two classes and had an internship at the UA Main library. The internship consisted of doing data entry for a project a librarian named Maria Hoopes, who happened to be my friend Peter Segura’s aunt, supervised. She was very nice and supportive, and one of the only librarians of color on the staff. The internship also consisted of spending time at the reference desk, helping students and others find materials for their research, and answering basic reference questions.  I learned a lot working at the reference desk, even though I didn’t feel the same level of support from some of the librarians with whom I worked while working there that I got from working with Maria.

My other classes were titled Reference Sources in the Humanities and An Introduction to Bibliography, in which I did quite well. For my class project, I compiled a comprehensive annotated bibliography on the works of Margaret Randall, a writer and poet who had lived in Mexico, Cuba and Nicaragua for many years, and who had recently returned to the U.S. She was currently under the threat of deportation because when she became a Mexican citizen, she gave up her American citizenship. The US government did not like her writings, either, which were all about life in socialist society. They thought her too dangerous and sought to keep her out of the country. I attended a reading she gave one night in late January at the U of A Social Sciences Auditorium, and decided that I wanted to find out more about her, so I took on the task of compiling all of her works and reviews about her works into one very long, annotated bibliography. I received an A on the project, and even got to correspond with Ms. Randall during the course of completing it. She was also able to use my bibliography in court as a record of her work. I was thrilled about that.

My classes in the Fall weren’t nearly as interesting as my Spring courses, but I got through them, and graduated in December with a 3.76 grade point average. My parents were ecstatic that I had completed yet another degree, and I was happy and relieved that I had finally finished the program. I was so lucky to have my parent’s support. They were always there for me. Even though I couldn’t handle living at home, I knew I could always pop over for a bite to eat, and my mom helped me with my laundry and ironing. She would always jokingly say to me, “mijito, I’m going to live another year, so I can see you graduate”. I wondered to myself, oh, oh, now what? She was ill at the time, and would only be with us just a short while longer, unfortunately.

Throughout the year, I continued to host the Chicano Connection Revisited on KXCI. I saved many of my playlists and have posted them all in the Chicano Connection Archive. I also have several cassette tapes of programs that I did this particular year, and will eventually get around to posting them in the archive too. Some of these shows include my buddy Richard Elias. He co-hosted several of them with me in the Fall. One of the highlights of the year was getting the opportunity to guest host for Ted Warmbrand’s show, “Music from the Living Loom”. Jamie Anderson, a local women’s music performer, and I collaborated on producing a gay pride Father’s Day show. Links to the show are included below. While the sound quality isn’t great, I’m glad I was able get this transferred from tape to digital format. I consider doing this show one of the highlights of my career in radio.

June 15, 1986: Music from the Living Loom, KXCI 91.7 FM, Tucson, “Gay Pride Show” featuring guest hosts Bob Diaz and Jamie Anderson. Part 1, Part 2.

KXCI sponsored lots of great concerts in 1986, many of which I attended, and my friend and landlord Ted Warmbrand also brought in several wonderful musical performers, so all in all I had a great time attending lots of concerts while continuing to build my ever growing home library of books and records. Some of the more memorable concerts I attended were the Bob Dylan/Tom Petty show up in Phoenix, Queen Ida and Her Zydeco Band at the El Casino Ballroom, and Stevie Wonder at McKale Memorial Center on the UA campus.

In December, I was able to find another temporary job, working as a cashier at the Food Conspiracy Co-Op. I liked this job much better than the one at Sears, but I kept them both until the end of the year. In mid-December, I started job hunting, and I found a job in Nogales as a public services and children’s librarian. I hadn’t really prepared myself to be a public librarian and was hoping to become an academic librarian, but this job was available and I needed one fast. I was hired before the year ended, so Brent and I packed everything up and were ready to move to Nogales by the beginning of January. A new chapter in our lives was about to begin.

I loved this calendar. It was locally produced.
My good friend Dennis died on January 2. He was 33 years old. This photo was taken back in 1978 when we were visiting Nogales with my then partner John.

Sandahbeth and Thaddeus Spae performed 3 songs for my friends and family at my birthday party. They sure were talented. To hear them sing, my previous blog post.
I ended up dropping two classes. The three that I kept were enough to keep me quite busy.
Information Sources in Humanities and Social Sciences was one of my favorite courses. It was taught by Dr. Don Dickinson. He was my favorite teacher.
The reference desk at the UA Main Library. Part of my internship consisted of spending time answering reference questions at “the desk”.
The card catalog was impressive. Staff spent hours each day updating it.
Margaret Randall
I attended this reading, and afterwards decided to do my Bibliography project on the works of Margaret Randall for my Bibliography Seminar class.
This performance was really fun. It was held in the Social Sciences Auditorium on the UA campus.
This event was wonderful theater. The comedy was spot on.
This was a sad day for the country. The whole world watched this tragedy live on television. The explosion occurred right after take off, and all of the crew members were killed instantly.
Bette Midler did several comedies in the mid-80s. This film was released on January 31, 1986
He’s baaacckk. He performed on 02/01/86.
This is one of my first attempts at putting together a research guide. 02/11/86. I think I got an “A” on it.
This album dealt with the current political situation. It was a scathing critique of the Reagan presidency. Released 02/18/86. The next song is one of my favorites.
Anita Baker had several hits with this album. It’s gorgeous.
Ted decided to feature himself in concert this year. He’s a wonderful storyteller and performer.
Brent’s parents visited in early April. They took this photo of us in front of our house.
This album was a big hit. It included the duet, “On My Own”, that Patti sang with Michael McDonald. Released on April 28, 1986
Released in the U.S. in April 1986. A wonderful gay love story.

Here are some of my exams, papers and projects I completed during the Spring, 1986 school semester:

02/11/86: Guide to Reference Materials in Jazz, LI S 571, Information Sources in the Humanities, Dr. Dickinson.

02/20/86: Exam in LI S 526, Introduction to Bibliography, Dr. Dickinson.

05/05/86: Margaret Randall: An Annotated Bibliography, in LI S 526, Introduction to Bibliography, Dr. Dickinson

Here is a letter I received from Margaret Randall after I sent her my completed bibliography project. Receiving this was the thrill of a lifetime. After all these years, she still remembers me too, as I was recently in touch with her on Facebook. She’s since written much more and continues her writing to this day.

I did well this semester. A few more classes, and I’d be done!
After working for Fry’s for 10 years, I was fired for ringing out my own order when on a break. The Union was able to ensure that I was vested so that I could receive a pension in later life, but even after having put in 10 years of time with the company, they couldn’t get me my job back. Another employee was later caught doing the same thing, and she was not fired.
This movie had some beautiful scenery. Released on May 23, 1986.
This grainy photo is the only one that exists that includes all of my brothers and sisters and me with our parents. I’m not sure exactly when it was taken. We had a great time, however.
I had just one semester left of Library School. I couldn’t wait to start my new career.
The great Benny Goodman passed away on June 13, 1986. These photos are from the Village Voice.
Jamie Anderson and I co-hosted a gay pride show (see links below) on KXCI together. She went on to become quite well known in the lesbian community and beyond, and over the years has released quite a few recordings.

Music From The Living Loom Show, Gay Pride/Father’s Day Program with guest hosts Bob Diaz and Jamie Anderson July 4, 1986. Part 1. (Audio only).

Music From The Living Loom Show, Gay Pride/Father’s Day Program with guest hosts Bob Diaz and Jamie Anderson, July 4, 1986. Part 2. (Audio only).

Every year during Gay Pride Month, a button was produced and distributed/sold to members of the gay community.
This was a great show. I remember hanging out with a guy named “Black Man Clay” afterwards and jamming with him. I sang all kinds of jazzy stuff and he harmonized and did rhythm. He was a great guy.
It took a while, but I finally found another job. I was hired at Sears and worked in the Auto Parts Dept. from July 1 until the end of the year. I was not a happy camper, but at least I was working.
My Sears name tag. We had to wear white shirts and blue pants on the job.
It took a while to warm up to this album. It wasn’t one of Bob’s best. Released on July 14, 1986.
This song is 11 minutes long. it’s a great tune, more like a long poem.
This was one of several letters I received from people who were incarcerated. My radio show was apparently a big hit with the inmates at the Wilmot prison facility.

This film was completed in 1984 and directed by John Jeremy, but it didn’t reach American audiences until early August, 1986, when it premiered on the PBS program, American Masters. That’s when I saw it. I managed to record the audio portion of the film and still have it on cassette. The entire film is now readily available on youtube and linked below.

Spike Lee’s first major directorial effort premiered on August 8, 1986, and was interesting, to say the least. I looked forward to what he would do next.
I started listening to Dwight Yoakam about a year or so after this was released on 08/19/86. I love his authentic, twangy voice.
Seems like everyone loved this album. My brother Charles would do some strange kind of meditation while it played. He tried to get my sister Becky and I to do it with him, and we just couldn’t. We kept laughing too much.
My last three classes…
This letter documents all the graduate courses I took while in the Library Science program. I was all set, and would soon have my Masters of Library Science in hand.
What a creepy movie. One you can’t stop watching…released on 09/19/86.

During the Fall semester, my last one as a student, I continued to host the Chicano Connection on KXCI. It was around this time that I got my good friend Richard to join me as co-host. We hosted several shows together, including the one noted below. One time we had our friends Mike and Denise join us, and they danced in the studio as we played Dylan’s Romance in Durango. Another time, Richard and I read the little “Know Your Rights” pamphlet on the air. We thought it was really cool to provide that kind of public service. We were both likely pretty lit most of the time, but had a blast and managed to get through each show without messing up too badly. Hanging out with Richard at this point in my life helped me get through the last couple of months of graduate school and working at Sears. By December, I had finished and moved on to other things. I sure miss those days when Richard and I had fun together on the radio. I have a recording or two of us on the air. I’m going to transfer them from tape to digital audio one of these days…

Aretha scores another big one. “Jimmy Lee” is one of my favorites. Released on October 1, 1986.
Released on October 10, 1986. I just love her Diana Ross impression.

Another Itzaboutime Production. My friend Ted stayed quite busy this year producing these wonderful local concerts.
Stamp Out AIDS was a national campaign established in 1986 to help people with AIDS. It raised money through the sale of stamps similar to Christmas and Easter seals. The money raised went to AIDS service providers across the country to fund buddy programs, food programs, hospice care, and other vital services.
I’m not a huge fan, but appreciate Holly Near’s work and music.
I loved this concert.
This concert was held on a revolving stage in McKale Memorial Center. It included African Dancers, and was quite a show!
Released on November 11, 1986.
Instead of having to write a Master’s thesis, we had comprehensive exams. I did just fine.
This is one of my very favorite albums. Released in November, 1986. Beautiful through and through.
I worked here for about a month at the end of the year as a temporary employee.

Here are some of my papers and exams from the Fall semester:

09/24/86: Exam #1, Research Methods, LI S 506, Dr. Hurt.

10/07/86: Exam, Academic Librarianship LI S 540, Dr. Dickinson.

10/10/86: Historical Analysis Paper, Research Method, LI S 506, Dr. Hurt.

10/22/86: Exam #2, Research Methods, LI S 506, Dr. Hurt.

12/08/86: Hispanics In Librarianship paper, Academic Librarianship, LI S 540, Dr. Dickinson.

12/10/86: Quantitative Analysis Paper, Research Methods, LI S 506, Dr. Hurt.

My last report card. I was so relieved and happy I made it to the end. Finally!
My unofficial college transcripts. It includes every course I ever took at the UofA.
Once I graduated, I was done with formal education for good. While I have attempted to go back to school to take a class here and there, I’ve never been able to stick it out.
I only recognize a few names on these lists, but these were my classmates in Library School.
Little did I know when I dropped out of high school ten years earlier that I would get this far. I was now ready to get to work doing something I really wanted to do…
My Dad and I in the McKale parking lot on the day I graduated.
My parents and I in our front yard the day I graduated. My dad was the only family member who attended both my UA graduations.
A graduation card from my big brother Charles.
A Christmas card from my buddy Richard Elias. I’ve saved every one he’s ever sent me.

Amber Tide playing at my birthday party, January, 1986

Back in 1986, when I was in Library School, I met a couple named Thaddeus and Sandahbeth Spae. They were musicians and they called themselves Amber Tide. I first saw them singing outside the steps of the Student Union bookstore on the U of A campus. They were from Seattle, if I’m not mistaken, and were living the gypsy life, going from town to town, playing music wherever they could and eeking out a living on the road. At the time, I lived next door to my friend Ted in a two bedroom adobe house with lots of space, and I invited them to hang out with me and told them they could park their camper in my driveway for a while. We became good friends, but after a while, Ted wasn’t too thrilled about them staying with me. They left after a few weeks, but we had some great times together. On one occasion I invited them over to my parent’s house to help me celebrate my birthday. My mom made a bunch of food and a lot of relatives showed up. Thaddeus and Sandahbeth gave a mini-concert for the family that day, and one of my brothers just happened to tape it. I’ve kept the cassette all these years, with the intention of one day transferring it to digital format. Well, that day has finally come. I bought myself a tape to mp3 converter a couple of months ago, and tonight decided I was going to figure out how to work the darned thing. Lo and behold I figured it out! What follows are the three songs my friends performed for me and my family. The last song, Your Cheatin’ Heart gets cut off early too, unfortunately. At any rate, I’m thrilled to be able to share this with my friends and family. Sandahbeth passed a way several years ago, but Thaddeus is still active and living up in the Seattle area.

Click on the text below to hear the performance.

Amber Tide at Bob’s Birthday party performing Slow Boat to China, Every Good Man Deserves a Good Woman and Your Cheatin’ Heart.

My Life Story: 1985

Things to know up front:

You can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Click the back arrow key to return to the post.

Every chapter in My Life Story includes information about me, my work, my family and my friends. It also includes information about events that took place locally and nationally, etc. that I thought important enough to include. You’ll also find that I’ve included films, musicians and recordings/videos, in addition to books that were released in a given year.

While I have included many personal photos, most of the graphic content included below is borrowed from the Internet. I do not claim to own this material. I am just adding it for educational purposes. If the owners of any of the content in the “My Life Story” series want their stuff removed, I am happy to oblige. My email address is jrdiaz@arizona.edu. Thanks!

Personal life

By the time I turned 26, most of my life since adolescence had been consumed with looking for that one person that I could be in love with and who would love me in return. There were lots of guys along the way who I fell for, but all of them, with the exception of one, were out of reach. That one person who I did connect with stayed with me for 8 months from the summer of 1979 to early 1980, and I was quite happy for the bulk of that time. I loved having a companion. I felt complete, and I had a real friend. When we broke up, I was devastated, but I was young and resilient, and I survived. Work and school kept me busy, and I had lots of friends to spend time with. I have to admit, however, that those years when I was single again, between the summer of 1980 and winter of 1984, were rough. I hated being alone, I hated the bar scene, I partied too much, and I hated myself for trying to pretend I was straight when I dated women. Then one day in the middle of December, 1984, Brent Bates showed up in my life, and we fell in love. He was nine months older than me and was from Muskegon, Michigan. I spent the next six years of my life with him. Little did we know when we met, where our relationship would take us.

Brent moved in within a month after we had met, so he must have been settled in with me by the end of January. The house on Manlove St. that I had moved into the previous summer was nice and roomy, and there was plenty of space for two people.  Once again, I felt that I had what I wanted—to be in a relationship with someone I loved. The first 8 months of our time together were exceptionally happy ones.  We got along well and while we came from different backgrounds and had a lot of differences, we did our best to communicate openly and to understand one another.  We also both enjoyed partying and had fun going to concerts and movies together.

Brent worked in the shipping/receiving department at Mervyn’s Department Store when we met. He was a conscientious person, with a strong work ethic. While he had just a high school education, he always sought to improve himself in one way or another. Within a couple of months after having moved in with me, he bought a new car, a little white Toyota Tercel. He was very proud of that car, and he took very good care of it. In July, we drove it across country to Michigan to visit his family. It was a fun trip, and my second road trip east. Unfortunately, I don’t remember many details about the trip there or the trip back. It’s all one big blur. However, I do remember our arrival. When we got to western Michigan, it was very late at night, and I was asleep. Brent decided to surprise me and he parked the car in a wooded area near Lake Michigan, outside of Muskegon. When I woke up I couldn’t believe my eyes. The scenery was beautiful, with gorgeous tall trees everywhere. And Lake Michigan! My god, it looked huge. It was like being near the ocean and quite a sight to see. I’ll never forget it.

When we got to Twin Lake, a small township north of Muskegon where Brent’s family lived, everyone was happy to see Brent again, and they were very nice to me and immediately treated me like family. We stayed with Brent’s parents, but at night, we slept in a small trailer away from the house. Brent’s dad was a bit weirded out about our relationship, but he came around in time. We hung out with his family for about a week, and while we were there, Brent took me to meet his uncles. One of them had a friend who lived on Duck Lake, which was just north of where we were staying. We went on a nice long boat ride while there. We also went out into the country and visited an old cemetery with graves from the 1800s. As I noted, Brent’s family was very nice, and while I found them to be a bit on the conservative side, they accepted our relationship and seemed happy that Brent had found a partner. Brent’s mom and his sister Teresa were especially kind to us.

About a month after our trip, Brent brought home two kittens one day that a  friend of his from work had given to him. They were very small, and irresistibly cute. We named them Cleopatra and Frederick, but called them Cleo and Freddie. They were so adorable. It was fun watching them play together. They got along well and  we kept them until we moved to Nogales in early 1987. It was nice having pets, and these particular cats shed very little cat hair, which was a relief. 

By September, Brent was presented with the opportunity to become a manager in the shipping and receiving department at Mervyn’s. The only catch was, he would have to move up to the Phoenix area to take the job. He decided to go for it, and before we knew it, he had moved out of our house and was living in an apartment up in Chandler. We visited each other regularly, but it was a difficult period for us. Being apart was a drag, to say the least, but we managed. We were both quite busy and that helped the time go by. By the following Spring, Brent realized that he wasn’t doing so well in his new job, and he came back home and landed another job working as a tile setter.

Work

I continued to work at Fry’s part time, about 25 hours a week, but I became increasingly unhappy with my job. I loved my co-workers, but the management staff were another story altogether. Some of them were nice, but there were others who were big jerks. After having worked for the company for nine years, I just couldn’t wait to leave. The job sure did pay well, however, and that’s why I stuck it out. I enjoyed having spending money. I’m not sure when I decided to become a union steward, but in the summer I attended an all day union stewards seminar. I worked hard to recruit new members to the union, something the management of the store wasn’t too thrilled about.

My education

I think I’ve always wanted to be a librarian. Ever since grade school, I would love to go to the library. I loved to read, plain and simple. My sister Becky would sometimes take me with her to the public library when I was a kid, and there also used to be a bookmobile that would park on the corner of 22nd and Cherrybell once a month on Tuesdays, and I would walk to it or get a ride to visit it whenever I could. In junior high, I would have joined the library club, but that was not something “boys” were supposed to do, so I bowed to the peer pressure and didn’t bother. In high school, however, I volunteered in the library at lunchtime and after school, and became friends with the librarians who worked there. One of them, Ms. Koster, bought me a brand new copy of the Joan Baez songbook as a thank you gift for having volunteered and another, Jeannette Bahr, helped me get a job at the UA library my freshman year. My English/newspaper teacher, Jane Cruz, had also enrolled in library school around 1975, and I was intrigued by her stories about someone named Dr. Trejo and the program she was in, the Graduate Library Institute for Spanish Speaking Americans.

I had received my BA in 1982, and for a couple of years, while I still took courses here and there , I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do. I tried the graduate program in sociology , but as I’ve previously noted, things didn’t work out. I finally decided that I would try something else, and enrolled in Library School late 1984. I got accepted, and started the program in mid-January, 1985, determined this time around to complete the program and graduate, and to find a job as a librarian either in a public library or an academic library as quickly as possible. By the time I entered the program, Dr. Trejo had retired and the GLISSA Program had folded. I was one of just a handful of minorities in the School when I began my studies.

So there I was, getting ready to pick my first few courses in my new program. I have to admit, I didn’t know what to expect as far as what was offered was concerned. I knew that librarians built collections and helped people with their questions, but I didn’t know much else about what librarians actually did or what they had to know to do their jobs. It was a good thing that the school provided some guidance on course choices. There were required courses and elective courses. I decided to tackle the required ones first, so for the first semester, my classes were: Foundations of Library Science, Collection Development, and Basic Reference. The foundations class was supposed to cover the history of libraries and key issues and topics within the profession, such as ethics and community analysis. The basic reference course covered the tools one uses to answer factual questions, as well as tools that help people find more in-depth information. The collection development course covered things like the publishing industry, censorship, how books are reviewed, collection development policies and other topics. I found all three of these classes to be very interesting. There were exams throughout the semester. The ones for basic reference were held in the Central Reference department in the UA Main Library. The professor for the class was Dr. Donald Dickinson. He became my favorite teacher, and I took several courses from him while in Library School. I didn’t keep any documentation for the basic reference class,  but I did keep all of my assignments from my other two classes. They were both taught by a woman named Gladys Stalschmidt, a recently hired professor. Unfortunately, she  had difficulty maintaining control in her classes. There were two women, in particular, who talked incessantly in our Foundations class, wasting everyone’s time with their long, boring stories. They drove everyone crazy. Many students complained about Professor Stalschmidt’s inability to control the class, and as a result, she didn’t last long at the school. I really liked her, however. It’s too bad some people had such big mouths. They ruined the class for a lot of people.

My assignments for both classes are available here:

I ended up getting all A’s this particular semester. I was off to a great start.

In early May, the Mexican American Studies department held a convocation for Mexican American students. The guest speaker was the legendary activist, Jose Angel Gutierrez. In the late Sixties, he founded “La Raza Unida”, a political party in south Texas that had quite an impact in communities along the Rio Grande. The party spread to other regions of the Southwest, including the Tucson area. Gutierrez also authored several books, and was a revered leader in the Chicano movement.

When summer rolled around, I decided to do volunteer work at the Valencia branch of the Tucson Public Library. It was an interesting experience, but I didn’t put in as many hours as I would have liked. I also tried to get involved with the Tucson Lesbian and Gay Pride committee, but I dropped out after just a couple of meetings. The summer went by quickly. I received great news by summer’s end, and that was that I was being given a lot of financial aid. I was quite excited and humbled at the same time. I was, for a change, getting recognition for doing well in my studies.

In August, I enrolled in several classes, including Introduction to Information Science, Research Methods, the History of the US , Library Management and  Cataloging. By October, however, I reduced my course load by dropping the research methods class and the history class. With Brent gone, I felt depressed, and I didn’t do as well in school as I could have. I even missed an important AZLA meeting, where I was supposed to receive the Alice B Goode Scholarship. Believe it or not, I really enjoyed taking cataloging. The professor, Margaret Maxwell, was a real pro, and she knew her stuff, and taught it well. My management class was taught by a lady named Helen Gothberg. She was very nice, and I did well in the class. My other class, Intoduction to Information Science, was essentially all about computers, which were just starting to catch on in the wider world. It was at this time that pc’s and word processors were starting to become more affordable. While I didn’t care for the class, I did learn the fundamentals of using databases, spreadsheets and word processing software.

Here are some of my management class papers from the Fall semester:

I ended the semester getting A’s in cataloging and management, and a B in Info. Science. One year down, one year to go!

Radio

When the year started, I was still hosting the Friday morning music mix and I was running the board for my friend and landlord, Ted Warmbrand, who hosted a program on Saturdays titled “Music from the Living Loom.” Ted was a challenge to work with at times, but he has always been a good hearted soul, so I didn’t mind helping him out. I loved doing my morning mix show, as I could play both Latin music and music in English, spanning a wide array of genres. There were guidelines in place, of course, as to what we should emphasize (lots of contemporary jazz. I called it elevator music), but we were also given a lot of freedom to play lots of different types of music. I particularly enjoyed adding leftist leaning, political music to my mixes, and found that overall, people really liked what I had to offer. I even got to produce a couple of special tribute shows, one on Aretha Franklin and another on Billie Holiday. I also came out on the air around this time. I vividly recall playing a song called “Glad to be Gay” and saying during the introduction, “I dedicate this to all of my brothers and sisters”. As luck would have it, one of my own siblings was listening at the time too! If he didn’t know I was gay before, he knew at that moment, that’s for sure!

Unfortunately, over time, the management of the station started to crack down on those of us who were stretching the boundaries of what was considered “acceptable” for daytime programming. One day sometime in March, I decided to play a tune titled, “Shoot First”, by Judy Collins. It’s an anti-gun song. After the show, I was called into the program manager’s office, and he let me know that he did not approve of my musical choices that day. I had also been getting harassed by Roger, another station manager, for bringing in my own music. That was enough for me. I decided right then and there to hang up my headphones, and I quit, which in hindsight was a bad move, but I was stubborn and didn’t like the idea of not having creative license to play what I thought I should be able to play. I had other things going on anyway, such as work and school. I have kept several cassette tapes of my shows from this time period. At some point, I’ll have them transferred and included in my Chicano Connection archive. Here are some of my playlists from the time:

My time away from the station didn’t last too long. One night at a street party, I ran into the station manager, Paul, and he asked me to come back to host one of the Thursday night Latin slots,  from 11pm to 1am. While the hours weren’t great,  I was happy to be able to go back, so on June 11, 1985, I started back up again at KXCI and called my new show “The Chicano Connection Revisited”. I would continue doing this show until the end of 1986, when I graduated from Library School.

Friends and family

I spent most of my free time with Brent during the first eight months of the year, so I didn’t get to see my old friends too often. I really missed them, but being with Brent, working, doing the radio show and going to school took up all of my time.

Sometime in the middle of the year, my good friends Ron and Jane moved with their two children to Washington DC, where Ron had landed an important position with the Catholic Church. I attended their going away party. It would be years before I would see them again. I regret that I had drifted away from them after high school, but I was young and immature, and distracted by lots of other things along the way. I’m just glad I didn’t lose complete touch with them. I would always try to see them when they visited Tucson, but those times seemed few and far between. In recent years, however,I’ve visited them in Washington a couple of times and they’ve also come to Tucson to visit. Today, I feel just as close to them as I did while in high school. As I think back on it, they were always there for me. I just didn’t realize it.

In July, my dad’s eldest brother Raul, died. He was the only one of my grandparent’s children to have been born in Mexico. He and his family lived in Superior since the 30s. His wife Prudence had died the year before. I wrote a blog post about him a while back: https://bobdiaz.net/2020/02/19/happy-birthday-tio-raul.

My buddy Richard and I stayed in touch throughout our lives, but our friendship wasn’t the same in the mid-80s. He had become very involved in sports and was on a softball team, and unlike me, he was just crazy about the Grateful Dead and was always going to their concerts. We clashed more often than not. We never stopped being friends, however, and we found time every now and then to hang out together.

My two buddies Scott and Tim each got married in 1985. Scott, the guy I had a giant crush on and for whom I wrote the song, “My Kind”, married a young woman named Penny Aldridge, who he had been dating for a year or so. I missed his wedding because I was traveling home from my Michigan trip with Brent, but I did get to participate in Tim’s wedding as a member of his wedding party. He married a woman named Chris Fox, a fellow UA student. The festivities were held in Trail Dust Town, and we all had a blast.

Scott and Tim both became police officers with the Tucson Police Department after college. What an amazing coincidence! I never dreamed Tim would become a cop. He just didn’t seem like the type. He was such a freak, with all that long hair, his guitar playing and his love for partying. He even moved on from the police department and went to work for the FBI, which was even more shocking. While I knew that Scott liked hunting and shooting guns, it came as a huge surprise to learn that he too had joined the police force. I lost touch with both of them long ago, but I think of them often. They were good guys. I miss them both, but so many years have gone by, I wonder how we’d get along now.

Another death in the family occurred in late December. My cousin Charlie Mendoza died from burn wounds he received from a car accident that took place near 22nd and Country Club on December 27. His brother Richard, who was driving the car Charlie was in, survived. Charlie was only 19. It was a terrible tragedy.

I didn’t spend much time with my friend Dennis in 1985. Unfortunately, he got sick, and by January of 1986, had passed away. He was a great friend, and we had a lot of fun together. His death was heartbreaking. He was the second of my friends who died of AIDS. The other was Leonard Brown. I had met both of them through John, my ex, back in 1979. They were real characters, and I think of them often.

My mom and dad were doing well at this time in their lives, although my mom still struggled with her aches and pains. My dad retired from the mines, and he and mom spent most of their time taking care of their grandchildren and great grandchildren. By 1985, my niece Belisa had three kids, Michelle had one, and my brother Rudy also had two. Fred’s daughter Edessa also spent a lot of time with my parents. Our family would continue to grow as the years went by. Becky and I were the only two who didn’t have children, but there were already plenty of grandkids to keep my parents busy.

Other stuff:

We were in the midst of the Reagan era. He had just won re-election at the end of 1984, so we were in for another four years of terrible fun.  His administration was corrupt to the core and there were indictments and resignations taking place throughout the year. Reagan also continued to ignore the AIDS crisis, which hit Tucson pretty hard in 1985. He was also secretly funding the Contras, and a big scandal broke out that would continue for another two years.

On the bright side, there were lots of concerts that took place in Tucson that Brent and I both attended, and there were some great movies that came out as well, along with a number of great albums by some of my favorite artists. The following visual chronology includes many of these as well as other memorable events, places and topics.

A photographic/graphic chronology of events and activities for the year:

Brent and I had just met in mid-December, 1984. In this photo we are visiting a couple of his friends at Christmastime.
My 1985 War Resisters League Planner.
I hosted an Aretha Franklin special on KXCI on January 13. It was a retrospective look at her career. I loved putting it together.
A birthday card from my friends Bruce and Liz. Bruce and I were in the Teatro together.
This was released on January 15. I love this album. Fogerty’s comeback.
My photo as it appeared on my University of Arizona identification card.
My Spring ’85 list of courses.
This was required reading in my Foundations class.
Another requred text.
One of the first things we were encouraged to do was to join the American Library Association. Students memberships were very inexpensive.
Not another Charlie King concert! Oh yes, once a year, every year. This one took place on February 8, 1985. Another Itzaboutime! Production.
These guys are amazing. I played their music all the time on my radio show. They came to Tucson on February 23, 1985, courtesy of KXCI. The following song, Chain Gang, appeared on my favorite Persuasions album, We Came to Play
Released on March 1, 1985. Love this silly film! It took me a while, however, to see it. John Waters, what a nutcase!
Released on 03/07/85.
One of the last shows I hosted before I quit KXCI was a tribute show featuring the music of Billie Holiday. I just loved this woman to pieces.
I played this song on my radio show and dedicated it to all my brothers and sisters. There’s nothing like outing yourself on the radio!
Joan Baez, mid-80s.
Joan Baez performed two benefit concerts on April 4 at the Temple Emmanuel. This was the third time I got to see her live.
Brent and I attended our very first mariachi conference concert. Linda Ronstadt and Mariachi Cobre were the featured artists, if I’m not mistaken. We bought a copy of this poster in commemoration of the occasion. In the coming years, especially after my mom died, I would become a huge fan of the genre.
Another Ted Warmbrand, Itzaboutime production. I loved this concert, held on April 27, 1985.
This is one of the funniest comedy albums ever made. Released on 05.01/85.
The great Tito Puente, doing his thing.
I remember this well. Tito Puente played at the Randolph Park Bandshell in the middle of the day. My friends and I danced our butts off.
In the kitchen at home.
I did well this semester.
Jose Angel Gutierrez spoke at the UofA Mexican American Studies Convocation on May 10, 1985.
Gutierrez was a great speaker. I’m glad I attended this.
It was good to be back on the air after an absence of several months. I started back up on June 11, 1985, and hosted the Chicano Connection Revisited from 11pm to 1am on Thursday nights.

Here is a playlist from July 4, 1985.

This was released on 6/15/85. Critics, for the most part, hated it. I loved it, especially the song “Clean Cut Kid” and “Dark Eyes”.
I attended this day-long seminar. It was very informative.
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My name tag for the seminar.
My Union steward pin. I still have it.
I tried to get involved with the Tucson Gay and Lesbian Pride Committee around this time. I saved a copy of the bylaws. The picnic at Himmel Park, now in its second year, was a blast. Brent and I went together.
I received this in recognition of the time I spent volunteering at the Valencia Branch of the Tucson Public library during the summer of 1985.
I was one of the first dj’s in Tucson to play the song Freeway of Love from the album, “Who’s Zoomin’ Who?”. I started spinning it as soon as the album was released on July 9, 1985. What a great record. Aretha was back with a vengeance!
Money for the Fall semester….Yippee!
Live-Aid was a huge affair. It was broadcast on July 13 first in Britain and then later in the U.S. I watched it at my parent’s house since I didn’t own a tv.
My dad’s oldest brother, Raul Diaz, died in July. He was a kind man, and smoked cigars constantly. He also played the harmonica and owned a bakery in Superior at one point. In later years, he delivered milk to the entire community.

For more information about my tio Raul and his family check out the blog entry I wrote for my tio on his birthday in 2020.

My uncle’s obituary.
The priest did a terrible job of eulogizing my uncle. I’ll never forget how bad it was. My uncle was a great man, and deserved much better.
Brent’s car looked just like this. We drove it to Michigan and back in July.
Our route was something like this.
I’d never heard of Muskegon before I met Brent. It’s on the western side of the state, right near Lake Michigan.
Brent’s parents lived just north of Muskegon in Twin Lake.
Brent and I visiting his family in Michigan.
One of Brent’s uncles had a friend who lived right on the lake. He took us boating one day. It was gorgeous.
I loved this film. It was released on July 26, 1985. I read the book too.
Duo Guardabarranco, from Nicaragua. While Brent and I were in Michigan, my friend Ted let them stay at our house. They broke my stereo, if I remember correctly. I had to buy a new needle for it. Oh well. They were amazing performers. This is a beautiful record and was released either in late ’84 or early ’85.
Original flyer for the concert.
This was the first time I’ve ever heard Guardabarranco. My friend Ted brought them to town. This was the first of many visits to Tucson. From the Az Daily Star, August 6, 1985.
I love Neil’s country flavored records. He was heavily criticized for saying something nice about Ronald Reagan at the time. I didn’t care. I loved the record. Released on 08/12/85.
This was my textbook for cataloging.
Another textbook for cataloging.
Released on 8/21/85. I didn’t see it until years later. I have always loved Jane Fonda.
I remember attending this concert. I had to leave early because I had the flu or a cold. Can’t remember exactly. I was so bummed that I couldn’t stay for the whole thing.
My two babies.
A major earthquake hit Mexico City on the morning September 17, 1985. It was a strong one, of 8.0 magnitude, and it killed at least 5,000 people. Hundreds of buildings collapsed and thousands more were damaged. Cost of the damage was estimated to be in the billions of dollars. It was a major tragedy.
Willie Nelson, Neil Young and John Mellancamp put this annual fundraiser together. The first one was held on 09/22/85.
One of the scholarships I received while in Library School.
Released 10/04/85.
This novel, by E.L. Doctorow, was released on October 12, 1985. I read both this one and Ragtime. Great stuff.
This great duet was released on 10-21-85. A live video performance follows. These two sure had great chemistry.
I missed the ceremony where this was supposed to be presented to me.
Released on 10/30/85. A great album.

A great song….

I loved this book. It was published on November 1, 1985.
Released on November 7, 1985. One of the best Dylan retrospectives to ever be released.

Here’s one of my favorite Dylan tunes from the above anthology. It was recorded live at the Royal Albert Hall .

This was a wonderful concert.
Hanging out at home.
Premiered on television on November 11, 1985. A very sad movie. It helped break the silence about the AIDS crisis.
Such a disappointment. My brother Charles and I took our mom to this concert and it was over before we knew it. What a drag.
No kidding.
I was a member of the wedding party. This was the second and last wedding in which I ever participated.
This is one of my all-time favorite comedy albums. Ms. Midler performs “Fat As I am” in the video that follows.
I missed Brent, and I didn’t do as well in school this semester as in the Spring. But I got through it anyway. One year down, one to go…
What a movie! Released on 12/18/85.
A Christmas letter from my friend Jane Cruz. This was hers and Ron’s first Christmas away from Tucson.
A Christmas card from my next door neighbor, Maria Netherton. She was a sweet older lady who worked at Haskell Linen Supply, just up the street, for many, many years.
My cousin Charlie Mendoza died in late December from burn wounds he received in a tragic car accident. He was only 19 years old.

My Life Story: 1984

Things to know up front:

You can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Click the back arrow key to return to the post.

Every chapter in My Life Story includes information about me, my work, my family and my friends. It also includes information about events that took place locally and nationally, etc. that I thought important enough to include. You’ll also find that I’ve included films, musicians and recordings/videos, in addition to books that were released in a given year.

While I have included many personal photos, most of the graphic content included below is borrowed from the Internet. I do not claim to own this material. I am just adding it for educational purposes. If the owners of any of the content in the “My Life Story” series want their stuff removed, I am happy to oblige. My email address is jrdiaz@arizona.edu. Thanks!

For this segment of “My Life in Pictures,” I’ve decided to include the bulk of the text at the beginning of the post. Photos and graphics follow.

I was a busy guy in 1984. I continued, as in previous years, to work 25 hours a week at Fry’s. I was also enrolled in graduate school at the University, hosted two weekly radio shows on KXCI, and continued to participate in Teatro Libertad. While I knew that graduate school should take priority, it didn’t. The bulk of my energy, aside from working, was spent preparing and hosting my two radio shows each week, and in attending Teatro Libertad meetings, where we planned and rehearsed for a number of local performances and our next big production, La Vida Del Cobre, Acts I and II. I also continued to find time to go out and have fun, attending lots of concerts, going out dancing, and partying with my friends.

WORK:

By 1984, I had already worked for Fry’s Food Stores for eight years. I’d been a cashier and stocker since the age of 19. The pay was very good, and while working with the public could be challenging at times, for the most part, I enjoyed meeting new people each day, and I generally got along well with my co-workers. The actual work itself, while at times physically demanding, was easy. I was a very fast cashier and could bag groceries with lightning speed. In the summer, I worked on the night crew stocking the shelves, but it was difficult keeping a night schedule, as I often had daytime obligations. On top of that, some of the guys I worked with were homophobic jerks, but I managed,  although I must admit, there were times when I hated my job. I knew I needed to keep it for a while longer, however, at least until I was done with school or had found something better. My annual earnings at Fry’s, for part time work, weren’t bad. By the end of the year I had earned $15,000. I spent it all on rent, food, bills, books, records and fun. I didn’t save a dime, unfortunately.

SCHOOL:

I had been accepted into the graduate program in Sociology the previous year, and while I had enrolled in a class called Social Psychology in the Fall of 1983, I ended up withdrawing from it. I don’t even remember attending it. I tried again in the Spring, and this time took a class called Political Sociology, with a teacher named Doug McAdam. Our big task for the semester was to write a dissertation-level research proposal. Dr. McAdam wanted us to have experience doing this kind of work, as we would all have to write such a proposal at some point in the future, that is if we wanted to pursue our PhDs. I chose to study the American Indian Movement, and I ended up writing a research paper, missing the mark on the assignment altogether. Dr. McAdam was a nice guy, and he ended up giving me a B in the course. I guess I wasn’t exactly sure what he had meant by a “research proposal”. I was disillusioned by the end of the semester, and ended up dropping out of the program altogether. My heart wasn’t into it anyway. I was too busy with my other activities to take my studies seriously. What can I say? That was the truth.

In the Fall, I tried taking a mechanics course at Pima College, but quickly dropped it after just two sessions. There were no teachers in sight. I guess I had enrolled in a self-study course or something. It was an awful, but brief experience, and I got the heck out of there as quickly as I could.

By the end of the year, I made up my mind that I wanted to be a librarian once and for all so I applied to the graduate program in library science and got accepted. I was given several scholarships, along with financial aid so this time around I didn’t have to pay for my education out of my own pocket like I had when I was an undergraduate. I couldn’t wait to start school again in January.

KXCI

Most of my attention went into preparing and hosting my two radio shows, the Chicano Connection, which aired on Thursday nights from 7 to 9pm, and the morning music mix, which aired from 9am to noon on Friday morning. I devoted approximately10 hours a week altogether to this work, both in prep time and in being on the air. My shows became quite popular, and I would receive letters from fans as well as get lots of phone calls while on the air. On Saturdays, I would help another host, Victor Blue, with his bluegrass show by “running the board” for him. He was a very nice man, and I enjoyed the music. Those of us who did this work for other volunteers were known as “techies”.

During the summer, Kathy Hannon, who I knew from Fry’s as the representative from the United Food and Commercial Workers union, wrote a  newspaper article about me for the union newspaper. In the article, she mistakenly noted that I had taken the KXCI radio course the previous summer for free. I actually paid nearly $500 to attend the course. I was earning good money at Fry’s at the time, and was able to afford it. It was a great investment in my continuing education.

Sometime in June, I decided to stop hosting the Chicano Connection, and just focus on the morning music mix. I can’t remember exactly why. I think it had to do with the fact that I didn’t have that much Latin music at the time, and the station’s collection was sorely lacking. It would take a while for me to build my own collection of Latin music, but I did, slowly but surely.

Later in the year, I went up to Phoenix to a Buffy Sainte Marie concert that she did as a benefit for the Heard Museum. One of the station staff members, Martha Van Winkle, invited me along, as she was scheduled to interview Ms. St. Marie after the concert. When the interview started, I just took right over and talked my head off. I was a huge fan of Ms. St Marie’s,  and we had a great interview. I’m not so sure that Martha thought so. It was supposed to be her interview, not mine. I just couldn’t help myself!

I have compiled all of the playlists from this time period on my Chicano Connection Archive page. They can be accessed here.

TEATRO LIBERTAD

In the first few months of the year, I spent an average of 8 hours a week in meetings and rehearsal with the members of Teatro Libertad. In the Spring, we performed at various community events and also co-wrote part II of La Vida Del Cobre. We performed the entire play, Act I and Act II at various places in Tucson, and later in Ajo and Clifton. Our performance at the El Pueblo Neighborhood Center on May 19 was attended by a packed house, and we received a resounding standing ovation at the end of it. It was such a great feeling and we were in seventh heaven.  We had put our hearts and souls into our work, and it had paid off nicely. A week after our El Pueblo performance we traveled to Santa Barbara, California to perform the play at TENAZ, an international theater festival sponsored by a California group called  El Teatro de la Esperanza. Unfortunately, we forgot part of our props back in Tucson (our slides), and we basically bombed, because we were upset over having forgotten them and there was tension between some of the individuals in the group. A critique of the play was given the following day, and we were subject to some rather harsh feedback that included some very mean comments by a former member of our group. It was unnerving and depressing. We didn’t even have an opportunity to respond. That evening, some of us took off to the beach, while others attended a Poncho Sanchez concert that the festival organizers were sponsoring, and we let all of our frustrations out by dancing the night away. The trip home was sad,  and seemed to take much longer than the trip to the festival. We were crushed.

But as they say, the show must go on. Our performances in Ajo and Clifton in June  went well,  and the copper strikers enjoyed the play, especially Act II, a lot. In early July, during the first year anniversary of the strike, we were in Clifton again. What was supposed to be a happy occasion, a rally and a picnic, turned into a riot, however, and the Department of Public Safety ended up shooting tear gas into a crowd of protesters. I was there too, and got hit by the tear gas. I had never experienced being tear gassed before, and my eyes were burning so badly, I wanted to gouge them out. I went running through the street in search of water so that I could drench my eyes in it and I finally found a hose and turned the water on full blast, rinsing my eyes out as much as I could. It didn’t help much. The burning in my eyes was an awful sensation, and I’ll never forget how painful it was. I wasn’t even participating in the rock throwing, although some of my friends were.

By September, we had decided to organize a festival called “Bedtime for Bonzo” where we featured a skit called The Beggar and the Beast. We had first performed this skit at Café Ole, and then outdoors at Carrillo Elementary School. I played the role of the beggar and was planning on continuing to play it at the Bedtime for Bonzo program until I injured my foot at Fry’s. I could hardly walk, much less run around on a stage. Someone else in the group ended up playing the part of the beggar.

In November, R.G. Davis, founder of the San Francisco Mime Troupe came to town and did a workshop with the Teatro in November. We were finally getting some professional training, and I learned a great deal in just one day. However, by December I had announced that I was leaving the group. My friends Juan and Teresa had left earlier in the year, and I felt it was time to move on too. I had a great time being a member of the Teatro, and made some lifelong friends along the way, but I needed to get serious about my education. I was so tired of working at Fry’s.   

PERSONAL LIFE

My personal life continued to be a drag for most of the year. I dated a woman named Ann for about a month early in the year, but finally just told her I was gay. I just couldn’t stand lying to her any longer. She immediately thought I had given her AIDS, but of course, that wasn’t true because I never caught the virus. It was an awful time to be gay, that’s for sure. Gay men were dying by the thousands and the Reagan administration did absolutely nothing about it. It was tragic. At the gay pride picnic at Himmel Park in June, I ran into my old friend Leonard, who John had introduced me to back in 1979, and he did have the virus. He was one of the first of my friends to catch it. He ended up moving to Bisbee and eventually passed on. Other friends that were around at the time included Lee, Scott, Peter, Tim, Dennis, Frank, Richard, my Fry’s friend Debbie Spedding, and my Teatro friends. I partied some with Richard and we went to several concerts together, but he had become a sports fanatic, and we weren’t as close at this time in our lives as we had been before. I continued to go out a lot and I partied way too much. I was so lonely, and longed to meet someone I could have a steady relationship with. That’s all I wanted. As luck would have it, in December I did end up meeting someone. His name was Brent, and he was a tall blonde guy from Michigan. A woman named Ila Meyer, a lesbian folk singer who I had heard perform at the Shanty, introduced us. Just like that, we started dating and before we knew it, he moved in and we were a couple. Our relationship lasted for six years.

I attended lots of concerts and bought lots of records in 1984. I was lucky to have such a good job and be able to afford it all. Some of the concerts I attended and music I bought are included below. I’ve also included a few other memorable events.

My 1984 calendar/planner.
A birthday card from my friends Scott and Penny. I turned 25 on January 15th.
Laura Nyro released this on January 15. I couldn’t have asked for a better birthday present! What a beautiful recording. The tile cut follows.

In the early 80s, these photos of Laura Nyro used to hang on the wall in my apartment on 7th St. The color photo is from an older magazine. I think it was LIFE or LOOK. Don’t remmber now. The black and white one is from “The Laura Nyro Songbook”.
El Norte, released on 1/27/84. A Gregory Nava production. I saw it when it first premiered in Tucson.
This was released some time in January, 1984. My friend Frank bought it for me when he went to France. It wasn’t available in the U.S. at the time. It went platinum in France. Joan Baez was more popular in Europe than she was here. Me and Bobby McGee follow. Joan had an affair with Kris Kristofferson in the early 70s. It probably contributed to the break up of her marriage to David Harris.
Brian Bromberg and I were in the school orchestra at Mansfeld Jr. High together back in 1972-1973. He and his older brother David both had successful music careers. I forgot I had attended this concert until I found the program recently.
A postcard from my friend Pamela when she went back home to visit her family in Bolivia.
The country was in crisis.
Charlie King has been performing every year in Tucson since the early 80s. I attended many of his shows back then, including this one.
My first ever Los Lobos concert was in many ways the best. It was in a bar with a great party atmosphere.
Los Lobos performed on March 3, 1984 at the Sundance Saloon, a classic 22nd St. dive bar that bit the dust long ago. This would be the first of many, many shows I’ve attended. My favorite rock band! The song Let’s Say Goodnight appeared on the group’s recording, And A Time To Dance.
I attended this concert with my sister Becky. Betty Carter was a living legend, one of the greatest jazz improvisers ever.
While the members of Teatro Libertad spent most of the Spring working on our play La Vida Del Cobre, we found time to perform out in the community. Unfortunately, the manager of the Foothills Mall didn’t like that we were singing pro-union songs, so she stopped the show and had us thrown out. What fun!
Marvin Gaye died on April 1, 1984.

This song by the Pointer Sisters was released as a single on 4/11/84. It first appeared on the album Break Out the previous year.

I had just seen Jesse Jackson a few month before this particular visit. I enjoyed his first visit better. It was in a baptist church in Sugarhill and the church ladies were out in full force, and every one of them wore a hat!

Jackson’s campaign was very inspirational, but our country was not quite yet ready for a Black president.
Some reporters are jerks.
I loved this concert. All the local progressive community and political organizations showed up for it. It was “leftie” heaven. This is where I first heard the tune, “Vamos A Andar” by the great Cuban songwriter Silvio Rodriguez. The writer of the article below didn’t think it was so great.
I still have this beautiful postcard.
Grupo Raiz was one of many groups from Chile who performed “la nueva cancion” or new song. Their tune, “Companero” follows.
Some reporters are real jerks.

My only paper this semester was in Sociology 510, Political Sociology, with Professor Doug McAdam. The title of it was “Political Process and the American Indian Movement: A Research Proposal.” I missed the mark, and got a B on it. This would be my last effort at writing anything related to the study of sociology. I soon dropped out of the program.

My last report card for the year. The following January, I enrolled in the Masters Program in Library Science at the University of Arizona, fulfilling a desire I’ve had since I was in high school, to be a librarian.
My mom, Josephine Diaz, on Mother’s Day, May 13, 1984.
Teatro member Scott Egan wrote this for the Guardian, a leftist newspaper with international circulation.
Act II of La Vida Del Cobre was ready to be unveiled. It dealt with the current copper strike.
This came out the day of our show at the El Pueblo Neighborhood Center. This was the first time my name and photo ever appeared in the newspaper. My family thought I’d hit the big time!
Scott Egan and Juan Villegas in the first scene of Act I of La Vida Del Cobre.
Music was a big part of our performances. This was my favorite part of being in the Teatro.
Fan mail.
I vividly recall reading this during the trip the Teatro took to Santa Barbara in May. It was a very lengthy book. A while later, when I was just about finished with it, one of my “friends” said, “I didn’t think you were really reading that thing.” I supposed they thought I had brought it along as a prop or something, to make me appear like I knew how to read. Some friend…
The first and only time I’ve ever been to Santa Barbara. It’s a beautiful town.
The Teatro had performed at this festival before, but this was my first and only TENAZ experience.
A schedule of performances. We performed La Vida Del Cobre on Saturday May 26, at 7pm. Another Tucson group, Teatro Chicano, performed the night before. Their play was titled, “Una Vez En Un Barrio de Suenos”.
We stayed at a fancy private Christian College in the hills above Santa Barbara. It was a beautiful setting.
Part of the program…
I remember running along the beach with my friend Pernela. I could run up to six miles at a stretch at the time. Not anymore!
You win some, you lose some. This performance was not one of our best.
This is La Casa de La Raza, where we saw Poncho Sanchez perform.
The great Poncho Sanchez.
This is the title cut to Sanchez’s 1984 album, Bien Sabroso, which he most likely played when we saw him in Santa Barbara.
I’m standing in front of the KXCI studios on the corner of Congress and 6th Ave. It used to be the Dave Bloom and Sons building.
Another great Springsteen album. I loved “I’m On Fire” and “Glory Days”. See review that follows one of my favorite songs from the album, Glory Days.
This review appeared in Musician Magazine some time in 1984.
Ajo, Az., where Teatro Libertad performed in June.
Clifton, Az., where we gave another performance of La Vida Del Cobre.
I got this at the Gay Pride Picnic at Himmel Park. The picnics became an annual event.
Our new publicity brochure. This photo was taken at Davis Elementary School. The mural is no longer there.
Teatro members Pamela Bartholomew, Liliana Gambarte, Pernela Jones, Bob Diaz and Scott Egan, Summer, 1984.
In 1984, Teatro Libertad was the the only theater troupe in town dealing with contemporary social and political issues. The criticism aimed at our group in the above article by a former disgruntled member hurt, but we kept on fighting the good fight and doing our thing. We had a strong following and our play “La Vida Del Cobre” was a smash, and this likely made others with competing goals quite jealous.
This was a scary experience. I got hit with tear gas. It was not fun.
The town of Clifton was in a state of siege and we could not leave until the following day. I almost lost my job at Fry’s because we were in lockdown. Fun, fun, fun!
Fan mail from a KXCI listener.
Another shot of me in front of the radio station.
I was very grateful to Kathy Hannon for writing this article about me for the union newsletter.
I was a union steward at this point in my tenure at Fry’s. A proud union member!
I have only a vague recollection of this for some reason. ]
At the time, the massacre was the deadliest mass shooting by a lone gunman in U.S. history, It remains the deadliest mass shooting in California’s history
August 11, 1984, Arizona Daily Star.
In August, I decided to move to a larger space. Ted Warmbrand rented me this house right next door to his, on Manlove St, for less than $200 a month. It was a spacious two bedroom adobe, and was close to the University and my parent’s house. I stayed until I left Tucson after I graduated with my Master’s in Library Science at the end of 1986 to live and work in Nogales, Az.
Mozart has always been my favorite composer. Who cares if this movie isn’t historically accurate. It sure has a lot of fun scenes, and the music is pure magic!
Pernela Jones and Bob Diaz, The Beggar and the Beast, Carrillo School, September 1984.
More scenes from the Beggar and the Beast.
Ah, the Reagan era. What fun we had.
I was supposed to be the lead character in this skit, but I injured my foot at work and could hardly walk. Someone else in the group played the role of the beggar in my place.
This album was released in October 1984. Los Lobos was on their way to becoming one of our nation’s greatest rock bands. This is a great recording.
What a tearjerker of a film. It was released on October 26, 1984.
Halloween, 1984. I’m on a break from work eating lunch at my mom’s. I was dressed as a radical fairy biker dude.
Another Itzaboutime production. My friend Ted was a busy guy. This was a wonderful show, and it was great to be in Tucson High’s auditorium.
The great Buffy Sainte Marie.
I had a blast interviewing Ms. St. Marie. Her husband Jack Nietsche was there too, but I was too shy to meet him. He was a legend in the music industry, but not a very nice person.
Buffy sang this song at her concert at the Heard Museum.
My great niece Jacqui, Belisa’s daughter was born in August. We had just baptized her. I don’t look too happy in this photo for some reason.
R.G. Davis, founder of the San Francisco Mime Troupe, came to town on November 11, to do a workshop on mime for the members of Teatro Libertad. Meeting him was a real honor and pleasure, and he was a great teacher too.
This was a fun concert. My friend from KXCI, Mary Ann Beerling and I stayed for both shows. We had a blast. The following song was recorded the same year as the concert I attended, but in Japan, not Tucson.
I enrolled in library school in December and couldn’t wait to get started back in school.
Released on December 14, 1984. Great movie.
Ila Meyer sang and played guitar. I met her somewhere downtown and attended a concert she gave at the Shanty one lovely afternoon. She was from Minnesota, but moved to Tucson with her partner, Kaija. I have her album, Woman That I am.
Ila introduced Brent and me to each other. I didn’t know that she still lived in Tucson. After Brent and I moved to Nogales in 1987, we lost touch with her. She passed in 2013. Her album follows in its entirety.

Here’s a list of my radio shows from 1984:

The Chicano Connection, January 5, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, January 6, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, Jan/Feb, 1984–exact date unknown. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection, Jan/Feb, 1984, exact date unknown #1. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection, Jan/Feb, 1984 exact date unkown #2. (Playlist only).

The Chicano Connection, February 23, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, February 24, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, June 22, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, June 29, 1984(Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, August 17, 1984, Part 1(Audio only).

The Morning Music Mix, August 17, 1984, Part 2. (Audio only).

The Morning Music Mix, September 14, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, September 21, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, October 12, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, October 26, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, November 2, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, November 30, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix, December 21, 1984. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix Date Unknown #1. (Playlist only).

The Morning Music Mix: Date Unknown #2. (Playlist only).

My Life Story: 1983

Things to know up front:

You can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Click the back arrow key to return to the post.

Every chapter in My Life Story includes information about me, my work, my family and my friends. It also includes information about events that took place locally and nationally, etc. that I thought important enough to include. You’ll also find that I’ve included films, musicians and recordings/videos, in addition to books that were released in a given year.

While I have included many personal photos, most of the graphic content included below is borrowed from the Internet. I do not claim to own this material. I am just adding it for educational purposes. If the owners of any of the content in the “My Life Story” series want their stuff removed, I am happy to oblige. My email address is jrdiaz@arizona.edu. Thanks!

My 1983 planner.

I have always thought of 1983 as the year I came out of my shell, and as the beginning of one of the most creative and productive periods of my life. As I’ve noted previously, I had always been a very shy person.  I had very little self-confidence and could never comfortably get up in front of a group of people, for example, and give a speech or a presentation without getting all nervous and feeling sick. 1983 would be the year I started to overcome these obstacles.

It was good to be back in school. I enrolled as an unclassified graduate student this semester. I ended up dropping the cataloging class. I wasn’t quite yet ready for library school. That would come in time.

After I graduated from the University of Arizona with a bachelor’s degree in psychology in May of 1982, I decided to take a six month break and just work at the grocery store. It got boring, however, and I missed school.  By the end of the year, I had taken the GRE and got very good scores. I was ready to go back to school, so I enrolled in three classes in the Spring of 1983 at the University of Arizona as an “unclassified” graduate student. Just for the heck of it, I took beginning Russian with my friend Scott, a course titled Latin American Political Development, and an Introduction to Sociological Theory, a graduate course in sociology. I also worked at Fry’s the whole time, continuing the pattern I had established when I entered college—to work part time, go to school part time and to have fun part time, which included going to lots of concerts and various events in the community. Unfortunately, as I was starting to get serious about studying sociology, this arrangement was becoming a bit difficult to sustain.

I turned 24 on January 15. My mom threw me a little birthday party and invited a lot of friends of mine over for her famous tacos. There was cake too, and beer, of course.
From my friend Scott.
Scott and I would go hiking a lot in the Sabino Canyon area. We had a lot of fun together.
Teatro Libertad, the theater group I had joined in November, 1982, was an active participant in protests and events related to raising awareness about the crisis in Central America.
Before she became famous as a novelist, Barbara Kingsolver was a local activist. She was also a poet.
I attended this with my friend Albert. I nodded out at the beginning of the show (must’ve been the beer), but when Miles started playing in earnest, I woke right up.
I was lucky to have seen this guy. He was a living legend.
February 11, 1983. This was my first Charlie King concert. He plays progressive folk music, and still visits Tucson on an annual basis. (Click on the article to enlarge it).

I’m not sure when I did this, but sometime near the beginning of the year, I applied to formally enter the graduate program in sociology at the University of Arizona. I had done very well my last two years of college, primarily because I so enjoyed taking courses in sociology, and learning about things like political power and social movements, as well as Latin American and Chicano history. I figured that the graduate program in sociology would allow me to continue in this vein. I really had no idea, however, what I was in for. Before I knew it, I was confronted with the fact that sociology is a social science, and as such, a student at the graduate level was expected to learn how to be impartial and study the topic with an objective lens. Sociology isn’t just about learning about how social movements work or how political power manifests itself, it’s about theoretical framewoks and paradigms, comparing and analyzing events, about using data to extract trends and develop hypotheses about why and how things happen in the social world. It’s about theory, and includes the study of great thinkers like Karl Marx, Emile Durkheim, and Max Weber, among others. These guys wrote for a 19th century audience often in German or in languages other than English. They were difficult to understand, and I, at this point in my life, was very opinionated, and wanted to change the world for the better, not study it. Also, sociology at the graduate level was a full time endeavor, and I just didn’t want to let go of my job at the grocery store, even though I was offered a stipend when I formally entered the Sociology graduate program. Needless to say, I didn’t last long in the graduate program. I took just a couple more courses, but by the summer of 1984, I had fully checked out of it. Other stuff had popped up and held my attention.

The Sociology Department at the University of Arizona was ranked 9th in the country. It was a very good program. My attention was elsewhere at the time.

Here are a couple of samples of the work I did this semester:

Sociology 500 Midterm Exam March 8, 1983, Dr. Fligstein

Cuba”, (paper written for Professor Seligson’s “Latin American Political Development” class Political Science 447, The University of Arizona, April 28, 1983).

In late 1982, I had joined Teatro Libertad, a leftist, mostly Chicano street theater troupe.  As a member, I had to learn how to act and sing in public. I was very nervous and scared at first, and I’m sure I was awful, but I didn’t give up and just kept practicing, and before long, I was able to perform in front of large groups of people without much difficulty at all. I got over being shy, and it felt great. The Teatro performed  a number of skits in a variety of places throughout the year and by year’s end, we had also written and performed  the first act of an original full length play called, “La Vida del Cobre” or the Life of Copper, about the 1917 Bisbee copper strike and deportation.  I played several different characters in La Vida Del Cobre, and contributed a lot of the music to the play. I had a great time, and being in a group like this helped me strengthen my self-confidence and performing abilities. I was doing political theater, and working to raise people’s consciousness about the power structure and the social realities in which they lived. I felt like I was making a difference.

These were among my very first performances with Teatro Libertad. I was a nervous wreck at first, but got better over time.
Sweet Honey in the Rock. What an amazing group of women!
My sister Becky and I attended this concert. It was held at the Ballroom of the University of Arizona Student Union.It was a memorable show…
I was happy with my grades. I wouldn’t take another class again at the university until the following Spring.
Scott Egan, the author of this article, was a member of Teatro Libertad. Other members at the time included Francisco (Pancho) Medina, Pernela Jones, Juan Villegas, Pamela Bartholomew, Liliana Gambarte and me.
This was the 2nd time I’d seen the Clash in as many years. The previous show was held in Mesa. This one was in the Exhibition Hall of the Tucson Community Center. We were packed in that place like sardines. It was wild! Az Daily Star May 28, 1983

In terms of my personal life in 1983, I was a mess. I was still in love with my friend Scott, but as the year unfolded and the AIDS crisis became more serious, people started acting strange, and I lost a few so-called friends. Scott also pulled away from me. He found himself a girlfriend, and we drifted apart by the Fall. My friend Frank and I had our ups and downs too, as I was always restless, and could never see myself as his lover or companion. He was a lot older than me, and had his own busy life that kept him on the road constantly, but he kept popping in and out of mine. There were others that came and went too. I was friends with a guy who worked at Fry’s named Henry at one point, but he was really not a good influence on me, as he was into being a little badass cholo, always getting into mischief.

Scott and Peter, my Fry’s friends. They were both a few years younger than me.
I was in love with both of these guys and was a total mess.

There was also a guy named Peter, with whom I became quite infatuated, but that went nowhere either. It seems like all the guys I was attracted to were straight, and that was a major bummer.  As I’ve mentioned before, I also still tried dating women, and there were a few here and there that also popped into my life at the time. One woman, named Lee, was also in my Russian class, and she actually got to visit the Soviet Union over Spring Break. She sent me lots of Russian souvenirs, including a balalaika. She was very nice person. Overall, however,  I felt lonely and unhappy, and after having had a taste of what “married life” was like when I was with John in 1979-80, I longed to have a steady male partner. It would take a couple of more years, however, before I found one.

On a break from work, eating arroz con leche at my parent’s house.
From the Arizona Daily Star, May 28, 1983.
This film was released on June 8, 1983. I don’t think I saw this when it first came out, but I did see it at some point this year or the following year at the De Anza Drive-In with my friend Dennis Krenek. It was a fun film.

Early in the summer of 1983, I signed up to take a course in radio programming from KXCI, a brand new community radio station that was planning on going live by the end of the year. I paid $475 to attend the radio course over the summer. (It was not free, as some have mistakenly written). My love of music, which I had been indulging in since childhood, was finally going to take center stage, and I was going to have the opportunity to share the music I loved with the whole community. Over the past 10 years, I had been collecting albums and had immersed myself in learning all about contemporary urban folk music, soul music, jazz, oldies, pop and other musical genres. I also had some basic knowledge of Latin music, but it would soon deepen and it quickly became a major focal point in my continuing musical education.

Released on June 15, 1983. Los Lobos would play in December ’83 at the Stumble Inn, but I wouldn’t get to see them live until March, 1984 at the Sundance Saloon. Awesome group!
Az Daily Star, 07/17/83. I loved going to this bar. In many ways, I led a double life at this time. One minute I’d be hanging out with my Teatro friends doing political theater, and another I’d be dancing my butt off at discos like this one. It took a while before I came out to some of my associates…
The Phelps Dodge strike in Arizona started in early July, 1983 and would continue for at least two more years.
Teatro Libertad participated in this rally and march. We sang at the top of our lungs as we marched through downtown Tucson. I loved being out in the community doing things like this.
I didn’t realize I had a copy of this flyer until I started browsing through an old college notebook today on 4/2/21. I just had to include it here!

The radio course lasted a few months, and by late Fall, the station was ready to go live. I was a devoted volunteer at the time, and did a lot of work at the station.

My FCC Radio programmer’s license.
Tropical Storm Octave moved into the area in late September, dumping over 8 inches of rain in Tucson. The Santa Cruz and Rillito Rivers flooded in early October, causing massive amounts of damage in the region. It was a sight to see!
What a great soundtrack! released on 9-28-83.
One of the things the station management wanted us all to do was to go around town to various businesses to try to get free recordings. It didn’t work out that well for me. I ended up buying all my own material over time.
Released on October 27, 1983. One of my favorite Dylan albums from the 1980s. Jokerman and Sweetheart Like You are amazing songs. See review below.
Musician Magazine, date unknown.

November 2, 1983–Ronald Reagan signs bill making Martin Luther King, Jr’s birthday a national holiday, as Coretta Scott King and others look on. My birthday is also on January 15. This is one thing Reagan did right!
November 3, 1983: Jesse Jackson announces he’s running for President.
Released on 11-04-83. A highly acclaimed album. See review below.
This review appeared in January 1984 in High Fidelity magazine, shortly after the release of Hearts and Bones.
Rich Towne, the guy that did the radio course, was a very good teacher. I learned a lot from him.
Released 11/23/83. Wow. What a movie!
I’m standing in front of two fellow members of the Teatro. We’ setting up our portable stage.

KXCI and Teatro Libertad were where my heart was at this point in my life. I wanted to convince people to become politically active and to take a stand and work to make the world a better place. I had signed up to take a graduate course in Social Psychology with Dr. Patricia MacCorquodale in the Fall, but I withdrew from the course before the semester was over. Academia, it turns out, wasn’t for me, at least for the time being. I couldn’t see myself as a professor doing boring studies, writing boring papers, and teaching all the time, although teaching probably would’ve been more fulfilling than doing research. I would take one more sociology class the following Spring semester, but that would be it. After that, I was done with the program.

The members of Teatro Libertad wrote this play collaboratively. It was a major achievement and a huge success. Act II would be written the following Spring.
Scene 1–“A.F.L vs. I.W.W.”, featuring Scott Egan and Juan Villegas. La Vida Del Cobre, Act I: The Deportation
“The Round-up”, Scene VII of La Vida Del Cobre, Act I: The Deportation. I’m the one with the rifle. Included in this scene from left to right are Liliana Gambarte, Scott Egan, Ted Warmbrand (an audience member who got arrested during the round-up scene), Bob Diaz, Pernela Jones and Pamela Bartholomew. The people in the background were audience members.
There were lots of musical numbers in this play. We loved to sing, even though we were out of tune a lot of the time. Included from left to right are: Juan Villegas, Liliana Gambarte, Scott Egan, Pernela Jones, Bob Diaz, and Pamela Bartholomew.
We did it. After many years of planning and fundraising, Tucson was about to have it’s own community radio station.

As the station went live, I was given two slots to fill in the programming calendar, one a Latin show on Thursday nights which I dubbed “The Chicano Connection”, and the other a morning music mix program that took place on Friday mornings from 9am to noon. I was still rather shy and wasn’t a great announcer when I started, but again, I kept at it, and got better over time.

From the Arizona Daily Star, December 5, 1983. The initial programming schedule included a lot of diverse shows. It would change continuously over time.
My very first playlist for my very first show. Aretha Franklin’s hit, “Respect,” was the first song I ever played on the air.
I didn’t own a lot of Latin music at first, but over time, I have acquired quite a collection, especially of Mexican rancheras.

My knowledge of music and my shows were also starting to get noticed out in the community, and I quickly became known for playing stuff that nobody else was playing or was long forgotten. Senator Dennis DeConcini even wrote to the station early on and noted how impressed he was with me and Kidd Squidd. I was in heaven. I even played political folk music, but this would eventually get me into trouble.

My first morning music mix playlist. I would play the same artists a lot over time, but would try to vary the individual songs that I featured.

Here are more of my playlists from December, 1983. (click the title to see the list).

The Chicano Connection, December 15, 1983.

The Morning Music Mix, December 16, 1983.

The Chicano Connection, December 22, 1983.

The Morning Music Mix, December 23, 1983.

The Chicano Connection, December 29, 1983.

The Morning Music Mix, December 30, 1983.

Even though my personal life was a drag,  this was indeed an amazing time in my life. I had some wonderful friends, many of whom I haven’t seen in a long time. For one reason or another we all just drifted apart. Some have moved away, some are still in town, and others have passed on. As I was thinking back on this particular year, I was overcome with emotion for the first time since I started this writing project. I really miss these folks. I still love them with all my heart. They were all wonderful, talented people. I’m lucky I still have friends like Ron and Jane. Our friendship has stood the test of time.

A holiday card from my friend Lee.

There’s one final thing that I want to say about this particular time in my life. I have a few regrets, that’s for sure. There are some things I did that I should not have done, and over time I’ve paid the price in one way or another for these mistakes. I likely hurt a few people along the way, and to this day I feel very sad about all of that, but I realize nothing can be done about it now, except to say I’m sorry to those who find this and know what I’m talking about. It was all so long ago. I was young and still had a lot to learn at the age of 24. Some things I figured out pretty fast, while others would take a lifetime to finally figure out.  Overall, I feel pretty good now and I am happier than I’ve ever been. I look forward to continuing writing my life story. I’ve come a long way on this project. 24 years down, 37 more to go…Stay tuned!

My Life Story: 1982

Things to know up front:

You can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Click the back arrow key to return to the post.

Every chapter in My Life Story includes information about me, my work, my family and my friends. It also includes information about events that took place locally and nationally, etc. that I thought important enough to include. You’ll also find that I’ve included films, musicians and recordings/videos, in addition to books that were released in a given year.

While I have included many personal photos, most of the graphic content included below is borrowed from the Internet. I do not claim to own this material. I am just adding it for educational purposes. If the owners of any of the content in the “My Life Story” series want their stuff removed, I am happy to oblige. My email address is jrdiaz@arizona.edu. Thanks!

My 1982 War Resister’s League Planner/Calendar.

1982 was an important year in my life. I was 22 years old when the year began.  I lived alone in my small apartment on 7th St, and I continued to work part time at Fry’s. I turned 23 on the 15th of January, just as my final semester at the University of Arizona was about to begin. I signed up for four classes, and they were quite demanding, with lots of assigned readings, tests, papers and lab reports. All of this kept me rather busy. 

A birthday card from my friend Tim
A birthday note from my friend Frank…
I signed up for too many classes, and ended up dropping a couple. I would still end up with enough credits to graduate in May.
This book was required reading in my class, “The Politics of the Mexican American Community”. It is a great book, one of my favorites.
Another required text. This one was assigned by Dr. Guy in my Contemporary Latin America class.
Movies with gay themes were starting to appear more frequently. This one was released on February 12, 1982.
This was also released on February 12, 1982. I loved this movie.

On top of all of this, I continued to spend time with my friends, who included Frank, Scott, Richard, Tim, and others, and to indulge myself in having fun, going out to the bars to dance and partying a lot. There were times when I felt like the partying, which consisted primarily of drinking lots of beer and smoking, was starting to have an adverse effect, and I wrote in my journal in February that I wasn’t focused enough on my schoolwork. There were even a few times when I had to fake being sick and take time off of work to catch up on school stuff. This was risky, as I could have easily lost my job by calling in sick, but I was luckily able to get a doctor’s notice (usually by making something up, like a bad back or a sore foot) each time I needed time off, and that covered me with work.

February 23, 1982: Contemporary Latin America exam

February 24, 1982: Political Sociology Take Home exam

February 25, 1982: Mexican American Politics exam

 I saved a lot of my schoolwork from this period. (To see my work, just click on each title above). Overall, I got good grades on my tests and papers, even though I was having too much fun. I was young and full of energy, I suppose. One way or another, I covered all my bases when there were deadlines to meet.

My new car, an early graduation gift from my mom, looked exactly like this. It was beautiful.

In February, my mother bought me a car. My ’64 Buick Special turned out to be a real lemon, and was always giving me trouble, so I needed to get another one that was more reliable. As luck would have it, my next door neighbor was selling her recently deceased husband’s 1964 Galaxy 500, a beautiful white, four door monstrosity with a great engine and body. I told my mom about it, and she agreed to buy me the car as an early graduation present. The former owner took great care of it. I had a lot of fun with that vehicle in the next several years.

From my sister Becky…

I received several letters from my sister Becky early in the year. Her relationship with her husband Paco was over, and by early March, she had divorced him. Aside from one or two notable exceptions (see above), most of her letters from this period are heart wrenching, and describe a very lonely, unhappy person in the midst of profound change. I was elated when she came home in the Spring. My brother Charles flew up to Washington and helped her pack her stuff and come home. Charles drove a U-Haul back with her and all her stuff.

Another gay-themed movie, released on March 16, 1982. Leslie Ann Warren stole the show.

As the semester progressed, I continued to subscribe to and read a lot of political magazines, such as The Nation, The Progressive, Mother Jones, In These Times, and the Guardian. I considered myself a socialist, and even joined the Democratic Socialists of America .

A booklet describing the mission and goals of this organization.
The more I read, the more I learned about the history of radicalism in the US. This stuff wasn’t taught in high school history, that’s for sure. I learned more by reading on my own than ever did in the classroom.

I was also starting to get interested in the Sanctuary Movement, which was founded in Tucson by Reverend John Fife and others. The following article appeared in the local paper in late March.

Sometime in the Spring, I met a young woman from Bolivia named Pamela Bartholomew. She would sit in on my Political Sociology class at times, and we became friends. She soon invited me to attend a play called “Semilla Sembrada”, by Teatro Libertad, a local political theater group.

Pamela Bartholomew
Arizona Daily Star, March 11, 1982

I attended it, and loved it. I later got to meet the members of the group, and would soon end up interviewing one of them for a paper I had to write in my Mexican American Politics class. A couple of the female members, Pernela and Teresa, had also grown up in my neighborhood and I knew their brothers. I would end up becoming a member of Teatro Libertad by year’s end.

My niece Michelle’s first son, Solomon, was born on March 28, 1982. Here’s a photo of him taken a couple of months later.

Solomon Corrales, my niece Michelle’s baby boy.

I had more papers and tests due in March, April and May. Overall, I continued to get A’s and B’s in most of them. The one class I didn’t care for at all was titled Introduction to Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. I got a C in it. Even though I had done well in previous science classes, this one just didn’t interest me at this point in my college career.

March 30, 1982: Contemporary Latin America paper on the Somoza Dynasty

April 1, 1982: Mexican American Politics exam

April 20, 1982: Political Sociology essay on American Ideology and Science

April 30, 1982: Mexican American Politics paper

May 11, 1982: Political Sociology Final exam

This was a great way to close out my last semester of college. Seeing Angela Davis on April 18 was a dream come true.
I remember inviting a woman I had met at Fry’s to this event. I had an actual date!
Az Daily Star, May 1, 1982. Just in time for summer! A new gay bar opens in Tucson on the grounds of the Tucson Inn near Stone Ave and Drachman. I had a blast dancing here and listening to live music.

I was exhausted by the end of the semester, but it was worth it! I graduated on May 15 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology, with a minor in Sociology.  I remember that I promised my parents when I quit high school that I would complete my education at the University, come hell or high water, and I did it!  It took five and a half years, but I didn’t care. I had reached one of the most important milestones of my life. I ended up with a 3.41 grade average, which wasn’t bad at all. I was the first and only one in my family to go to a four year college and graduate, and it made my parents extremely proud, and that made me very happy.

My diploma
My family threw me a big graduation party. My mom and sisters went all out and made shrimp cocktail and other delicious food. I even invited two of my professors to the party. It was a blast.
A card from all my co-workers at Fry’s.
I owe so much to my two high school teachers, Ron and Jane Cruz. They continued to believe in me and support me through high school and into my college years, and are to this day my dearest friends.

I had no immediate plans for the Fall, so I hung out with my friends and had fun. Frank and I drove up to Oak Creek Canyon at some point, and we took some photos. My dad had taken the family up there way back in 1965. He had grown up in the area, and knew it well. It’s beautiful country, and the drive with Frank was very enjoyable. I loved playing my guitar at the time, and Frank enjoyed listening to me. He was my biggest fan. Nobody else thought I played very well, and I probably didn’t, but he was a real sweetheart to me.

Playing my guitar in Oak Creek Canyon
I bought the t-shirt I’m wearing at the Semilla Sembrada performance I had seen just a month or to before this photo was taken.
Frank, my dear friend and teacher, and one of the most influential people in my life, taught me many valuable lessons.
Frank followed the teachings of Bagwan Shree Rashneesh, who as a guru, advocated meditation and taught a unique form called dynamic meditation. Rejecting traditional ascetic practices, he advocated that his followers live fully in the world but without attachment to it. The underlying premise of the book, A Course in Miracles, is that the greatest “miracle” is the act of simply gaining a full “awareness of love’s presence” in a person’s life. Frank was always trying to get me to let go of “living in my head” and he urged me to stay focused on the present moment and to live from my heart. I’ll forever be grateful to him.

I also attended several concerts over the summer, including one by the Clash in Mesa, and one by the Grateful Dead. I drove my friends Richard, Denise and Mike up to Mesa in my new car to see the Clash show, and we had a blast. Denise made some silk-screened t-shirts for the occasion and sold a bunch of them up there.

The Arizona Republic, June 15, 1982.

When we went back up to Mesa to see the Grateful Dead, I got a ride with someone. It’s a good thing, because I was flying higher than a kite that night. It was a wild, memorable, trippy occasion. I won’t divulge the details, but believe me, we all had fun.

Wow, what a show!

A few days later, they performed in Texas, and the concert was recorded. This was how they sounded when they were in Phoenix. Great!!

Released on July 26, 1982.
Released July 28, 1982.

I didn’t have a steady boyfriend, but I had a few very close friends like Frank. He and I were very tight, and he would write to me a lot as he traveled the country and Europe. He bought me the book, Be Here Now, and was a big follower of Bagwan Rajneesh, and A Course in Miracles. He loved me dearly and was my mentor. Sometime in the summer, I took a flight to Albuquerque to meet up with him while he was staying there. I remember shopping at the various record stores in the University area with him. Poor Frank quickly learned that I had a constant habit of shopping for books and records. He even found a copy of Joan Baez’s album, “Live Europe’83: Children of the 80s” for me when he went to France the following year. The record was available only in Europe at the time, and apparently, it took him a while to find it, but he did and he brought it back for me. Bless his heart.

A gift from Frank.

While I had did have strong feelings for Frank, I was also still very infatuated with my friend Scott, who was quite handsome and a very nice guy. We would go hiking together to Sabino Canyon, and he taught me how to shoot a gun, believe it or not. We didn’t really have a lot in common, as he was into things like hunting, but we enjoyed each other’s company. We also both worked at Fry’s, and would often go jogging together. Other guys that I hung around with at this time included my friend Harold, who was a choir director for a local African American church, and Michael, who turned me on to the movie, Harold and Maude. He and I clashed some, so our friendship only lasted a few months. My friends Ron and Jane, Sylvia, Dennis, Jim and Gary were still around too. I was very lucky to have so many good friends at this point in my life.

I love this movie. The soundtrack is great too.

In August, my dad and I took a road trip to Las Vegas in my new car. We stopped along the way in Superior to visit his brother Raul, and then drove through Phoenix before heading north to the Verde Valley region, where he was born and raised.

My Dad.
My dad was born in Jerome, Az in 1920. He was raised in Camp Verde.

We visited Jerome, Cottonwood and Camp Verde. At one point, in Cottonwood, we stopped by the river and he took his shoes and socks off and waded into the water. It was so cool to see that. This was where my dad spent his childhood and youth, and it was a very special moment.

The Verde River

We continued driving north to Flagstaff and visited a lady who was from a family my dad knew when his family lived there in the thirties. From Flagstaff, we drove west to Needles. We had almost made it and were just 40 miles outside of Needles when, as luck would have it, my car’s water pump went out, and the car stalled stuck outside of Yucca, Arizona, in the middle of nowhere. It was the middle of the night too, and we were stuck. My dad tried lighting a fire to get someone’s attention, and a State trooper even drove by, but did nothing whatsoever to help us. We ended up walking a couple of miles up the road to a motel that had a pay phone. I barely had enough change to make a call to my uncle’s house, and I had to memorize his phone number after getting it from the operator. It’s a good thing I was able to do that. Otherwise, I don’t know what we would have done.

My uncle came and got us, and the next day, we got the car fixed. It was a very scary situation there for a while, but we pulled through. The experience helped my dad and I bond like never before. All that walking we did was hard on him, as he walked with a limp due to a broken leg he had gotten years ago while working in the mine. I felt really bad for him, but he was a good sport.

Needles is a small town near the Colorado River. Two of my dad’s brothers settled here.

Once we had made it to Needles, we spent time with my dad’s two brothers Val and Failo, and their families. We also went to Las Vegas, but it was awkward and we didn’t have a great time. He wanted to see showgirls. I didn’t.

My cousin Clarisa later took me to Laughlin, Nevada, another gambling mecca on the banks of the Colorado River. I had a really bad experience there too. As we were walking through one of the casinos, we went through a dance area that had a band playing, and the band started mocking Mexican music and making stupid noises. I yelled back at them and flipped them off. Little did I know I was being watched. A few minutes later, we were served drinks, and I suddenly got very, very sleepy. I ended up crashing in the car, and the next morning I was sicker than a dog. Apparently the servers slipped something into my drink so that I wouldn’t cause any further trouble. I had never vomited bile before, but I did that day. It took me a while to get back on my feet. It was a horrible experience, one I’ll never forget. We later made it home without any problems, thank goodness.

Another fun concert. I just had to see Rickie Lee Jones!
Release date: September 1, 1982. One of my favorites!

I decided not to enroll in school in the Fall. I needed a break. There wasn’t much to do other than work, so I continued that and just hung out with my friends, listened to lots of music, partied and went to the movies.

This is my absolute favorite Springsteen album. It was released on September 30, 1982.
Joni Mitchell released this album on October 1, 1982. I found it to be a great album, much easier to listen to than her previous effort, Mingus.

Sometime later in the Fall, I decided I wanted to branch out a bit and find something creative and fun to do. Since I liked playing the guitar and flute, I looked around and found a music group that I liked that I thought I’d try to join. After hearing her group perform at an event, I met up with a woman named Rebecca, who was with a folk music group called Bwiya-Toli, to talk about the possibility of joining them. They played progressive folk music from Latin America. I auditioned with them, but didn’t impress the group leader all that much. I didn’t know how to play percussion and they wanted me to do that. I could play the flute and guitar, but hadn’t played in an ensemble in quite a while either. Things didn’t work out with them after all.

Released October 27, 1982. What a great album!

However, my friend Pamela soon thereafter invited me to attend a Teatro Libertad meeting. The group had been in existence since 1975, and had several major plays under their belt by the time I came along.  Earlier in the year, I had attended a performance of Semilla Sembrada,  their most recent full length play, and over the summer I became friends with Teresa, one of the members of the group. My very first meeting with the Teatro was on November 9, 1982. The group was very disciplined, and meetings were held two to three times a week. There would be no alcohol or other drugs allowed at any of the meetings, and punctuality was very important to the group.

Teatro Libertad publicity poster

While the primary focus of Teatro Libertad was theater, the group also sang a lot, and I particularly enjoyed participating in the singing and learning new songs. The acting was another story. I had always been, believe it or not, a very, very shy individual ever since I was a child, and it took all the courage I could muster just to get up in front of a group to speak. I had trouble giving presentations, for example, in college. I would just freeze at times, and usually bombed whatever presentation I was supposed to give. I knew if I wanted to stay in the Teatro, that I had to get over this fast. It took a few embarrassing moments, but I was soon participating in skits and contributing as a full member to the group.

I bought this when it first came out in November, 1982. I had a big crush on my friend Scott from Fry’s at the time, and I played it for him one day. We had a great time listening to it in my little one room apartment. I was crazy about him.
The song, Willie Moore, had been included in The Joan Baez Songbook, but I’d never heard it until this album was released.

Jesse Jackson visited Miracle Valley, Arizona on November 11, which was the sight of a controversial shootout in the predominantly Black community south of Sierra Vista. He also came to Tucson and spoke at the Mt. Cavary Baptist Church that evening. I was there and he was fantastic. Unfortunately, the writer of the article had to be a smart ass about things. It’s so frustrating that some journalists can twist things around like this and get away with this kind of garbage.

From the Tucson Citizen, November 12, 1982.
This article about local singer Mary Baker appeared in the 12/04/82 edition of the Arizona Daily Star. She would sometimes perform in the basement of the Fineline, a local gay bar that I went to a lot. Another group, a lesbian country band named “Rare Breed” would also perform there.
I attended this concert. 12/09/82.

This Ray Charles concert was alright, not great. My friend Richard was one of the people that hollered at the wrong time. He yelled out, “You bad, Ray”, and Ray told him to shut up. How funny is that? Richard told me about it later. This was the first of two Ray Charles shows I saw in the 80’s. The other one took place a couple of years later at the Temple of Music and Art. My brother Charles and I took our mom to see him. The concert was over in about 40 minutes, and was the shortest performance I’ve ever attended. We we all very disappointed.

This film premiered on December 17, 1982. I saw it with my friend Scott.

As the year came to a close, I knew I needed to make some decisions about my future. I decided to take the GRE exam and to go back to school. I considered going in to social work, and my friend Frank even wrote me a letter of recommendation, but I also thought about law school. I couldn’t make up my mind, and it took a while to figure it all out.

I knew one thing for sure. My feelings for my friend Scott continued to deepen, and I wrote him this song. I was crazy about him.

My Life Story: 1981

Things to know up front:

You can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Click the back arrow key to return to the post.

Every chapter in My Life Story includes information about me, my work, my family and my friends. It also includes information about events that took place locally and nationally, etc. that I thought important enough to include. You’ll also find that I’ve included films, musicians and recordings/videos, in addition to books that were released in a given year.

While I have included many personal photos, most of the graphic content included below is borrowed from the Internet. I do not claim to own this material. I am just adding it for educational purposes. If the owners of any of the content in the “My Life Story” series want their stuff removed, I am happy to oblige. My email address is jrdiaz@arizona.edu. Thanks!

Rolling Stone Magazine, January 1981

As the year started, I was getting close to getting my bachelor’s degree. Having passed the midpoint with only a handful more credits to go, I had hoped to finish by the end of the year, but would have to continue through the Spring semester of 1982, as I ended up dropping some courses along the way. I continued to work at the grocery store too, and began the year still living with my parents, but that would change soon enough.

Ronald Reagan had just won the presidential election in November, and my friends and I all braced ourselves for the coming onslaught of conservative government policy, which included backing dictatorships once again in Central America and busting unions. Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority was more popular than ever, and things didn’t look good for the gay community or other minority communities either.

School started January 15, my birthday, the day I turned 22. I had already taken one jogging class the previous semester and attempted another this semester, but the class was held too early in the mornings, so I dropped it.

During the Spring semester, I took three sociology classes.  My teachers in these classes were  J.T. Borhek,  Gary Jensen, and Stanley Lieberson, (who would move on to Berkeley, and then Harvard).  The reading assignments, particularly in Borhek’s class, were rather dense, and included The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism by  Max Weber, The Communist Manifesto, by Karl Marx, and Suicide: A Study in Sociology, by Emile Durkheim.  I did my best to wade through these, but sometimes I had to re-read things again and again to comprehend stuff. I enjoyed reading about ethnic and racial groups much more than the heavier theoretical material.

Text used in Dr. Lieberson’s Sociology class, “Minority Groups”.

I was completely immersed in my school work. I loved my classes this particular year, as I had started to move away from psychology to the study of sociology, which became my minor. I was particularly interested in minority groups, politics and social movements. It was easy being more serious about my studies at this point because I found the subject matter so interesting. My grades improved a lot at this time. At one point, I got the highest grade on a test in my class on minority groups, and Dr. Lieberson awarded me with the following book. A couple of my fellow students didn’t like that Dr. Lieberson had done this, but I sure was a happy camper.

My reward for getting the highest grade in my class.

I also got an A on a paper I wrote for Dr. Borhek’s class, “Sources of Social Theory”. The paper was titled “The Chicano in America Today: A Sociological Analysis”. (Click on the title to read the paper). I didn’t get a new typewriter until the Fall semester, so I very carefully wrote this one in cursive. It got some water damage, but it’s still readable.

A birthday card from my sister Becky. I turned 22 on January 15.

In Central America in 1979, the Sandinistas had taken power away from the previously U.S. backed Somoza regime, and other nations in the region were also clamoring for freedom. El Salvador had been suffering under a brutal dictatorship and had witnessed in the previous year the killings of the ever popular Archbishop Oscar Romero and four Catholic nuns who had started a land reform school. In early January, the civil war started to escalate, and the FMLN, the revolutionary rebel forces, was on the offensive.

By this point in my life, I was starting to refine my political views, and they were definitely left of center. I was quite sad and depressed that Carter had been defeated and that Ronald Reagan had won. I could not stand the man, and have never thought he did our country any good whatsoever. I felt that the freeing of the hostages in Iran had been a publicity stunt that Reagan and others within the Republican party had engineered with others in the Middle East to give him more credibility and make him more popular. There were definitely some shady deals made to make this happen, in my opinion. Jimmy Carter had been a great president, but Reagan’s shenanigans made Carter appear weak and ineffective in the end.

Reagan was inaugurated President on January 20, 1981, exactly 40 years ago.
This happened the same day Reagan took office.

At home, life continued to be a challenge. I decided it was time to leave again, and this time it was for good. Around the third week of January, I found a small studio apartment in back of a professor’s house on 7th street, a block east of Campbell. I had to practically beg the man to let me rent the place, and assured him I was working and in school. It was humiliating, but I loved the location. It was perfect, and the one big room was all I needed. The one thing it didn’t have unfortunately, was a stove, but I managed. My mom and dad’s house was just a mile away and I could always pop over there to eat and do laundry. Mom wasn’t happy, of course that I had left again, but I couldn’t take it living at home. People were in and out of the house all the time. My parents were always bickering and babysitting the grand kids, and two of my brothers were always there just hanging out. My brother Fred and I never got along, and as time went on, our relationship deteriorated further and further.

My little apartment on 7th street. This is a more recent photo. The place was in better shape when I lived there, and there wasn’t a gate there either.
Rosalie Sorrels performed at the UA Stduent Union on Friday, January 23, 1981. I was there.
The contra wars started as soon as Reagan took office.

Reagan, in response to the allegations that Nicaragua was supporting the rebel forces in El Salvador, quickly stopped providing aid to the leftist Nicaraguan government and started aiding the “contrarevolucionarios”, or counterrevolutionaries, instead. These forces consisted of former members of Somoza’s military, who, from their home base along the Honduran border, began to fight to regain control of the country. In the ensuing months, Reagan would secretly authorize more and more funding to this clandestine force, popularly known as the Contras.

It would take me a while to “discover” Rosanne Cash. This album, her third, was released in February, 81. One of her best. It includes “Blue Moon With Heartache”, one of my very favorites.
Reagan waving to the crowd just before getting shot.

From Wikipedia: “On March 30, 1981, United States President Ronald Reagan was shot and wounded by John Hinckley Jr. in Washington, D.C. as he was returning to his limousine after a speaking engagement at the Washington Hilton Hotel. Hinckley believed the attack would impress actress Jodie Foster, with whom he had become obsessed. Reagan was seriously wounded by a .22 Long Rifle bullet that ricocheted off the side of the presidential limousine and hit him in the left underarm, breaking a rib, puncturing a lung, and causing serious internal bleeding. He was close to death upon arrival at George Washington University Hospital but was stabilized in the emergency room, then underwent emergency exploratory surgery.[4] He recovered and was released from the hospital on April 1.”

I was at home in my apartment when I heard the news about Reagan getting shot. Thinking back on it now, I wouldn’t wish that kind of thing on anyone, but Reagan was such a slimy politician, at one point I was hopeful that we’d get someone else to run the country. My fears about the kind of damage Reagan would do to our country came true soon enough. I discussed the shooting with my friend Tim, who had dropped over that day. I couldn’t help telling him what I thought. He and I spent a lot of time together around this time. He would bring his guitar over to my apartment and we’d discuss the class we were in together and the papers we wrote. I never felt attracted to him. He was completely straight, and had his share of girlfriends. He certainly was handsome enough to have lots of them, but he was quite skinny. Not my type, really. He was just a friend.

I made some other new friends around this time in my life, and they included Jim and Gary, a couple who had been together for many, many years. Jim was an artist who grew up before World War II in Southern California, and he met Gary in the bay area when Gary was very young. They lived there for many years. At some point, Jim also spent time in Europe studying art. After they moved to Tucson, they owned an art gallery in town, but then sold it so that Jim could devote more of his time to his art. I met Jim at a bar called the Graduate one day while I was playing pool. He noticed that my hands were big and had prominent veins, and he asked me if I would be willing to model for him while he worked on a sculpture. I agreed to do it. I went to his house way out on the far west side and sat still with my hand relaxed, but stretched out, while Jim did his sculpting. We hit it off and became friends. His partner Gary was also nice.

Jim Knox

Jim had been an actor in Hollywood at one point and was very handsome, even as an older guy. He and Gary had a big record collection and they were crazy about Judy Garland. I remember having conversations with the two of them about wanting to “change the world.” They chuckled at my youthful idealism, and encouraged me to do it, but I knew they thought I was “very young”.

I spent a lot more time with my old friend Richard this particular year too. He had also made some new friends who lived near his new apartment, which was on 9th St. near 4th Ave. Their names were Mike, Denise, Jimmy and Merricat. Denise and Mike were both artists, as was Merricat. She made beaded jewelry,  and either lived next door to Denise or was her roommate at one point.

Denise and Mike
A gift to me from Mike

We all partied together frequently, and while there was always beer and marijuana around, at times we did other heavier things, such as hallucinogenics. Richard had become a big fan of the Grateful Dead, and such people are known as Dead Heads and acid freaks. I enjoyed the music, but never considered myself that big of a fan, although I did try the drugs once or twice.

This is a great live, acoustic “double album”. It has some great tunes on it, like the one below.
Chuck Berry performed at Spring Fling on the UA Mall on April 3, 1981. I vividly remember the show. It was very short.
I was lucky to have seen Chuck Berry in person, short show or not.

Doing acid and other psychedelics was sure an interesting experience! One could easily have a bad trip if the setting for the “party” wasn’t mellow enough. I went through this myself once or twice, and afterwards realized that I shouldn’t indulge so much in the heavy stuff. While I was in much better shape psychologically than I had been when I was 18, I still had issues at 22, and the drugs sometimes brought those issues out into the open in a very creepy way, and I would find myself in a downward spiral. If it weren’t for a friend of mine who saw that I was sinking one evening at one of these parties, I’m not sure where I would have ended up. She calmed me down and made me relax on the couch and told me, “remember this is just temporary. It will wear off”. Wow. That sure helped.

Seeing her perform live was a dream come true.

As far as dating was concerned, there wasn’t anyone steady. I continued to go out to the bars to meet other guys. I had a lot of fun, and still liked to dance, but was really tired of the bar scene after a while. It all revolved around the pretty people, and around drugs and alcohol. I was young, and indulged myself, but I wanted more. I’m glad I had some stability. Working half time and going to school were my two big priorities, and I never let the partying get out of control. My mother’s favorite saying to all of us was that “you have to learn how to paddle your own canoe,” and that lesson was embedded deep in my psyche.

Bob Marley died of cancer on May 11. It was a sad day the world over.
My gpa went up a lot this semester. Once this one was over, I had two more semesters of school left.
I had my own subscription to this magazine. Refugees from El Salvador were starting to make their way to the U.S., and the Sanctuary movement was just getting off the ground.

Word was slow to get out that gay men in big cities like New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles were starting to die from combination of pneumonia and a rare strain of cancer called Kaposi’s Sarcoma, but by early June, the Centers for Disease Control had published the first official report on Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, or AIDS, and by July there were over 40 reported deaths. As time went on and word spread about the disease, gay men became further targets for discrimination and violence, and they began dying at an alarming rate, particularly on the east and west coasts. The world would never be the same. By the middle of the decade, at least two of my friends, Dennis and Leonard, had contracted the disease, and both eventually died. A lot more friends would die through the 90’s as well.

The first report about a mysterious illness affecting young gay men…

Around this time, Frank Weill, my old religion teacher from Salpointe, and I bumped into each other at a bar one night, and we started spending time together. He had left the church by then, but still did spiritual counseling for a lot of people. He would become a very close friend in the next few years, and I learned a great deal from him.

My good friend Frank.
The news of Sister Clare’s death on July 30th shocked everyone in Tucson and Arizona. I didn’t know Sister Judith, but she was constantly at Clare’s side. Clare was my teacher in high school, and she was very kind to me.
Released in 1981, this is another 2 lp set of music from the Bread and Roses Festival held at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley. Great music, but only available on lp.

Summer dragged on. I was working constantly, feeling unsure of myself and unhappy about my sexuality, but still going out and messing around and partying a lot. I felt lost and alone, especially after my buddy Tim took off and went back east for the summer. I couldn’t wait for school to begin.

Sure enough, Reagan started busting the unions. The PATCO strike was a major event in American history. The workers that were fired weren’t allowed to get re-hired in the industry until the late 80s/early 90s.

Dylan was starting to write secular songs again on this album. It was released on August 10, 1981 and included the great tunes “Lenny Bruce” and “Every Grain of Sand”.

Before school started, in mid-August, I took a little vacation, and booked a flight, one of the very first I’d ever taken, to Seattle, to go see my sister Becky, who lived in Lacey, a little town just east of Olympia. She and Paco had moved across the country the year before, where he was able to find work with relatives. Becky and Paco were having lots of problems at this point, but I didn’t care. I wanted to see her and I needed to get away for a little while. They would soon split up and by early 1982, she was back home with the family.

This was the airline I chose to go visit my sister.
My plane landed in Seattle. My brother-in-law and sister picked me up at the airport and we headed south to Lacey.
Lacey was just east of Olympia, Washington’s state capital.
The town of Lacey had lots of trees everywhere.
My sister drove me around the area. It was very lush and green. It also rained a lot!
The view from the top is amazing. I’ll never forget it.
We took this photo up in the Space Needle.
This place is always a lot of fun. I’ve been to it several times, but this was my first time and I was awestruck.
We drove Highway 101 to Port Angeles and caught the ferry to Victoria.
This looks exactly like the ferry we took.
There were flowers everywhere. Victoria is an absolutely beautiful place.

The Royal British Columbia Museum was amazing. We wandered around for hours, it seems.
I picked this up either in Victoria or Seattle. Bob Marley had died earlier in the year. The group “Reconstruction” played a lot in the Vancouver area. I used to have this up on my wall in my apartment.
Paco and Becky drove me up to Mt. Rainier one day and we climbed up as far as we could. I left them both in the dust, as I was in very good shape at the time.
It was time to head home and get ready for school to start.
Release date: August 20, 1981. Included are the songs, “Hold On, I’m Comin’,” a duet with George Benson titled “Love All the Hurt Away”, and You Can’t Always Get What you Want. Great album!
I loved my classes this semester.

I had a great time this semester. My classes were interesting and I learned a great deal in them. I particularly loved my class, Collective Behavior and Social Movements. The professor, Dr. Diane Bush, was a wonderful teacher. My History of Women in America class was also very good. I was the only guy in the class! I’m still friend with my professor, Dr. Karen Anderson. The class on Mexican American Culture was taught by Dr. James Officer. He was another wonderful teacher and was the author of the book, “Hispanic Arizona”.

Released on September 4, 1981. I love this album.
This movie premiered on September 18, 1981. I don’t think I saw it right away. It’s now a cult classic, very campy, very gay…
This film had very little scenery, but it held one captivated the entire time. I loved it. It was released on October 11, 1981.

When the film Zootsuit came out, I decided that I would take my mom and dad to see it when it was playing at the theater in El Con. Mom and Dad were a young married couple in the mid-40s and the music and the fashions of the era were well familiar to them. They enjoyed the film a lot. I did too.

Mom and Dad, still together after so many years.
A review in the local paper of the movie, Zootsuit. Oct. 16, 1981.
I used to own this poster, but like a fool, I gave it away to someone very undeserving. I should’ve kept it.
Released on 11/12/82. This film was way ahead of its time.
Released on 12-8-82. A heartbreaking movie. Amazing.

By the end of the semester, I had written a series of papers on the Gay Liberation Movement for my Sociology 313 class titled Collective Behavior and Social Movements. They were called “take home exams, but were really very long essays. Here’s the entire set of them.

“The Gay Liberation Movement Part I (Take Home Exam #1). Sociology 313: Collective Behavior and Social Movement. Dr. Diane Bush. September 15, 1981.

“The Gay Liberation Movement Part II (Take Home Exam #2). Sociology 313: Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Dr. Diane Bush. October 29, 1981.

“The Gay Liberation Movement Part III (Take Home Exam #3). Sociology 313: Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Dr. Diane Bush. November 30, 1981.

“The Gay Liberation Movement Part IV (Final Exam). Sociology 313: Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Dr. Diane Bush. December 14, 1981.

I did well this semester overall. I was just about done with school, with just a few credits left to complete. My grade point average continued to improve this semester.
I loved this movie. It was released on December 17, 1982. I saw it with my friend Scott.
This movie was released on Christmas Day, 1981. I loved it.

As the year came to a close, I had made more new friends. I became friends with Scott, a guy I met at Fry’s. I developed a very heavy crush on him and we spent a lot of time together for the next couple of years. I started dating women again too. I had hooked up with my friend Merricat sometime in the Fall, for example. She and I fooled around some, and I even took her to a Christmas party some friends from Fry’s were having. Merricat came to the party dressed like a modern day hippie, with a beaded headdress and a long flowing skirt, and my friends from Fry’s got all freaked out and even asked me, where did you find her? She was such a nice person, but we didn’t last. I was gay, and that’s all there was to it. While I fought my attraction to guys, it overpowered my desire to be with women. It took a few more years and a few more awkward sexual experiences with women to finally let go of any notion that I was attracted to them or could sustain a relationship with one. But in the meantime, I kept trying.