Category Archives: My Life in Pictures

My life Story: 1977

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!

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

On Thursday, May 12, at around 8:30pm, I was reading a novel titled Saint Francis, by Nikos Kazantzakis at Winchell’s Donut shop on 22nd street. I was the only customer in the store, and suddenly a guy appeared with a gun, and he robbed the place. I knew something was up, and dared not make a move. I sat perfectly still with this book in my hands pretending to read it. When the guy had left and the cops arrived the clerk informed them that the robber had his gun pointed at me. I had no idea because I was seated facing the back wall.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

My Life Story: High School, 1973-1976

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!

SUMMER, 1973.

I never should have gone to Salpointe. My parents could not afford it. They thought Tucson High was a perfectly good school. After all, my five older brothers and sisters all went there and they did just fine. We were a proud THS Badger family, but I insisted that Salpointe was where I wanted to go. I argued that it was a better school and because I wanted to go to college eventually, I would get a better education there. Nobody knew the real reason why I insisted on Salpointe. In all honesty, I was in love (obsessed) with a boy from junior high who was going there, and I wanted to follow him. Nothing would stand in my way.

I promised my parents I would work my way through school and pay most of the tuition myself, and also noted that my santito cousins, the Mendozas and Basurtos were going there too. My mom and dad reluctantly said okay, but they had no idea what the tuition was going to be. Otherwise, they would have definitely said no. We barely made the tuition payments, and were given a break more often than not. I was a charity case, I suppose. Maybe the administration let me stay on because I did well academically. I really don’t know.

My home life at this time continued to be quite a challenge. My mom was sick a lot and in and out of the hospital for months at a time. Around the same time, my sister Irene got a divorce, and my sister Becky moved to New Jersey. Partying was a big thing in the seventies and most of the kids, in my neighborhood, anyway, were getting high or drinking and doing other drugs. While I was in school, I stayed away from all of that, thank goodness, but every now and then I’d hook up with some of my travieso cousins or friends and we’d smoke or drink, especially during the summer months. I have to say, compared to some of the kids I knew, I was a saint!

Published in 1973, this all-in-one encyclopedia was titled “Illustrated Home Reference: A Quick and Useful Guide for Home and School Use”. It also included an atlas and a biographical dictionary. It was a great reference book.

One day a traveling salesman came to our house selling books. Without my parents’ permission, I agreed to purchase this all-in-one encyclopedia, as it was a great deal, or so I thought. I didn’t have to pay for it immediately, but there was a catch– I would also have to buy a Spanish-English dictionary that came as part of the package, but it hadn’t been published quite yet. When it did get published, the guy came to our house a second time to deliver the dictionary and to collect the money I owed. My father was home at the time, and I told him what I had done, and asked him to pay for the books. He got very angry at both me and the salesman. He chased the poor guy away and slammed the front door and then he yelled at me and told me to never do something like that again. I guess the salesman was too scared to come back, as my dad was not one to be messed with, and as a result I kept the encyclopedia without paying for it. I was very hurt at my dad, but realized later that I should have first asked for permission to buy the books. My parents didn’t have a lot of money, and things like this were considered frivolous.

FRESHMAN YEAR, 1st SEMESTER: FALL, 1973.

The boy I had the crush on ended up “unfriending” me shortly after school started in the Fall of 1973. Just my luck. He also switched schools and ended up at Rincon or Catalina. I don’t even know. So there I was, with only my santito cousins to hang out with. It took a while to get to know people and make new friends. I had to give up playing the cello too, because the school did not have an orchestra program. I didn’t want to give up music altogether, however, so I took up the saxophone and joined the band. That’s where I made my first friends.

The main entrance to Salpointe. The school would later change its name to Salpointe Catholic High School.
This is what the Salpointe campus looked like in the mid 60s. It would later expand to include several other buildings.
My Freshman year portrait, 1973.
After I switched from the public schools to Salpointe, I took up the saxophone. I stopped playing in an orchestra, although I rented a cello for a while my freshman year. I eventually gave it up, however. My musical instruments all had names: Max the Sax, Morgan the Organ, and Chichi the Cello.
Band practice. I’m on the far right side of the photo, playing the saxophone. I played both the tenor sax and the alto sax, depending on what was available.
Mr. James Lee was our band teacher. He was a great guy. His father was Jack Lee, the composer of the UA fight song, Bear Down, Arizona and longtime director of the University of Arizona marching band.
The marching band played at all of Salpointe’s football games. I’m on the far left above the guy with the blonde hair. I hated football.

Our band teacher was cool. We played some great stuff, including the Beatles’ song O-Bla-Di-O-Bla-Da and the one that follows, Kodachrome by Paul Simon. We had a lot of fun.

American Grafitti was released on August 1, 1973. Oldies But Goodies became all the rage, yet again.
This was a beautiful film. It was released on October 19, 1973. I think Robert Redford is the handsomest actor Hollywood has ever brought us.
I’m not a big fan of Ms. Streisand, but there are two songs in particular that I really love. This one is my favorite. The other one, released a few years later, is Evergreen.
Jerry Mendoza was a good friend of ours who lived near the railroad tracks.

Living near the railroad tracks was hazardous. Chemical waste was dumped into the ground and the water in the area was badly contaminated. The railroad companies eventually cleaned up the toxic waste, but for many in the area who got sick, it was too late. Jerry Mendoza lived right next to the tracks. He was good friends with my brother Fred and the other guys in the neighborhood. He died of leukemia at the age of 16. When I was little, he gave me a Nancy Sinatra album that had the song, “These Boots Are Made For Walking”. He was a rocker, and didn’t care for Nancy Sinatra. The album must’ve belonged to his mom or something. I just loved the album. It also included the songs “In My Room” and “As Tears go By”.

Jerry Mendoza gave this album to me, but he couldn’t find the cover to it, so I just got the record.
This was a big hit in 1966.
This was Bruce Springsteen’s second album, released on November 11, 1973. My sister Becky moved to New Jersey this particular year, and she told me that she and her husband Paco would see Springsteen perform at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park sometimes. Her husband knew Bruce in high school. Becky got to meet him. Wow, must’ve been quite a thrill. Check Bruce out below in this concert he held in Phoenix back in the day. What an amazing artist!

Soylent Green was released on April 19, 1973. This is how I spent Thanksgiving.

I saw these two movies on November 22, Thanksgiving night in 1973. I was very depressed, and also had a crush on a kid named Bill who lived near Salpointe. Shortly before dinnertime, I slipped out of the house and took the bus to Glenn and Campbell. I wandered up and down Bill’s street for a while and then went to the Catalina Movie Theater on Campbell and Grant, where I saw these two movies. They were both way too weird for me. I don’t remember how I made it home. The bus must’ve still been running late into the night. The only person that noticed I wasn’t home for dinner was my sister-in-law Lillian. She seemed genuinely concerned that I was gone, but nobody else thought much of it, sadly enough.

Westworld was released on August 17, 1973.
Newsweek Magazine 11-26-73. Famous last words…
Newsweek Magazine, December 3, 1973. The energy crisis was so bad that people were told not to put up Christmas lights during the holidays. There were long lines at all the gas pumps, and prices skyrocketed. This all occurred during the Arab-Israeli war when OPEC decided to play hard ball and put the squeeze on the availability of oil.
Father Frank Weil was one of several Carmelite priests who lived at the monastery on the Salpointe campus. He taught religion. We would eventually become very close friends, and I learned a lot from him.
My first semester’s report card. I managed to keep up my grades all through school.

While I liked the majority of my classes this semester, I didn’t really care for my English class, as it was team taught, and each teacher brought a different approach to their work. It didn’t provide for a lot of continuity, which I favored. However, I do remember one teacher in particular who had an impact on me early on. Her name was Sister Rachel, and one day in English class she played the song “What Did You Learn In School Today?” by a folksinger named Tom Paxton. She was “shocked” that none of us had heard of him before! The song was an eye opener, and I later sought it out. Tom Paxton was a folkie who was part of the Sixties generation of singer songwriters who became popular for their political lyrics and memorable tunes like Ramblin’ Boy and Early Mornin Rain. Another thing I remember clearly is that Sister Rachel and other nuns were involved heavily in the farm worker movement at the time, and I remember bringing my mom’s black velvet painting of the Virgen de Guadalupe to class so that Sister Rachel could use it in a protest march that was being held somewhere in the community. It made me very proud to have my mom’s painting included in the march. I didn’t know it at the time, but Sister Rachel was good friends with my other teachers Ron and Jane Cruz. I had a feeling she didn’t like me much for some reason, and I came away thinking she was a very moody nun. Oh well. I did appreciate that she turned me on to Tom Paxton!

I didn’t care much for my religion class either, but the teachers, Father Frank and Father Roderic in particular, did get us to start thinking about deeper stuff like “values” and “morality”. I wasn’t a bad kid, but I was still lost. I continued to struggle with my budding sexuality, and began to question who I was. I’d never thought much about it in the past. I was busy trying to “fit in” and not get beat up.

All in all, I managed to survive my first semester at Salpointe without too much difficulty. I liked my teachers. Most of them were supportive, but I do remember being told by a “counselor” early on that I shouldn’t get my hopes up about going on to college. I couldn’t believe my ears. I’d always wanted to continue my education and go to college, but this jerk must have assumed that because I was Mexican American, that I wasn’t college material. This made me more determined than ever to succeed. Bigotry and hatred towards Mexican Americans, while not always expressed so openly, did exist at Salpointe. I would encounter it at the oddest moments, and it would really shock me and throw me off kilter for a while, but I can be rather stubborn, and I’ve always known I was gifted academically, so I didn’t give up and I persevered in spite of the obstacles and bigoted people I encountered along the way.

The following is from the September 18, 2015 issue of the magazine, Psychology Today.

In 1973, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) asked all members attending its convention to vote on whether they believed homosexuality to be a mental disorder. 5,854 psychiatrists voted to remove homosexuality from the DSM, and 3,810 to retain it. The APA then compromised, removing homosexuality from the DSM but replacing it, in effect, with “sexual orientation disturbance” for people “in conflict with” their sexual orientation. Not until 1987 did homosexuality completely fall out of the DSM.

The classification of homosexuality as a mental illness was removed from this manual in December, 1973, but not completely…

I wrote the following poem around this time. I was fourteen years old.

This song got a lot of airplay. I just loved it. I felt like a lonesome cowboy a lot of the time, sad and depressed.

FRESHMAN YEAR, 2nd SEMESTER: SPRING, 1974.

I started working the Spring semester of my freshman year. I got a job in the snack bar during Bingo nights and worked with my two aunts and my santito cousins selling soft drinks, pop corn, tacos, tostadas, and sandwiches. I had to get a health card in order to serve food.

My Pima County Health card, which I obtained in order to work at the Salpointe snack bar on bingo nights.
This birthday telegram was from my sister Becky and her husband. They got his name wrong. It was Paco, not Taco. Cracked me up!

Spring 1974–this is the semester that changed my life. Growing up, I knew my family was of Mexican and Spanish descent, but we never really discussed our family history in much detail, although my dad was very proud of his Spanish roots. His father was Asturiano, and came to North America from Spain at the turn of the century. His mother was from Zacatecas, Mexico, but also of Spanish descent. My mother’s family, on the other hand was mostly Indio Mexicano and part Spanish. I knew very little about her father’s or mother’s families. Once my grandparents families made it up north, their ties to Mexico weakened with each succeeding generation. As a little boy, I was very light-skinned, a guerito, as they say. I could easily pass for being “white”, especially in my younger years. My brother Fred on the other hand, had darker skin, and people quickly identified him as “Mexican”. This dichotomy played itself out in my whole family. Three of us were light-skinned and three of us were darker in complexion. I never really felt like part of the family. My brothers and sisters were all incredibly good looking, and I felt anything but that. I was fat and cross-eyed, a clumsy, goofy kid with very low self esteem. It didn’t help that my older sister Becky would tease me and tell me I was dropped off on the doorstep and adopted. She was kidding, of course, but I was just a child and I believed her at one point. It messed me up.

This appeared on televison on 01-31-74. It was an amazing movie. Cicely Tyson was incredible.
This is the first record album I bought with my own money in 1974. I got it at Discount Records on University Blvd. I still have it.
I saw this with a bunch of friends at the drive-in. We were all cracking up, it was so funny. 2/7/74.

Before the second semester started, Salpointe had what was called “Interim Week”. During this time, all the students were able to take mini-courses on any number of topics. I can’t remember the name of the mini-course, but I signed up for one with a teacher named Ron Cruz. The course was a mix of politics and history, and Ron ended up taking us on field trips to a variety of places downtown, including Barrio Viejo and the Pima County Courthouse. It was an eye opening experience, because Ron was teaching us local history, our history. I’d never been exposed to it before, and I was completely hooked. It turns out Ron was going to teach an entire class on the topic soon and he invited me to sign up for it, even though most of the other students enrolled in it were sophomores.

The class was called “Cultural Awareness” but it was really an introduction to Chicano Studies. It opened my eyes to who I was. I was finally able to understand the significance of my family background and began to learn about our social structure and my family’s place in it. I embraced the word CHICANO because Ron defined it as a person who was proud of both his indigenous and Spanish roots and someone who had a sense of “critical consciousness” about the historical and political realities of American society and who worked to make the world a better place. That’s exactly who I wanted to be and do too.

To elaborate, this brief description from Wikipedia describes well just what I was experiencing. Critical consciousness, conscientization, or conscientização in Portuguese, is a popular education and social concept developed by Brazilian pedagogue and educational theorist Paulo Freire, grounded in post-Marxist critical theory. Critical consciousness focuses on achieving an in-depth understanding of the world, allowing for the perception and exposure of social and political contradictions. Critical consciousness also includes taking action against the oppressive elements in one’s life that are illuminated by that understanding.[1]

In subsequent years, I would continue my education in Chicano history and other topics such as the study of social movements and non-violence. I am forever grateful to my teachers Ron and Jane for helping to guide me in this direction.

Ron Cruz taught a course called “Cultural Awareness”. It was really Chicano Studies, and it changed my life. I took it the second semester of my freshman year.

In this class, I was exposed to music, poetry, history, politics, film and literature. Ron would play us Mexican corridos, and on his classroom walls were portraits of accomplished Mexican Americans, people like senators, congressmen, educators and labor leaders. He would also show a variety of films in class, which I really enjoyed. He helped us all realize that we had a deep, rich history, one to be proud of. Wow. I felt like I had finally found myself, at least partially. There certainly was a lot more to discover and explore, but this was the start of a long adventure of self discovery and self acceptance!

The poem, Yo Soy Joaquin/I Am Joaquin by Rodolfo “Corky Gonzales, had a huge impact on me. The film below added another dimension to it altogether.
My dad was a copper miner and a union man. This film is just amazing and it helped me understand some of the workplace challenges people like my dad faced.
Salt of the Earth, one of the best documentaries ever made.
I bought this book when I was at Salpointe. I still have it. Chicano History 101 in Pictures.
This movie was bad, as in pretty awful , but I clearly remember seeing it at the Buena Vista. It was released on March 7, 1974. It starred Lucille Ball and Bea Arthur.
This album by Daniel Valdez, titled Mestizo, was released in February 1974. He wrote all the music, and it was yet another example of Chicano artistic expression. It’s an amazing album. The concert below showcases his talents.
I’ve had this since high school. It’s all beat up, but I still treasure it.
Listening to corridos in Mr. Cruz’s class piqued my interest in traditional Mexican music. I bought this album at the local drugstore, El Campo Drugs, on 22nd and Country Club sometime in the Spring of ’74. I still have it.
This was released in February, 1974. It preceded her big hit, “At Seventeen” by a year. The title cut is beautiful. I didn’t buy this until a couple years later. For a while, I bought every new album she released in the 70s. What a gifted woman!
This album was released on 2-25-74 and included the hit, “Until You Come Back To me, That’s What I’m Gonna Do, written for Aretha by Stevie Wonder. I would be a few more years until I really started listening to this woman. My sister Irene had the 8-track recording. The following song is my favorite.
John Denver. My first concert!
This 1974 concert, featuring John Denver, was the first one I’d ever been to, and it was held at the brand new Tucson Community Center arena on March 1, 1974. His big hits at the time were “Sunshine on My Shoulders”, and “Take Me Home, Country Roads” and my brother Rudy owned his album, John Denver’s Greatest Hits.
I loved this song. It was a huge hit for Mr. Denver.
This was probably the last carnival that I went to at Southgate, mid-March, 1974.
This was taken at the carnival at Southgate.
Irene and her girls at the carnival in 1974.
While this wasn’t the Eagles very first album, it was filled with great tunes, like Ol 55, Best of My Love and My Man.
God, I love this song.

I wasn’t always aware of it, but my feet have always been immersed in both Mexican culture (especially at home, listening to my parents and relatives speak to each other in Spanish, listening to norteno music on the radio in the kitchen , watching El Teatro Mexicano on TV every week, going to Catholic mass every Sunday, and eating Mexican food all the time), and American culture ( via television, popular music, literature, and film).

All of the songs on this album are in Spanish. The recording was released in April, 1974. I bought it at JC Penney downtown. It was dedicated to Victor Jara and the people of Chile and was hugely popular in Latin America. One of my favorites, No Nos Moveran, follows. The song is preceded by a poem written by Pablo Neruda and recited by Joan.
This is the cover of the 1973-1974 Salpointe Yearbook. It was a high quality product. The advisor for the yearbook staff, David Cosgrove, was a real pro, and he worked wonders with his students.
I enjoyed taking science classes. My teacher for this class, which was called “Introduction to Physical Science,” was a man named Paul Shubitz. I would also take physics from him the following year.
I did really well academically my first year. This is the highest I was ever ranked. The school stopped ranking students my junior year.

SUMMER, 1974.

During the summer of ’74, I tried my hand at washing dishes at Howard Johnson’s during the graveyard shift. I lasted only a month, and earned just over $350. It was the first time I’d ever contributed to the federal tax system, however. From this point on, I’d continue working and paying income tax every year, either at the snack bar or at other places.

This is a postcard of Howard Johnson’s on the Benson Highway, where I worked in the summer of ’74. Needless to say, I didn’t like the work or the hours. One of my duties was to vacuum the restaurant floor. There was a jukebox in the room, and I would play the song below practically every shift I worked there. I remember it as clear as day.
This album was released on 7-19-74. One day as I was walking along 22nd St, going home from Randolph Park, I found a copy of this album jacket lying on the side of the street. It was all beat up and there was no record inside. I picked it up and took it home, and told myself that one day I would find the record, and I did. This has become one of my favorite Neil Young albums. I didn’t get into listening to him a lot until a few years later. My friend Richard loved his albums “Tonight’s the Night”, and “Zuma”. It took me a while, but I eventually acquired these and many others. The song that follows is just great.
Nixon resigned the Presidency on August 8, 1974.
This album was released on 8-11-74. I didn’t acquire it until a few years later. I think following song is amazing.
Our new President and First Lady…
More treasures from the music room of the public library downtown. I fell in love with the flute after listening to this album, and was soon learning how to play it. This is some the most beautiful music Mozart ever wrote. The album, in its entirety follows. Side 2 showcases the clarinet virtuosity of Jacques Lancelot as he presents Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto in A Major.

SOPHOMORE YEAR, 1st SEMESTER: FALL, 1974.

As I entered my second year of high school, I was still struggling with the fact that I was attracted to boys. I continued to hide how I felt, although I did have a couple of sexual encounters with one of my travieso cousins around this time. What started out as horseplay developed into something else altogether. The details aren’t important. I’ll just say I enjoyed it immensely, but knew I couldn’t tell a soul about it, nor could I allow it to continue. What felt so right was wrong, at least that’s how everyone around me, including me, thought about it.

This was also the year I became great friends with Ron and Jane Cruz, Richard Elias and Sylvia Boyed. Richard and I had met in Mr. Cruz’s Cultural Awareness class the previous semester, and we both ended up playing the tenor saxophone in the marching band together in the Fall of ’74. We were also on the newspaper staff together. The following semester, we led a petition drive to get scab lettuce out of the high school cafeteria. Most of the student body signed the petition, but the administration let us down and we were informed that the lettuce machines didn’t work with romaine or other kinds of lettuce. They only worked with iceberg lettuce, so our effort went down the drain. It was fun, nevertheless. We had drive and were passionate about a cause, and we succeeded in getting the vast majority of students on our side.

As I just noted, I started to spend a lot of time in and out of school with Richard my sophomore year, and we would remain very close throughout the rest of our time at Salpointe. I would, for example, go to his house after school and play basketball with him or watch Hogan’s Heroes and The Munsters on TV with him. I even stayed at his house and had dinner with his whole family multiple times. Richard’s parents were very kind and generous to me at a period in my life when I needed such generosity. My mom was hospitalized at this point, and there was no such thing as “family dinner time” at my house. I always marveled at how the Elias family would eat together every day, and how Mr. Elias would engage his kids in conversation at the dinner table. Richard had an older sister named Ana, and an older brother named Albert, both of whom I became good friends with as well.

My beautiful sister Becky.
I knew every song by heart…
My song for Richard…

If there was one album that I cherished in my teen years, it was Carole King’s Tapestry. I especially loved the tunes, So Far Away and You’ve Got a Friend. I thought of my sister Becky when I heard the first of the two, and of Richard when I heard the second. Becky and Richard became the two most important people in the world to me, and while one was close in proximity, both were very far away. Unreachable. I’d dare not share how I felt about Richard, yet somehow I think everyone must’ve known that I was completely smitten and totally in love–a real mess, yes indeed. Becky was the only person in the world at the time that I felt understood how hard things were for me growing up. She was there when I needed her, but had moved very far away, and it would be years before I’d see her again.

This double album was a compilation of Joan Baez’s music going all the way back to the early Sixties. It was one of the first of her recordings that I ever purchased. It was released in August, 1974.
This song originally appeared on the album “Blessed Are”, but it was included in the Contemporary Ballad Book album, which consisted of a variety of songs Joan recorded throughout her career up until 1971 or so.

The film, “The Longest Yard”, premiered on August 21, 1974. It was so funny!

Puberty finally started kicking in big time my sophomore year…I hated my hair in this photo. The longer it got, the curlier and more unruly it became.

Being in the marching band was a great experience, but I stopped participating after my sophomore year. I found this letter somewhere in the band office and kept it.
That’s my best friend Richard Elias in the front, followed by me, looking all dorky. Richard and I became close friends around this time. Our friendship lasted a lifetime. He died in 2020.
Our band in 1974. Richard is on the left tickling the girl sitting below him, and I’m in the middle towards the right playing with the hair of the girl sitting in front of me. Poor Colleen.
My buddy, Richard. He was a spunky one, that’s for sure!
Released on September 13, 1974. Richard owned this album, and we’d listen to it together all the time. I bought my own copy eventually. Several of the songs hit me like a freight train when I listen to them, especially now that Richard’s gone.
Another Richard song…
In 1974, I joined the student newspaper staff. Richard became the editor after he pulled off a coup, forcing the former editor out of the way. Jane Cruz, Ron’s husband, was our advisor, and our buddy Ronnie Burch was one of our co-conspirators and partners “in crime” as they say. We had a blast. I didn’t know much at all about journalism at the time, but I did write at least a couple of articles for the paper while there.
This is the cover of one of newspapers. We were rank amateurs, but like I said, we had a blast.
This was taken in the Crusader office. I don’t remember what I was doing.
My brother Rudy fell ill around this time and his wife divorced him. I took him to see George Harrison in November, 1974 when he came to town and performed at the Community Center with Billy Preston and Ravi Shankar. Rudy had always been a big Beatles fan, and he really enjoyed the show. Unable to work, he moved in with my parents and lived with them for several years before he remarried and started a new family.
This was Rudy’s favorite song.
This was Linda Ronstadt’s breakthrough album, released in November, 1974. Her hit song, “You’re No Good” was played day and night on the radio. I preferred other songs from the album like the title cut and the Hank Williams song “I Can’t Help It (If I’m Still In Love With You). Like many Tucsonans, I became a lifelong fan. Her music provided the soundtrack to my youth.
One of my favorites from this album.
Released on December 15, 1974. I’m pretty sure I saw this at the Fox Theater downtown.
I continued to do well academically. If I’d had a choice, I wouldn’t have taken religion or P.E. but they were required.
I’m including this song because it reminds me of when I started playing the flute. My friend Jane Tannich let me borrow hers, and I had it for almost a year. I played it during midnight mass church services at the Carmelite house’s little chapel, and my friend Karen Ocon’s mom, who was a flutist herself with the Tucson Symphony, complimented me on my playing. I also played the flute during another service, and Morning Has Broken was one of the songs I played a solo on. I should’ve kept it up, but didn’t pursue music in college.
Freddy Fender released this album in late 1974. By January, 1975, he released the title cut as a single and it put him at the top of the charts.

SOPHOMORE YEAR, 2nd SEMESTER: SPRING, 1975.

This was a particularly difficult year for me and my family. I turned 16 on January 15, but there was no celebration. I spent the evening at home listening to oldies and moping. I felt so awkward and lonely. A week later, a couple of my immediate family members got into some serious trouble, and our lives were never the same. I can’t divulge many details, but there were a lot of heavy changes that took place. Another sibling separated from his wife at this time, making things even more difficult to deal with. I struggled at school, and felt isolated and very depressed. I still had my friends and teachers, but it sure was rough going there for a while. I don’t think anyone had any idea what I was going through at the time.

Blood on the Tracks, one of Dylan’s best albums ever, was released on January 20, 1975.
The entire album is a work of genius, but this song gets me every time.
I didn’t do that well in this particular competition. The highest ranking was a ‘superior’ rating and all I got was an “excellent” rating. I couldn’t get a ride to this event, which was held at the University of Arizona’s School of Music building, and I therefore had to ride my bicycle all the way there while holding my saxophone in my lap. I made it without crashing, but I was all sweaty and agitated by the time I got there. I wasn’t in a good space, that’s for sure. Life at home was not great.
Released in February, 1975, this was Janis Ian’s breakthrough recording that included “At Seventeen”. She hadn’t had a hit since she recorded “Society’s Child” in 1966. I love this album.
Here was another instance where I had to find my way on my own, finally getting to the testing site all flustered and sweaty. This time it was to Rincon High School. I took the bus there, barely making it in time for the exam. I usually did well on Spanish tests, but this time, ugh, I felt like I had bombed.

Joan Baez started her career in 1959, the year I was born, but she was rarely on the radio. Her only hit was “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down”, which I didn’t particularly like. I started listening to her my freshman year. The first records of hers, aside from the aforementioned one, that I heard were “In Concert: Part II”(1963) and “David’s Album”(1969). I borrowed them from the public library downtown. My mother bought me the album “Diamonds and Rust” in 1975, and I wrote an article about Ms. Baez for the student newspaper around the same time. This was the year she was part of Bob Dylan’s “Rolling Thunder Revue” tour, which began in October, 1975 and lasted until May of the following year.

This album was a huge commercial breakthrough for Joan Baez. It included her signature song, “Diamonds and Rust”. It was released on April 1, 1975.
My friend Richard’s sister Ana made him a head band just like this one for his cowboy hat, and I bugged her relentlessly to make me one too until she finally relented. I wore it proudly.
The Crusader office had a subscription to El Malcriado, which was the UFW’s official newspaper. I did a book report on Forty Acres for my history class and also read Sal Si Puedes, which was one of the most popular works out at the time that dealt with the UFW. Peter Mathiessen was a well known and prolific author who later went to write “In The Spirit of Crazy Horse” an outstanding book about the American Indian Movement.
Richard and I would also sometimes accompany Ron and Jane to various liquor stores in town to picket their sales of Gallo Wines. We boycotted Lee’s Liquors on N. Stone and Speedway as well as another one on Tanque Verde Rd near Grant. At that one, the owner put loudspeakers outside where were were picketing and blasted “the Stars and Stripes Forever”, lest we forget we were in Amerikkka. Jane helped us make these homemade buttons.
I attended this event with my teacher Ron Cruz and buddy Richard. Tijerina, was considered one of the four major leaders of the Chicano Movement back in the day. He was a controversial figure, but a very, passionate, dynamic speaker, and I’m glad I had the opportunity to hear him speak in person.
April 30, 1975. The Vietnam War finally ends!

James Taylor has always been one of my favorite singers. This album was released on May 1, 1975. It includes some great folk songs like Wandering and Sarah Maria, and the big hits, “Mexico” and “How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You”.
Mr. Garcia was a nice man, but some of the students I knew were always pulling pranks on him, and would do things like put thumb tacks or bubble gum on his chair. One time he sat on a big wad of gum and wore the same pants two or three times before he realized there was gum on them. Ah, high school…
My Spanish teachers were Mrs. DeValk and Mr. Jose’ Garcia. I had started learning the language formally in junior high. It was an easy subject for me, because, of course, my parents and relatives all spoke it. My generation was the first generation on both sides of my family whose first language was not Spanish. It blows my mind when I think about it.
I received this award in recognition for having worked with my friends Richard and Jorge to get scab lettuce out of the school cafeteria. We circulated petitions around campus demanding this, but in the end we were defeated because the school administration told us that the lettuce cutting machines could not cut romaine or other types of lettuce, and there was no way the cafeteria workers could do this work by hand. We lost this battle, but learned some invaluable lessons.
This is the cover of the 1974-75 Salpointe Yearbook. It was not a great production like the previous year’s annual, but it’s what we had. Mr Cosgrove had left Salpointe in 1974, but returned by the start of the 1975-76 school year and helped bring the quality of the yearbooks up to par again by the time the next yearbook appeared.
I was a member of the National Honor Society throughout jr. high and high school. I’m on the upper right hand corner in this photo. My good friend Sylvia is the third person in the front row. She and I were very close at one point. My good friend Felicia is also in the photo, in the front row, fifth from the right.
I got better grades this semester, but my rank was lower this time around. How they figured that stuff out was beyond me.
Ron and Jane, sitting on their front porch on S. 4th Ave. with their dog and their two children, Elida and Beto.

SUMMER, 1975.

I had the honor of meeting Cesar Chavez at the event noted below. I would meet him again in 1988 when I lived in Michigan. He was a very soft-spoken man. Meeting him was the thrill of a lifetime.
Richard and I both attended this event and met Cesar Chavez. He was sitting in the pew in back of us and Ron introduced us to him and told him what we had accomplished back at school. He later wrote us a thank you letter for our efforts.

The above film can be watched on youtube, but it’s broken up into six parts. Here is the first part. Subsequent parts appear on the right of the youtube page.

From the Tucson Citizen, May 26, 1975.
Country rock was all the rage. This was yet another group that popularized it. They had a big hit with a song called “Amy”, but my favorite is the one that follows. The album was released sometime in June, 1975.
I started attending the Cathedral around this time, even though our family parish was St. Ambrose. Richard was member of St. Augustine’s, so there I went…I enjoyed the choir and stayed in it for over a year.
Released on June 10, 1975, this album includes one of my all time favorite songs, “Take It To the Limit”. Wow!
This is a live version of Take It To the Limit
I took a summer school English class at Tucson High this particular summer. I never understood what the Rime of the Ancient Mariner was all about, nor did I really understand the other works we read. We had a lousy teacher. I always thought I did well in English, but this class was awful. It didn’t help that my cousin Martin was also in the class, because he was not a good influence and liked to party. I took one more summer school class at Tucson high. It was in American history. I’m not sure if I took it this summer or the following summer, however. I do remember my brother Fred’s future wife Ruth was in the class. She was always asking about him.
Released on June 16, 1975, this album was a best seller. It featured the tunes, “Low Rider” and the title cut.
Released on June 20, 1975. This album became one of my very favorites over time. It was Richard’s favorite too.
What a song!
My teacher Ron is on the far right. He and several others are picketing a store called Market Spot on E. Speedway near Park Ave. Notice the guy in the back middle wagging his finger at the camera.
Arizona_Daily_Star_1975_07_03_Page_15
Richard and I decided to go to the drive-in one night. We watched all of Big Mad Mama, but left during the next film, “Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia”. It had a lot of violence and nudity in it, and it made Richard and me quite uncomfortable. This ad appeared in the July 13, 1975 issue of the Arizona Daily Star.
One of my prized possessions. I still have it, of course.
I found another summer job, this time at Tucson Newspapers, Inc. and had money to buy concert tickets. Richard and I went to the concert specifically to see Santana, and we left when Clapton started playing. Go figure. The concert was held on August 17, 1975.
Born to Run, Springsteen’s third album and his most popular to date, was released on August 25. It would take me a few more years to realized what a gifted musician this guy is. My sister got to meet him when she lived in New Jersey.
All I remember from this show was the song, Witchy Woman. The Eagles became superstars soon after this. We would also later see Linda Ronstadt in the same venue. I think I even saw her two or three times in the 70s. The Eagles started out as her backup band. I went to this concert with my buddy Richard. It was held on August 28, 1975, a week or so before classes started.

JUNIOR YEAR, 1st SEMESTER: FALL, 1975.

Linda Ronstadt’s follow up to Heart Like A Wheel was a wonderful album. It was released on September 15, 1975. I couldn’t wait to see her live in concert. I did end up seeing her twice before the 70’s were over. She was a trailblazer in so many ways. Love is A Rose, written by Neil Young is included in this album. It’s one of my favorites.
Here I am during my junior year. 16 years old, with a face full of acne.
Sister Claire Dunn taught American politics, and I was in her class. She was the nicest person. She’d give me rides home all the time. She later ran for a seat in the State Legislature and was involved in politics for a several years, but was tragically killed in the early 80’s in an auto accident on the freeway between Tucson and Phoenix.
This album was released on October 17, 1975. I bought a copy of it and played it again and again. The biggest hit from this album was “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover”, but preferred the title cut and the tune “My Little Town”.

Mr. Gary Heinz taught Global Studies. We focused solely on the histories of China and the Soviet Union, however. Mr. Heinz would use the entire blackboard to write out his lecture outline and notes every class. He was one of the very few teachers that did that. I remember he offered extra credit once to the student who could correctly write down the names of all the state capitals the fastest. I won the contest. I also wrote one of my first creative writing essays in his class. It was about Taoism. I got an A on it. I asked Mr Heinz if I could have the paper, but he decided to keep it. He also had us all write papers about some aspect of Russian History. I chose to write about Alexander Kerensky, head of the provisional government in 1917 for just a few months. The Bolsheviks soon took power and he was exiled.

I read a book on Taoism and also wrote a paper on the Russian leader Alexander Kerensky for Mr. Heintz’s Global Studies class.

Mr. Heintz held a contest and awarded a prize to the first student in the class who could identify all of the capital cities of the 50 states of the union. I won the contest. I’ve loved geography ever since elementary school.

Released on November 19, 1975. A great film.
Doing well academically was the only thing I had going for me. I was so “out of it” otherwise. I was desperately in love with someone, but could never say a word about it or do anything about it. I eventually realized this person would not be around after a while. I knew I would have to come to terms with it sooner or later.
The Cathedral Choir Christmas photo. It was taken at Old Tucson in 1975.
Richard and I would love to listen to this 1975 album, by one of Tucson’s best loved country rock bands. Our favorite songs were “Drunken Mistake,” “Heatstroke” “Too Many Pretty Women To Love Just One,” and “The Hoochie Coochie Man’s Been Hoochie Cooed”. Honky Tonk Music is another one.

JUNIOR YEAR, 2nd SEMESTER: SPRING, 1976.

Bob Dylan’s Desire album was released on January 5, 1976.
My friend Terri Cozetti bought this for me for my birthday. It was released in early January, 1976. I played it to death.
Love Song to a Stranger, Part II. Part one came out on her album, “Come From the Shadows”.
My brother Rudy started listening to Dylan way back in the mid-60s. I started listening in earnest in the mid-70s. My buddy Richard also became a big fan around this time. This issue of Rolling Stone magazine appeared on January 15, 1976. What a great birthday present!
Meanwhile, my friends Ron and Jane bought me this record for my birthday. I still have it. They also bought me one by a composer named Elliott Carter. I didn’t care for it, as Carter was an avante-garde composer and to this day, I don’t like that stuff. I have that album somewhere…
The Crusader newspaper staff. This little office was like a safe haven. Richard was our editor in chief and Jane our advisor.
My buddy Richard. After he graduated, he went on to college and then worked in public housing for many years. He also served on the Pima County Board of Supervisors and became one of Tucson’s most beloved, progressive leaders.
Jane Cruz remains one of my best friends. I’m so lucky that she and Ron were my teachers. They helped me get through the most difficult period of my life.
Jane taught Chicano Literature. I was in her class the second semester of my junior year.
This is from Jane’s class on Chicano literature. I still have the xeroxed readings and study guides that she handed out to us.
Chicano literature in a nutshell…
Released on 2/8/76. Robert DeNiro was incredible, as was Jody Foster.
By the mid-70s my mom and dad started shopping at Fry’s on 22nd street instead of at El Grande. One time, my dad cornered the assistant manager and asked him to put me to work. I started bagging groceries at Fry’s sometime in the Spring of 1976 at the age of 17. When I turned 19, I was promoted to cashier, and remained there the entire time I was in college. I put in 10 years altogether, and since the age of 62 have been collecting a small pension.
By the last semester of my junior year, I had learned the guitar, the trumpet and the flute, and continued to play the saxophone. Today, I still play the flute and the guitar. I haven’t touched a saxophone or trumpet in a very long time.
Released on April 5, 1976. These two are among my very favorite actors. What a team!

Meanwhile, two adult friends of mine and Richard’s who shall remain nameless took us to see this film. What a hoot!

From the April 5, 1976 edition of the Arizona Daily Star.
I did well on my ACT test. Below is a chart showing average test scores over time. The average national composite score in 1975 (see chart below) was 18.5 and mine was 28.
Sister Joan Winter was my friend and confidant my junior year. She was such a wonderful person. Her favorite expression was “WOW!”
I can’t believe I drank this stuff. It was a very popular soft drink, especially among my female friends.
Horizons, the 1975-76 Salpointe Yearbook. It was a well produced effort, again led by Mr. Cosgrove, who had returned to Salpointe after a year’s absence.
Karen Koster was the librarian at Salpointe the final semester of my junior year. I sometimes volunteered there after school, and she would, like Sister Claire, give me rides home every now and then. On the last day of school, she gave me a ride home and presented the following songbook to me as a parting thank you gift for having volunteered at the library.
This was a gift from the librarian Ms. Koster. I will always treasure it.
My last report card from Salpointe. I would quit before completing another semester.

The second semester of my junior year ended and most of my friends graduated. Richard went on to Colorado College and my friend Sylvia moved to San Diego and attended the University of San Diego. My friends Terri and Rose also left for college. Ronnie got a job and would soon be married.

Rose
Richard
Terri

Ronnie
Sylvia

Even Ron and Jane left. Ron went on to work for Nosotros, a local social service agency, and Jane ran a bookstore before going to work for Pima County Adult Education. I knew it was going to be rough for me the next semester. My support network had disappeared, but I had no idea how truly difficult things would get. Our family had problems coming out of its ears, and I couldn’t wait to leave home. It would take another year or two before that happened, however. I held on and did my best to get through and graduate the following Spring, but things didn’t quite work out that way.

Released in May, 1976, this is another compilation album of songs that spanned Joan Baez’s entire career. I bought it as soon as it was available. I was a Joan Baez fanatic at this point in my life.
This song never appeared on any of Joan’s previous albums until this point. There is another version available, but I just love this one.
Released on May 27, 1976. This is one of my very favorite Aretha Franklin albums. All of the songs were written by Curtis Mayfield.

SUMMER, 1976.

From the Arizona Daily Star, June 7, 1976. I wasn’t aware that this had happened at the time. The boys that committed the crime were let off easy, with probation. I came out 2 years later and would be a regular visitor to the club where this incident occurred. I never heard anyone mention the incident at the time. I guess people didn’t want to remember.
By this time in my life, I wasn’t watching much television, but I did really love this particular show. The Gong Show, hosted by Chuck Barris, shown above, premiered on national television on June 14, 1976. It was a wild show that showcased people with talent and without talent…You can imagine what happened to those poor souls who didn’t cut it!

I’m not exactly sure when, but around this time I went with Richard and his mom to Nogales. I bought some greeting cards, post cards and other stuff while there. I still have these little treasures after all these years.

Textured felt postcards from Nogales.
A portrait of Zapata
Greeting cards
Jane and Ron nominated me for Boy’s State, which was to be held in Flagstaff. I wish I had known what it was all about. I hadn’t a clue, until it was nearly over. I wasn’t cut out for politics. Another boy would’ve benefited more from the experience than me. I was a shy, quiet person with very little self confidence. I trembled at the thought of speaking in front of other people. Oh well. I made it through the program somehow.
I had started to lose weight by this time, thank goodness.

SENIOR YEAR, 1st SEMESTER: FALL, 1976.

The cover of Linda Ronstadt’s 1976 album, Hasten Down the Wind, sure turned a lot of heads. It was a great album, released on August 1, 1976
Linda’s father helped her write this song.
My teachers and friends, Ron and Jane Cruz, gave me a copy of this poster that they acquired when running La Campana Books. I still have it, but it’s badly beaten up. I had it hanging near a swamp cooler at one point and it got water damage. I found this copy online just recently.
A month and a half later, Ms. Ronstadt did a concert at the TCC Arena. I was there. It was a great show.

It was the start of my senior year, and I felt so terribly lonely. Things at home were worse than ever. My mom was very, very ill and life in our house was nearly unbearable. On top of that, I was working half time at Fry’s and had a full load of classes, including a couple where I ended up with a bunch of freshmen, because I messed up the sequencing of my classes a few years earlier. I took physics my sophomore year, when I should’ve taken biology, for example. I also had two advanced math classes, which were a real challenge. I was also supposed to fill the role of editor of the Crusader, something I knew was beyond my capabilities. I was under so much pressure, it nearly turned me into a basket case.

My friends were all away at college at this time, struggling with their own issues, but we managed to keep in touch regularly. Some did better than others at adjusting to college life away from home. Richard wrote a few letters, and I could sense that things weren’t very easy for him. Sylvia, Terri and Rose also corresponded with me regularly at this time. I still have all their letters. My sister Becky also wrote to me a lot, something she started doing back in ’73, after she moved to New Jersey. Her letters and cards were always encouraging. She knew that I was struggling, but would always try her best to cheer me up. Her favorite little saying to me was “cheer up, buttercup”. Ha ha ha. Oh, if only it were that easy!

The previous year, a good friend of mine named Marlena had left Salpointe early, at the end of the first semester of her senior year. She took the GED exam and went straight to the University of Arizona. I remembered that she had done this, and realized that was what I needed to do too, to preserve my sanity. So I decided to follow suit and announced to everyone that I was going to quit high school. My parents were horrified, as were my teachers and the school administrators. I was betraying everyone by doing this. I was losing out on getting in to a good school upon graduation. It was wrong, and I would regret it, they told me, but I knew it was the only solution. I was ready to crack. I had to get out, so I didn’t waste any time. I left Salpointe in late September and found out when and where I could take the GED. I took it in October, and then I set about getting myself enrolled at the University of Arizona, and completed all the paperwork by November. I did this all on my own, and my plan worked. By January, I started classes as a freshman at the University of Arizona, and I continued to work at Fry’s. A whole new chapter in my life was about to begin.

I took the GED exam sometime in October, 1976. I didn’t receive the grades or the diploma until nearly 3 years later, however, after the University of Arizona registrar’s office asked me to show proof of having graduated from high school. I had to contact the State office of Education and have the paperwork sent to me. I was already half way done with college by then!
My GED. I was told that I blew all my chances of going to a good University because of this, but the U of A was good enough for me. Making this move saved my life.
I played this album to death. One of my all time favorites, it was released on November 1, 1976
I couldn’t wait to start college. This document was verification that I was accepted! Yippee!!
This album was released in November, 1976. It includes some beautiful songs, including Victor Jara’s “Plegaria a un Labrador” and “Spanish Is The Loving Tongue” as well as the title track. It’s a beautiful record.
This was also released in November. Joan wrote all of the songs on this one.
Christmas, 1976. My friend Sylvia was a very special and dear friend . She and I were both immersed in exploring our faith at this point. For her, it became a lifelong journey. I, on the other hand, would sooner or later stray far away from religion, Catholicism and the Church, although I remained a seeker.
This is one of my very favorite albums. It was released on December 28, 1976, and I bought my copy from a guy named Claude, with whom I worked at Fry’s. He listened to it just once and didn’t like it. I, on the other hand, loved it. Many of the songs deal with traveling and life on the road, and in the coming year, I would start exploring the wider world on my own, trekking across country on a big Greyhound bus all by myself.
This great film premiered on 12/30/76. It’s a great documentary about la musica Tejana!

Here’s one of my favorites songs from the soundtrack:

“Chicano” by Los Pinguinos del Norte.

1976 marked a turning point in my life. It was the year I declared my independence and started making my own life decisions. It was also the year I started working a regular job. My earnings for the year totaled $1,832. From that point on, they would steadily increase and I would continue working for 9 more years at Fry’s, supporting myself through college. Even though I was young, adulthood had arrived. Freedom from my demons would also eventually become a reality too, but it would take another year or more before I came to terms with the truth, and many more before I fully accepted myself.

To be continued. Stay tuned for Part 4: The Undergraduate Years, 1977-1982…

My Life Story: Junior High School, 1971-1973

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!

I had a rough time during adolescence. It really sucked. My eyes were a mess, I felt ugly and fat, and I was very lonely. My home life wasn’t great, as my mom was sick a lot, and my brother Fred and I fought all the time. He was Mr. Cool, had lots of girlfriends and was good looking and athletic. I was the exact opposite. The only thing I had going for me was school. I continued to do well in my classes, and I continued playing the cello. By the end of the 8th grade, I was pretty good at it.

My brother Fred, “Mr Cool”.

I was a late bloomer physically, but emotionally, beginning in the 7th grade, I was discovering that I was more attracted to boys than to girls. I hid my desires, of course, and had girlfriends throughout my time at junior high, but they came and went. I really fell head over heels for two boys in particular, one each year I was in school. They will remain nameless, because I don’t think they ever knew how I felt, and I wouldn’t want to embarrass them in any way. I never “wanted” to be attracted to boys, and I fought it with all my might, but my feelings would not change. This drove me crazy, and I was quite unhappy and felt totally alone with nobody to talk to about it. I even had a couple of episodes where I could not stop crying. I was a such a mess. The one person that did help me through some of these rough spots was my dear sister Becky. She came over to the house once while I was having one of these little dramatic breakdowns, and she held me and told me it was all going to be okay, and that we were all in this together. I’ve never forgotten and I’ll be forever grateful to her for her kindness and support.

My sister Becky

One day as I was riding my bike home, a couple of boys started throwing rocks at me. I usually tried to avoid conflict at all costs, but on this particular day, I decided to confront them. I rode back toward them, got off my bike and told them to stop it. One guy, the taller of the two, had on a pair of heavy boots, and he decided to kick me right in the groin. He missed his target, however, and kicked my thigh instead, and boy did it hurt! I got really angry and started to fight him. I wasn’t good at fist fights, but we tumbled on to the ground and somehow I managed to grab onto his boots. I was a hefty kid, and stronger than I realized, and I picked him up by his ankles and I started to swing his body against the fence, which was covered in privet bushes, as hard as I could. I swung him like a bat into the fence, smashing his face right into it, time and time again. His friend stood there watching and wanted to jump in, and I yelled at him and told him two on one wasn’t fair, and, luckily, he backed off. The guy who started the fight was pretty badly beaten up by the time I was done. Once I thought he’d had enough, I got on my bike and went home, while they both yelled that they were going to get me again. When my brother Fred saw me, he told me I looked like I had gotten into a fight. I replied that he was crazy, but he just laughed like he knew that I had. The next day I saw the kid in the hallway, and his face was all bruised and scratched up. It was a mess. He tried to lunge at me, but the hallway was crowded and he stopped. I never saw him again. This was the only other fight I ever got into as a kid. I lost the one in grade school, but this time I fought back and won.

While I had a rough time, I must admit it wasn’t all bad. I did have fun playing in the orchestra, and I enjoyed learning. I also started reading more and I learned how to play the organ. I spent a lot of time too with my sister Irene and her kids, and with my friends Ernie, Roman and Oscar, and enjoyed listening to music. I also spent a lot of time with my brothers Rudy and Charles, who had started new families in the early 70s. They both lived in the Pueblo Gardens neighborhood, which was close to our house on 22nd. I was never made to feel unwelcomed, and being with them gave me a sense of comfort and safety. Even though I felt alone, I really wasn’t.

My brother Charles and his wife Elaine
My brother Rudy
My brother Rudy had a beautifully framed copy of this print of the Beatles in his living room.

Thank goodness I survived.

Mansfeld Jr. High School
The best part of the new school year was that we could buy new school supplies. I loved shopping for this stuff. It was the one time of the year my parents would actually let me indulge in stocking up. Now I’m a bit pack rat when it comes to pens, notebooks, paper etc.
My 7th grade Spanish textbook. Mrs. Rodriguez, whose photo is below was our teacher.
Back in 1971 I had no idea I would graduate twice (1982 and 1986) from the University of Arizona or that I would be spending the bulk of my adult life working there (1992-present). I started attending classes in 1977, and I’m still here 46 years later…
Ernie Carrillo, one of my best friends growing up. We are still in touch, after all these years and remain as close as ever.
This is what the corner of Park Ave and University Blvd. looked like back in the early 70s. I rarely made it to this part of town, ever.
My 7th grade portrait. My lazy eye got even lazier during adolescence. I would get an eye operation the following year, but it didn’t help much.
My brother Charles took us to see this when it was showing at the Jerry Lewis Theater. He wanted us to learn about social issues like race and class and he thought this movie would help.
From the Tucson Daily Citizen, October 16, 1971.
Released on October 24, 1971. I knew all the lyrics. I’m sure a lot of kids knew this song. It was very popular.
7th grade orchestra cello section Members were Lori Fibel, David Boyer, Becky Baldwin, Susan Matte and me.
7th grade. The entire orchestra, led by Mr. Lauritz Bjorlie.
This is one of the many songs we played in the orchestra. The melody is so sweet. This version isn’t exactly the same, of course.
The auditorium at Mansfeld. The orchestra practiced on the stage, and had one big concert here at the end of the year. This is also the space where we would have our “Blue and White” socials, our student assemblies, and where we ate lunch.
I clearly remember borrowing this book, titled “Louis Armstrong: A Self Portrait”, from the public library downtown. Armstrong was well known among the general public. I would see him on television all the time and of course knew he sang the song “Hello Dolly”. I didn’t know about his long career in jazz, however. I was much too young and didn’t know anything at all about the history of jazz at this point in my life. This book was my introduction to the topic. Armstrong died on July 6, 1971. I believe this book came out shortly after that.
11-16-71 Tucson Daily Citizen. Ike and Tina Turner in Tucson!

Laura Nyro released Gonna Take a Miracle on November 17. 1971. It featured the voices of a group called Labelle, which included Patti Labelle, Nona Hendrxy and Sarah Dash. The album is filled doo-wop, oldies and Motown soul. Next to Eli and the Thirteenth Confession, it’s my favorite Laura Nyro album.

Wow. This is so damned good!
This film premiered on television on 11-30-71. It was so sad.
I remember this like it was yesterday. A bunch of us went to Randolph Park and had a blast playing in the snow. My brother Carlos and his new wife, Elaine were there as were a few other family members and friends. The last time we had snow like this was back in 1964. It was a rare treat indeed!
My report card, 1st semester, 7th grade. I was in the honor roll all throughout junior high.
Harold and Maude premiered on 12-20-71. It would take me another 10 plus years to get to see it, but wow, what a movie! It’s one of my very favorites, and it had a huge impact on me when I finally did see it. The song that follows is the movie’s theme song.
My brother Rudy bought this when it was released in 1971. His wife hated the record, but we couldn’t help cracking up every time we heard it.
Occupied America, but Rudy Acuna, was first published on January 1, 1972. This publication is not in it’s ninth or tenth edition, and is considered a classic of Chicano history. I didn’t read it until I got to college. I still have my copy of the original edition.

This is from the introduction to Occupied America:

“Mexicans – Chicanos – in the United States today are an oppressed people. They are citizens, but their citizenship is second-class at best. They are exploited and manipulated by those with more power. And, sadly, many believe that the only way to get along in Anglo-America is to become “Americanized” themselves. Awareness of their history-of their contributions and struggles, of the fact that they were not the “treacherous enemy” that Anglo-American histories have said they were-can restore pride and a sense of heritage to a people who have been oppressed for so long. In short, awareness can help them to liberate themselves.” (p. 1)

I bought this 45 and played it to death. It was released in late 1971, reached #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on January 15, 1972 (my birthday!), and earned a gold record. The song is linked below.

The following month, in February, 1972, a group called “Malo” released one of the most memorable songs of the era. The group was led by Carlos Santana’s younger brother Jorge. I remember this song was later played at our “Blue and White Social”, an annual dance held towards the end of each school year.

This album was a huge hit in the Mexican American community. The cover art is by Jesus Helguera, one of Mexico’s most popular artists. His calendars have become collector’s items and are quite easily identifiable and well known.

I was not very sophisticated when it came to music. I mostly listened to what was on the radio, and to the albums my brother Rudy had. Being in the school orchestra did, however, make me want to learn more about classical music. I remember we took a field trip once over to Palo Verde High School to listen to the University of Arizona orchestra perform. Slowly, but surely, I did start to get more interested in classical music.

One day my sister Becky brought home a stack of classical albums that a friend had given her. I listened to all of them, but this one was my very favorite, and continues to be to this day. Nobody plays Mozart like Ingrid Haebler! Both concertos follow.

Still, I loved certain popular songs. The following two were favorites of mine.

This was released on April 21, 1972.
One of my favorites songs, released on May 18, 1972.
The front cover of the 1972 Tower yearbook.

To see the full yearbook, click here.

Mrs. Rodriguez, my 7th grade Spanish teacher. She was the best. I continued to take Spanish up until the 11th grade. By the time I got to college, I passed the foreign language proficiency exam with flying colors.
Mr. Bjorlie started teaching me the cello in the 4th grade all the way up until the end of the 8th grade. He was a very patient and talented teacher. Unfortunately, when I switched to catholic school in the 9th grade, I had to give up playing. I took up the saxophone instead.

My 7th and 8th grade English teacher, Mrs. Virginia LaFraniere. She taught us English grammar mostly, and gave weekly quizzes. I always aced them. And she always wore a wig, every single day.
I loved this space. It’s the front entrance to the school. The doors on the right lead in to the auditorium. .
I was a klutzy, chubby geek, but at least I did well academically.
My report card, 2nd semester, 7th grade.

There’s an interesting story behind the following two certificates. I didn’t really deserve them. I think I played in one basketball game and one football game the whole year. I had other things going on, like being in the orchestra. However, at the end of the year, when certificates for participation in various extracurricular activities were being given out, I went to the head P.E. teacher, Mr. Tripp, and politely insisted that I be given certificates for having participated in these two activities. He balked at first, but I held my ground, so here they are, and after all these years, the truth has been revealed. Ha ha ha.

Santana and Buddy Miles Live was released on June 7, 1972. This was Carlos before he found his spiritual awakening. The music was recorded live in January, 1972.
My buddy Ernie and I joined the boy scouts for a short while in 1972. We went on a big hike up into the Catalinas and later participated in the Boy Scout Pimaree. See the article below.
Ernie in the 8th grade. We were in the Scouts together.
We went to Ft. Huachuca to participate in the Pimaree. I didn’t have a very good experience. There were bullies all over the place.
I used to love reading through these merit badge books. Being a boy scout was an expensive hobby and I never had the money to fully participate. No merit badges for me…
Levy’s at El Con had a complete selection of Boy Scout clothing and accessories. Like I said, being a boy scout cost money!
Our troop also went to Tombstone, and I bought this photo from a man who claimed he was Chief Cochise’s grandson. It turns out, I learned much later, that he was a fraud.
Another memento from our Tombstone trip. I still have the newspaper that came inside this envelope. It’s a reproduction, of course, but in good shape still.
I received a scholarship to attend music camp at the University of Arizona in 1972. My friend David Boyer, pictured with me below, also attended. It was a memorable experience and my first exposure to the University campus.
My friend David and I in the 8th grade.
The legendary Tejano group, The Royal Jesters released the album “Yo Soy Chicano” sometime in 1972. Many years later, I would play the title cut on my radio show all the time.
My I.D. card. My brother Fred had one too just like it. I have it now.
My eighth grade portrait. I was out sick a lot, and had my eyes operated on at around this time. I had high blood pressure and got put on a diet at one point. I didn’t lose much weight until later in high school.
I loved this movie. It came out on t.v. on 09-24-72.
I sold greeting cards, and this is the only one I have left.
I didn’t become a Joni Mitchell fan until I was in college, but I quickly grew to love her and her music. For the Roses was released on November 21, 1972. It’s a brilliant record. One of my very favorite songs, The Judgment of the Moon and Stars, follows.
Our Christmas tree, 1972. I started playing the organ at this point in time. It was a Magnus “chord” organ, and I learned it all on my own.
This is exactly how my organ looked. Mine didn’t have legs, however, if I remember correctly. I also had several music books, and learned a lot of songs from different eras of American music.
I had a ten speed just like this one. I would ride it to school early in the morning to attend algebra class at Tucson High School. The class started at 7am, and I was always late.
Our algebra class was held at Tucson High School in the Vocational Education building.
This was my Algebra I textbook.
Considering my home life still wasn’t very stable, I did well. My mom was sick and spent a lot of time in the hospital.

Bruce Springsteen’s debut album was released on January 5, 1973. My sister Becky’s husband to be, Paco Sharer, went to high school with Springsteen, and when they moved to New Jersey, he introduced Bruce to my sister. I didn’t get into Springsteen until much later, but I do love this album. I have all of Springsteen’s stuff.
I would love to go to the carnival at Southgate. I would usually go with my sister Irene and her kids. Below is a photo of them taken at the carnival. From the Arizona Daily Star, February 23, 1973.
Anadine, my sister Irene, Michelle and Belisa.

During my last semester of the 8th grade, I had to write a “research paper” for my social studies class. I decided to write it about alcoholism. I went to the library and used the “Reader’s Guide to Periodical Literature” to find sources for my paper, but the library wasn’t that well stocked with magazines, so I ended up writing a personal testimonial about my mother, who was an alcoholic. She started drinking around 1956, a couple of years before I was born, and it got her very sick over the years. She’d spend months at a time in the hospital in the 70’s, and would attempt to quit several times, but never could completely. I loved my mother dearly, and would do anything for her, but her drinking took its toll on everyone in the family in one way or another. It made life at home quite difficult. When I had my eye operation around this time, she showed up to the hospital quite inebriated, and I burst out crying, begging my dad to take her home. I was coming out of anesthesia at the time, and was quite messed up. I have always regretted that moment. Her drinking eventually killed her. She died of cirrhosis of the liver at the age of 64 in 1988.

We played this song in orchestra.
I bought this book while in the 8th grade. It had a profound effect on me, and marked the beginning of an awakening to the world’s social realities.
I bought these tarot cards through the Scholastic Book program. I still have most of them. This is but a sampling. I never knew what they were really for. I just liked the artwork.
More Tarot cards
These were also bought while I was in junior high. I never did read Dune and I gave it away a long time ago. I’m not a big science fiction fan, but I still have the music books.
More stuff I read. This author wrote a whole series of books about troubled youth.
My final junior high report card.
Getting six honors put me way at the top of my class. There were just two or three other kids who had more than that.
We were a diverse group!

To see the full yearbook, click here.

Orchestra, 8th grade.
Pages from my 8th grade yearbook.
Stoned? Who, me? Nah!
My diploma.
Have I mentioned that adolescence was rough? I carried this book around everywhere I went at the time. Oh god…
I spent countless hours watching this stuff. As alone as I felt, at least I had something to keep me occupied.I think back on it now, however, and wonder what I might have been able to accomplish had there not been any tv.
A great movie to close out the summer before the start of high school. Released on 7/16/73.

Stay tuned for Part III of My Life in Pictures: High School, 1973-1976…Coming soon!

My Life Story: Elementary School–1965-1971

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!

Note: I decided to split my original post, “My Life Story: 1959-1971”, in half. It was too long. This is the second half of the original post, and it covers the years I was in elementary school.

One of the fondest memories of my childhood was when my uncle Failo and his wife Armida came to Tucson back in 1965. They took me with them shopping to the new Sears store way out on East Broadway. They bought me a hamburger and fries at the restaurant there. It all came in a little plastic boat with an American flag. They made me feel so special. I loved my tios dearly.

My tia Armida and tio Failo. The new Sears store on Broadway opened on September 1, 1965.
Released in September, 1965, Judy Collins Fifth Album is filled with wonderful songs, including the one below, written by Billy Ed Wheeler, a folksinger from Kentucky whose songs speak about life in Appalachia and the southeast.

I attended Robison Elementary School on 18th Street and Treat Ave. from 1965 to 1971. I cried on the first day of school, but quickly adjusted. I was in Mrs. Goldbaum’s class. She was a very nice lady, and had taught 3 of my brothers and sisters.

The front cover of my 65-66 Robison Elementary School yearbook.

To see the full yearbook, click here.

Robison Elementary School
My first grade portrait. My two front teeth had grown back by then. Thank goodness!
I used to love reading the Dick and Jane stories. It’s how I learned how to read.
These were my classmates in the first grade. My photo got cut out somewhere along the way. Mrs. Goldbaum was a wonderful teacher. I’m still friends with several of these kids, and I even got to see some of them at the Tucson High 40th year reunion back in 2017.
One of my earliest memories of being on the playground at Robison was seeing all the boys playing marbles out by the ramada. There were some very competitive kids out there. They would make a big circle in the dirt and put their marbles all in a pile in the middle of the circle and then take turns shooting them out of the circle. I must admit I lost a few here and there, but I still have most of my marbles…Ha ha ha.
Billy Fass, Ernie Carrillo and Ricky Fass were my closest friends. We lived just a couple of houses away from eachother and were together all the time.

These were my next door neighbors, Becky, Tiny and Debbie Romo. I would go over to their house and play school with them and dance with them all the time. They had an older sister who gave them her old 45’s. I remember they had “The Loco-motion” “The Mashed Potato” and a lot of other fun songs. I loved being with them. It was a lot more fun than being in the Rat Finks, the little gang of boys in our neighborhood that I got thrown out of for not wanting to give back the coloring book they gave me to play with and for being a cry baby. The girls had a little brother they all called “Boy”. He was a year younger than me and we played together a lot too.

It would be another 20+ years or so before I got around to reading the Autobiography of Malcolm X. He was a brave, intelligent man who saw through all the b.s. we’re fed in this country about race relations and equality. The book was published on October 29, 1965. He was assassinated earlier in the year on February 21, 1965.

Another great Beatles album, released on December 3, 1965. My brother Rudy had all of their albums and my brother Fred and I knew all of the songs.
What a song!
Released in the US on December 6, 1965
This premiered on 12/9/65.
Every year at Christmas, our mom and dad would make tamales, and then a week later, it was menudo. I grew up eating the best stuff!
This premiered on 12/31/65. I remember going with my parents, Freddie and Becky to see this at the Prince Drive-In. It was a beautiful film, but it went way over my head at the time. The theme song to the movie was quite beautiful. See below.
My mom used to have a music box that played this song.
My mom threw me a birthday party when I turned 7 in January, 1966. Some of my friends from school were there as were my neighborhood friends, including Billy Fass, who gave this album to me as a birthday present. It’s a great album, with songs like the Hokey Pokey and the Bunny Hop. I lost the original along the way, but was later able to find a copy on Ebay.
More first grade reading material.
My brother Charles was in the Navy from 1964 to 1968. He was always sending my brother Fred and me gifts. One year he sent us stuffed animals and another year we each got matching sailor suits with white sailor caps. We wore them to school with pride!
“USS KRISHNA”

My brother Charles joined the Navy in 1964 with a friend of his named Art Carrillo. Art was very fond of my brother Fred and me and he sent us this photo of his ship. According to Wikipedia, “the USS Krishna (ARL-38) was one of 39 Achelous-class landing craft repair ships built for the United States Navy during World War II. Named for Krishna (a deity worshiped across many traditions of Hinduism), she was the only U.S. Naval vessel to bear the name, and only one of three ships (along with USS Indra and the Civil War era gunboat USS Varuna) to be named after a Hindu deity”. Art also sent us several oversized color portraits of a number of other Navy vessels, but they are long gone. He referred to me and Freddie as his two “little men”.

This drive-up burger joint was just up the street from where we lived. They made huge hamburgers and the strawberry shortcake was delicious. Our parents would bring us here a lot.
This premiered on March 17, 1966. I saw it later on television. I would watch it every time it came out. I just loved the music.
This song was a big hit in 1964 for Soeure Sourire, the original singing nun.
I just had to include this song too. It’s my favorite.
Here’s Debbie Reynolds on the Ed Sullivan show singing another song from the movie. This is another favorite.
Javier Solis was a Mexican singer whose voice was well known throughout the Latin world. He sang rancheras, but was best known for his lovely boleros rancheros. His voice was strong, but also had a very sweet, soft quality to it. Between 1961 and 1966, he had 12 number one hits. He also appeared in a number of movies. He was born on September 1, 1931 and died on April 19, 1966 from complications that arose during surgery on his gall bladder. He was only 35. My mom and dad were big fans of his, and on the day he died they went out and bought one of his record albums. I was with them and I still have the album, although the cover is missing.
Amaneci en Tus Brazos was composed by Jose Alfredo Jimenez. This is Javier Solis at his finest.
This was the very first book I ever owned. I acquired it when I was still in the first grade. The Scholastic Books program was in place at the time and I bought it at school. I still have it. My brothers and sisters also had books, including old spelling books and science books. I enjoyed them all. I was lucky to have five older brothers and sisters.
My brother Rudy was a great athlete. He loved baseball. Az Daily Star, 5-4-66.
My sister Becky graduated from Tucson High in 1966, and when we went on our family vacation to San Francisco that summer, she decided to stay with my aunt and uncle. She didn’t come back home until a year later.
This postcard shows a mariachi group performing in a restaurant called La Caverna, which was on Elias Street in Nogales, Sonora. My parents would bring us here sometimes for a meal whenever we would go shopping in Nogales. Some of my fondest childhood memories are of these day trips. My mother loved mariachi music and she would often get my dad to pay the musicians to sing a few songs for us. Unfortunately, La Caverna burned down in 1986 and never re-opened.
I saw this at the Fox Theater downtown with my friends and brother Fred. Released on 06-21-66. I didn’t care for war movies, but went anyway.
My mom and dad went to see this when it came out. It was considered an “adult” film, and I wasn’t allowed to go. It premiered on 6/22/66.
This photo was taken in Needles, California during my family’s summer vacation in 1966. Included in the photo are my brother Fred, my cousin Sylvia’s daughter whose name I don’t remember, me and my Uncle Val’s nephew, Richard. It was about 118 degrees that day, and there were were, barefoot! Wow!
Me Canse De Rogarle is a fun film that features Jose Alfredo Jimenez and Lucha Villa. It was released on August 3, 1966. It has some great duets in it.
My brother Rudy took a radio training course while in high school. This photo appeared in the October 12, 1966 issue of the Tucson Citizen. Rudy loved to wear nice clothes. Our mom spent hours ironing his shirts, most of which he would buy at expensive men’s clothing stores like Franklin’s on University Blvd. He worked all through high school and paid for his clothes with his own money. He even bought a car, which was a really cool little Anglia that had a four track tape deck.
More of my favorite TV shows…

I wrote a separate blog post about our 1966 family vacation. Click here to read it.

The front cover of the Robison Elementary School yearbook. The font page is all I have left of it.

My 2nd grade photo, 1966. Miss Stevens was my teacher. I was 7 years old here. The one thing that stands out from this year in school was that I wet my pants one day while in class and didn’t tell a single soul. It was a very uncomfortable day.
This is the reading program that was used when I was in the second grade, in Miss Stevens class.
This film premiered on 10/17/66. I remember going to the drive-in with my sister Becky to see it, probably about a year later, after she came back from California.
My brother Rudy during his junior year of high school in 1966.
This premiered on 10/27/66.

My sister Becky has always been an avid reader. She used to take me with her to the public library downtown when I was a kid. She was always returning her books late. One time, a man from the public library knocked on our front door. He came to ask for overdue books that Becky had forgotten to return. They don’t do that anymore! I have very fond memories of the downtown library. The music room was incredible and the children’s section was a lot of fun.

The Tucson Public Library on S. 6th Ave was right across from Armory Park. It was built in the early 1900s and is now used as a children’s museum.

In 1966, the public library bought a two bookmobiles that moved from one location to another on a rotating basis. One of their stops was near our house, across the 22nd St bridge on Cherry and 22nd in the Pueblo Plaza parking lot. It would show up on Tuesdays and was open from 12 to 9. I used to love going there, and was scolded once for looking at the books intended for adults. I remember they had all the Wizard of Oz books and other children’s materials. Sometimes I would walk by myself over the bridge to visit, but 22nd was a very busy street, so I didn’t do it too often. .

Inside a typical bookmobile. They were usually pretty cramped if I remember correctly, but the librarians were always very nice and helpful.
Released on November 16, 1966, this was my brother Charles’s favorite album. He especially loved “My Girl. ” I still have his copy of this album, I think.

Don’t Look Back, featuring the vocals of Paul Williams. This is one of my favorite songs by the Temptations.

The first ever Superbowl to take place was in 1967 on January 15, my birthday. I watched the game with my family at my sister Irene’s house.
Aretha Franklin’s first Atlantic album was a monster hit. The song “Respect” went all the way to number one on the pop charts in the summer of ’67. A live tv recording of the song follows:
This book was published in April, 1967. My brother Rudy bought it new. I still have his copy. Joan Baez appears in the book too, but at the time I thought she was weird and had no idea who she was. She wore black and had long straight black hair. She reminded me of Morticia Adams. Little did I realize how much I would admire her later.
This photo was included in the Dylan book noted above. I had no idea at this point in my life how influential it would later become.
Our family parish was St. Ambrose Church at 300 S. Tucson Blvd. I attended kindergarten here as well as catechism.
My first holy communion took place in 1967. I had to attend catechism at St. Ambrose Church in order to participate.
This is the St. Ambrose altar before Vatican II brought changes to the look of the church.
Christ Among the Doctors by Heinrich Hofmann. This painting was in our family Bible. It was but one of many beautiful works of art contained within it. This was my first exposure to art. It took a while to realize that.
My first holy communion photo. Included in it are my good friends Bubba Fass, Victor Rivera, Mugsy Olivares, Henry Quiroz and a lot of other guys from my neighborhood.
Relics from my first holy communion. I still have some of them.

As kids, we went to the Circle K up the street all time. It was just east of 22nd and Tucson Blvd., and we’d walk there to buy candy, sodas and baseball cards. The clerks there were usually women in their thirties and forties, and they were always very nice to us. One day we woke up to find the following headlines in our local newspaper. It was shocking. The lady who was murdered was the sweetest person. We couldn’t believe it. One of the kids who did the dirty deed hid near our house somewhere along the railroad tracks. Thank goodness they found him.

I stopped attending catechism after I received this certificate. I never did go through the confirmation ceremony. Several years later, one of my high school teachers, a nun, thought I was a little heathen because of this and she kept me from participating in some of the class sessions that involved learning about “sex”. Go figure…
I remember reading this book in the second or third grade. I was inspired by Roosevelt’s determination to overcome childhood asthma. I was sickly too as a kid.
My brother Rudy bought this the day it was released on May 26, 1967. Freddie and I knew all of the songs by heart.
Here is a photo from February, 1967. My dad is on the right. The man in the left is one of his co-workers but I don’t know his name. After his mining accident, my dad was trained to be a blacksmith.
July 2, 1967. Here’s another photo of my dad, wearing his blacksmith’s apron at work in San Manuel, just before the copper strike started.
This was released on July 7, 1967. I have the 45. The back side has the song Baby You’re a Rich Man. George’s infatuation with the sitar is clearly evident on the song.
A perfect song for the Summer of Love…
My dad worked for Magma Copper Co. for many, many years. This particular strike lasted through the following year, ending in March, 1968.. It sure made life difficult for everyone. My dad had to find other temporary work and my mom even found a job at a hamburger joint. We had to go on welfare too for a while. The food was nasty!
My mom worked here during the copper strike.
Times were hard, and we went on welfare for a while. But not for long.
Aretha Franklin’s second recording for the Atlantic label was released on August 4, 1967. It’s one of her best ever. The following song was recorded just a month or two earlier, and it is one of my all time favorites.
This film premiered on August 13, 1967. I don’t know if I saw this film when it was released or later. It feels like I saw it when I was a kid. The theme song was a big hit (see below).
My third grade photo, Fall, 1967. Miss Conn was my teacher. She was the nicest lady. I hated this photo. I look like I’m choking and my hair is all wet and flat.

My third grade teacher was a lady named Mrs. Conn. She loved to teach us music, and we sang a lot. There were several songs she taught us, including the one that follows, “Love is Blue”.

Released in 1967, this English version with lyrics is just one of many that appeared over time. Paul Mauriat’s instrumental version was probably the most popular of the bunch.
Ernesto “Che” Guevara was assassinated in Bolivia on October 9, 1967, by U.S. trained Bolivian forces. He was an Argentine Marxist revolutionary, physician, author, guerrilla leader, diplomat, military theorist and a major figure of the Cuban Revolution.

My next door neighbors, the Romo sisters, had a Ouija Board, and we used to find out each other’s secrets by asking the Ouija Board for answers to our questions. One time one of the girls asked the Ouija Board to tell us who I liked at school, and before we knew it, the words Selina were spelled out. And it was true! I had a crush on a little girl named Selina in the third grade. One of the Romo girls later told me that once they were making fun of the Ouija Board, being disrespectul in some way to it, and suddenly the pointer moved straight across the the word “goodbye”, and it never worked for them again. No kidding.

I used to check out this book from the school library all the time. My favorite poem was by Ogden Nash. It was short and sweet. “Candy is dandy, but liquor is quicker”.
I don’t remember if this was Freddie’s or mine, but we had something just like this, and I just loved spinning the roulette wheel.
This film premiered on 11/22/67. I didn’t see it until many, many years later. Wow. What a funny movie!
This premiered on 12/22/67. I didn’t see it until much later, but I knew the song “Mrs. Robinson” well. It was a big hit on the radio.
I’m not sure exactly what year it was, but at one point, my mom and dad bought an aluminum Christmas tree. I would love to sit and stare at the tree as the color wheel turned and made the aluminum change colors. We also had red and white round ornaments. They were made of styrofoam and were wrapped in vertical synthetic red and white thread. They had a candy-cane like look to them. I liked the live trees our dad would buy better, however. It was always an adventure going with him to find a tree to bring home.
We had all of these games and toys at one point or another. I also enjoyed chess and chinese checkers., tinker toys and pick up sticks. One year my sister Becky and her husband bought me several games and books. I was a lucky kid that Christmas!
What a year it was for music!
Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, Judy Collins, and Arlo Guthrie performing at the Woody Guthrie Memorial Concert at Carnegie Hall, January 20, 1968.

Aretha records a masterpiece–Lady Soul, released on January 22, 1968.

What an incredible record! It includes several hits, such as Chain of Fools, Ain’t No Way, and Natural Woman. The musicians on this include Duane Allman and other southern soul session men. The album reached number one on Billboards R & B charts and stayed there for 16 weeks.

This was released in October 1967, but later played at the Cactus Drive-in. I went with all my Mendoza and Basurto cousins to see it. The ad below is from February 1968.
My sister Becky’s husband Larry took this photo at the University of Arizona when Bobby Kennedy visited during his presidential campaign. He was assassinated 3 months later.
This album was released on March 25, 1968. My sister Becky was living at home at the time and she had a copy of this album. I remember it well.
One of many wonderful tunes from the album, Eli and the Thirteenth Confession…
from the Arizona Daily Star, April 5, 1968. I watched the ensuing riots on the nightly news. That along with the daily body counts from the war in Vietnam were reported each night by announcers like Howard K. Smith and Walter Cronkite. I was a kid, and I didn’t understand the significance of any of it, but I do remember it because I watched the news practically every night.
Charles would be coming home soon, after 4 years in the Navy.
My friend Larry Mendoza, my niece Michelle and me at Randolph Park, summer 1968.
Randolph Park, 1968. I’m nine years old.
My sister Irene would always dress my nieces Belisa and Michelle in matching outfits. Here they are having hotdogs. Seated next to them are Rose Fass and Leo Carrillo, who were my friends Bubba’s and Ernie’s moms. In the background are Ernie’s sisters Lorraine and Cathy with another neighbor, Anna Arenas. Lorraine was always telling me, “Go home, Bobby Joe” whenever I’d visit Ernie at their house.

I clearly remember when the following accident happened. For some reason, I always thought it was fatal, but apparently it wasn’t. It happened right near our front door, as the 22nd street over pass was just a few feet west of our house.

“The Games People Play” by Joe South, was released in August, 1968. It was one of my mom’s very favorite pop tunes. She’d sing it to all her grandchildren over the years.

My brother Freddie and I collected baseball cards. This is a sampling of some of the better known players back in the day.
My favorite team was the St. Louis Cardinals. They won the 1967 World Series the previous year.

Hey Jude was released on August 26, 1968. It became our family’s favorite song, largely due to my brother Rudy, who had been infatuated with the Beatles since they first appeared on American television in 1964. He bought all of their albums and played them to death. As a result, my brother Fred and I knew practically every song. Their music provided the soundtrack to our youth.

4th grade, 1968. This is yet another photo that I didn’t care for. I had just gotten a haircut . My hair was sticking out all over the place, and my shirt was buttoned all the way up and choking me. I would’ve looked better with a tie on, but I never wore ties as a kid. Still don’t like them.
In the 4th grade, I joined the school orchestra. I really wanted to play the violin, but the teacher urged me to take on the cello, because there weren’t any cello players in the goup. I grew to love playing the cello, but it took me a while to figure it all out. Unfortunately, my parents could not afford paying for lessons, so I did my best to learn it on my own. A man named Lauritz Bjorlie was our teacher. He did what he could to teach us the fundamentals, but real lessons by a private teacher never happened. I did okay anyway.
This was the book we used to learn how to play. My brother Rudy took me one day to the Chicago Store to buy this along with a music stand. I loved going to the Chicago Store! I was a real dump, but there was cool stuff everywhere!
My 4th grade class photo. I was “in love” with the two girls on either side of me, Janet and Susan. I even wrote one of them a love letter once and she just had to read it out loud to all her friends. I was so embarrassed, I wanted to die.
The Wilmot brand of the Tucson Public Library was an architectural wonder.

Have I mentioned yet that I loved to read as a child? My sister Becky and her husband Larry would take me to the Wilmot branch of the Tucson Public library all the time. I remembered this series, and after searching and searching on the internet for these, I finally found them on Ebay. I read these in the 4th grade (68-69) during a reading contest in Mrs. Pilling’s class. I had to write a book report on each title and created a fact sheet for each state by copying information like the size of the population, the date the state joined the union, the geographic size of the state, etc. etc. I won the contest!

There was a book for each state of the union. This is a sampling of them.
My brother Fred started junior high in 1968.
Dark Shadows was my favorite show of all…
My sister Becky married a guy named Larry Baker in September, 1968. They went their separate ways a couple of years later.
Becky on her wedding day.
This photo was taken on October 20, 1968.. We’re in my mom’s kitchen celebrating my niece Belisa’s birthday. She had just turned 6 two days earlier. Included here are me, Bubba Fass, Larry Mendoza, Roman Jaurigue, Ricky Fass, my brother Fred and Larry Ochoa.
Here’s the entire photo. The little girls are my nieces Anadine, Michelle and Belisa and one of our neighbors, Theresa Ochoa.
The 1968 Summer Olympics were very popular. Everyone watched them on TV. They took place October 12 through 27.
I remember this well.
But I don’t remember this. The massacre of students at Tlatelolco in October in the Plaza of Three Cultures claimed hundreds of lives. The students were protesting the social and economic conditions that kept millions in poverty. The massacre took place 10 days before the Olympics.
My dad was back at work at the mine in San Manuel in the summer of ’68, and he made these bookends and pen holder for me right around the time that the 1968 Olympics were taking place. They weighed a ton. Both of the bookends had rings attached originally, but one set fell off after a while. Dad also made my mom knives and spoons, but they were very heavy. I wish I’d had kept them, but they’re long gone!
A bunch of us kids from the neighborhood saw this when it came out. The story was about a writer, George Plimpton, who decided he was going to try his hand at football. He got creamed. The film was released on 10-23-68.
These were the “official” candidates for President. Too bad Humphrey lost. Who knows how many lives would have been saved? While he had supported Johnson’s stance on Vietnam while he was vice-president, Humphrey changed his stance and was against the bombing that was occurring in 1968.
Pat Paulsen would appear on the Smothers Brothers show. He was very funny, and he ran for President in ’68. Too bad he didn’t win. We ended up with Nixon…
Becky took Freddie, me and some of our friends from the neighborhood to see this at the drive-in. It was released on November 13, 1968, just a little over a week before the White Album came out.
From the soundtrack to Yellow Submarine, “All You Need is Love”…
Released on 11-22-68. Rudy bought this the day it was released. Another Beatles classic that we knew by heart.
Rocky Raccoon was my favorite song.

I clearly remember the Honk Kong flu epidemic. My mom and aunt took all of us kids to the Southern Pacific Hospital downtown for vaccination shots. In the end, I didn’t get one, however, because I had a cold. I never did catch the flu this particular season. I guess I got lucky. At least I don’t remember catching it, but I did get sick a lot as a kid. I had the measles, the chicken pox, the mumps, and even scarlet fever.

From the Tucson Citizen, December 17, 1968.
The Southerrn Pacific Hospital, also known as the Carl Hayden hospital was where we had to get our vaccination shots for the flu during the Honk Kong flu epidemic. It closed shortly after this.
I had the best Christmas in 1968. My sister Becky and her husband Larry went all out and bought me several games, like Password, Concentration and Operation, plus several books, including “The Call of the Wild” by Jack London, and “Little Men” by Louisa May Alcott, plus a new dictionary. I also loved the book, Heidi, but I don’t think they included that one. I used to check it out from the school library.
This movie, which I saw, premiered on 12-24-68. I probably saw it a few months later.
What a year for music!

Although I was too young to know what was happening, students at both the college and high school levels were engaged in protests throughout the country. They were fighting for more relevant courses and rallying against the war in Vietnam. This happened in Tucson too. See the articles that follow, student activists fought to have a Mexican American studies program created at the University of Arizona, and high school students from Tucson High and Pueblo staged walkouts protesting conditions in their high schools. It was a volatile, but exciting time. The Chicano movement was in full swing.

2-13-1969 Tucson Daily Citizen
2-14-1969 Tucson Daily Citizen

My sister and her husband Larry lived in an apartment north of Speedway near Jones Blvd. at one point and then in the University of Az area near Helen and Mountain. My brother Fred and I would love to visit them. They were “hippies” and smoked pot and listened to groovy music. Larry took the following photos of Becky in February and March, 1969. I just love these.

My sister Becky was always reading.
I thought my sister Becky was one of the prettiest young women I’d ever seen. She was beautiful, and still is.
I used to love to read Archie comics and to watch the Archie cartoons on TV. I also had my own copy of the above 45. It was bubble gum heaven. Released May 24, 1969. Below is the cartoon version of the song.
My 4th grade report card. Even though I was out sick a lot of the time, especially this particular year, I always did well in school, and I loved to read. This is also the year I started playing the cello. I played up until the end of the 8th grade and used an instrument loaned to me by the school. I wasn’t athletic at all and was a chubby, klutzy kid, so playing music became my favorite pastime.
Rudy also spent time in California after graduation from high school, but by 1969 he was back home coaching a little league team with his friend Hector Carrillo. My brother Freddie and our friends Ricky Fass and Ernie Carrillo were on the team and my friend Roman was the bat boy. I was nowhere to be found…
Midnight Cowboy was released on May 25, 1969. What an incredible movie. I didin’t see it until much later in life. Both Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight are outstanding in this film.

The Stonewall riots started on June 28, 1969. This was the beginning of the gay rights movement. Within a couple of years, I began to realize that I liked boys and that I was gay, but I didn’t come out until I was 19. I would later write about this event in one of my Sociology classes on social movements.

Police would raid the gay bars in New York regularly. This time, however, people fought back.
This song, written and sung by Jackie DeShannon, was released in June, 1969. One of my brothers girlfriends loaned it to him, but he never gave it back, and I kept it. I later bought the album by the same title, but this was the only song I liked.

During the summer of 1969, my sister Irene and her family brought my brother Fred and me along on their vacation to California. They took us to Disneyland, the San Diego zoo, and Buena Park, where we visited Knott’s Berry Farm and the Movieland Wax Museum.

It’s A Small World after all…loved it!
We went on all of these rides and more. It was an experience of a lifetime. I enjoyed every minute of it.
In Buena Park, we went to the Movieland Wax Museum, where my brother Fred and I took the photo below.
I was 10 1/2 and Fred was going to turn 13 in a couple of months.
Knotts Berry Farm was a lot of fun. It had a bunch of kiddie rides.
We then drove down to San Diego and visited the zoo. It too was a lot of fun. I’ve only been back once since.
We drove across the line to visit Tijuana. My sister did some shopping and I think we also had a meal, but I can’t remember exactly.
My nieces Michelle, Anadine and Belisa. We grew up together.
This song was released in July, 1969, a few months before the album was released. It is one of my very, very favorite Aretha Franklin songs.
We spent summers at St. Ambrose Pool. This isn’t it, but it’s similar. The pool was eventually closed due to high levels of radiation in the area.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the country, this was happening…

Three days of love, peace and music, August 15-18, 1969. I remember when the movie came out in March, 1970. I wasn’t allowed to go see it, because it included nudity and was rated R.
It would be a few more years before I even knew who Joan Baez was, but here she is performing at Woodstock. Wish I’d had known about her back then.
This film was cool. I saw it when it came out. It premiered on 9/23/69.
My fifth grade portrait. I was a big crybaby as a child, and I guess my sadness showed sometimes. My mom got very sick this year, so things at home were difficult.
My fifth grade class photo. The adult on the far left in the photo was a substitute teacher. Mrs. Wagner, our regular teacher, was out this day.

In the fifth grade we would sometimes swap teachers. I remember, for example, taking reading from a teacher named Mr. Koster, even though Mrs. Wagner was my regular teacher. Some of Mr. Koster’s kids would also take classes from my teacher, Mrs. Wagner. Mr. Koster wrote the word PIG on the chalkboard one day, and next to each letter spelled out the words pride, integrity and guts, letting us kids know where he stood on the hippie issue. He was a crotchety old guy, that’s for sure and wasn’t a fan of what was going on in places like Chicago during the Democratic national convention. The youth of America were on a mission to yippify the world.

A pretty blonde girl that I had a huge crush on the year before in the 4th grade named Janet Harrison was a student in Mr. Koster’s class, but one day while she was sitting in with my class, she wrote the lyrics to the Beatles tune Nowhere Man on the chalk board while Mrs. Wagner was out on a coffee break. The rest of us watched in awe as she spelled out every word of the song. Everyone was worried she was going to get caught, but she managed to erase it all just as Mrs. Wagner was walking in the door. Janet was the coolest, hippest student in school as far as I was concerned. I was still smitten by her, but she never paid any attention to me. I didn’t know it at the time, but she was a little rich girl, whose father Harmon Harrison was a well-known surgeon in town. I was way out of her league. We later attended Mansfeld together. In high school, she was a debutante with the Tucson Symphony Cotillion Ball. Later, in college, she became a party animal. She managed to complete her degree in Russian and went off to work at the embassy in the Soviet Union before returning to the US. I haven’t seen her since college.

Janet Harrison

Nowhere Man /Lyrics

He’s a real nowhere man
Sitting in his nowhere land
Making all his nowhere plans for nobody

Doesn’t have a point of view
Knows not where he’s going to
Isn’t he a bit like you and me?
Nowhere man please listen
You don’t know what you’re missing
Nowhere man, the world is at your command

He’s as blind as he can be
Just sees what he wants to see
Nowhere man, can you see me at all
Nowhere man don’t worry
Take your time, don’t hurry
Leave it all ’til somebody else
Lends you a hand
Ah, la, la, la, la

Doesn’t have a point of view
Knows not where he’s going to
Isn’t he a bit like you and me?
Nowhere man please listen
You don’t know what you’re missing
Nowhere man, The world is at your command
Ah, la, la, la, la

He’s a real nowhere man
Sitting in his nowhere land
Making all his nowhere plans for nobody
Making all his nowhere plans for nobody
Making all his nowhere plans for nobody

My brother Rudy got married in November, 1969 to Lillian Villaescusa. They later divorced sometime in the mid-1970s.
This premiered on television on 12/6/69.
My brother Rudy and his wife Lillian took Fred and me to the drive-in movies one night and we ended up watching Bonnie and Clyde and this film. I guess my brother and his wife didn’t realize what the film was about, but as soon as they learned it included nudity, we left.
I don’t like films with lots of violence, but this one was a thriller.
This is the ad for the films we watched. I don’t remember seeing Bullitt. The ad appeared in the Tucson Citizen on November 1, 1969.
I remember the night the two pedestrians were killed on the overpass near our house on 22nd St. My brother Charles had just started training to be a paramedic, and he was on the scene of the accident helping out. It was horrific. There were body parts strewn all over the place. There was another accident on the overpass that occurred later that involved a truckload of kids. I can’t remember when it was exactly, however. It happened after this particular incident if I recall correctly.
The Youth Fitness project, I believe, was a nationwide project funded by the government to get kids to be more physically active. I remember that there were a bunch of activities that we participated in that were intended to gauge our physcical abilities. These included sprinting races, and long jump competitions. They were fun. I wasn’t at all athletic, but I enjoyed participating nevertheless.
I was a school safety patrol officer for two years in a row. Each year, we received a certificate of recognition for our efforts.
This is exactly what my patrol belt looked like.
I was a bright kid, and did better than most of the other students in my class. I think my teachers gave me lower grades than I deserved sometimes because they either didn’t like me or they thought I shouldn’t get all 1’s. It’s funny how those things mattered so much more back then to me than they do now. If only someone had told me that such things wouldn’t mean anything at all in time…
I was on this Little League team, but wasn’t present the day our team photo was taken. Included here are Bubba Fass, Davey Santander, Mugsy Olivares, Bobby Kivel and Freddie Corral, plus a bunch of guys who lived on 19th street. Bert Otero was our coach. I hated Little League, but stuck it out for two years.
Just thought I’d add this to give some perspective to what things were like cost-wise in 1970.

My sister Becky and her husband split up sometime in 1970. She moved back home for a while, and at one point got involved with people who were active in local issues. The El Rio Coalition was fighting at the time for a park and space for community activities. One day, my sister came home with a little pin and a book about Che Guevara. I didn’t really understand what this stuff was all about, but I kept the pin and still have the book. Here they are:

This belonged to my sister Becky.
El Rio protesters march to El Rio from Tully School on Tucson’s west side.
This also belonged to my sister. I don’t know if she ever read it or not.
This was a lot of fun. I was never great at it, but I loved to skate.
My sixth grade portrait. This photo was on display in the exhibit window in front of the main office when I was named “student of the month” by my teacher, Mrs. Darnall.

My sixth grade class. Lori Fibel was my girlfriend. She’s the fourth girl in the first row. She told me years later I was the first boy she ever kissed. She was likely the first girl I ever kissed too.
While I wasn’t good at sports, I loved to play tether ball, and there were several such courts on the playground. In the sixth grade, I was known as “the king of the tether ball court”. The only kids who could beat me sometimes were two girls named Edith Pringle and Gloria Contreras. They were both very tall, and it worked to their advantage.
I went to see this with a bunch of friends from the neighborhood. I was a tad too young to really understand the deeper meaning of the film.
My brother Charles married Elaine Romero in November, 1970. They are pictured here with my uncle Donato and Aunt Mary, their padrinos.
My uncle Nato, pictured above, loved this song by Ignacio Lopez Tarso. It’s called “Dona Elena y el Frances”. I still have his 45.

John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band was Lennon’s first solo effort after the Beatles broke up. It was released on December 11, 1970. My brother Rudy loved this album and bought it as soon as it was released.

This song tears through all the b.s.
What a sad movie. Seems like everyone saw it. Released on 12/16/70.
Released on 12/23/70. I very clearly remember seeing this when it was first released.
Christmas Day, 1970. I’m here with my mom at Tony Galvez’s house. He and his wife later joined us at our house for dinner.
Standing are: Carlos Diaz, my brother, me, Tony Galvez, a family friend, my dad Alfred Diaz, Jesus Pesqueira, another family friend. Sitting are, Josephine Diaz, my mom, a little girl whose name I don’t remember, Tony Galvez’s wife, Delia Pesqueira, Jesus’s wife, and Elaine Diaz, my brother Carlos’s wife. Christmas Day, 1970.
Close up of me from the above photo taken in our family living room on Christmas Day, 1970.
My mom and dad, Christmas 1970.
Christmas, 1970 or 1971, not sure…
More toys from the 60s. I loved playing jacks with the girls next door!

All in the Family premiered on January 12, 1971. It became an instant classic tv sitcom, but when it first aired, I was probably too young to understand the satirical humor, and I didn’t like Archie Bunker much at all. Edith was a blast, however.

Two days later, on January 14, 1971, Ike and Tina Turner released their version of Proud Mary.
God bless Tina Turner.

Out there in the outside world, the Chicano movement was in full swing. Novels were being written, people were marching in the streets, and Chicano history was being documented. Music groups like Santana, Malo and El Chicano were very popular. This song is from El Chicano’s 1971 lp, Revolucion.

My brother Rudy and his wife took me and Freddie to see this at the Rodeo Drive-in. I was too young to understand what was happening. Boy, was I naive! Movie release date: 04-18-71.
My 6th grade school patrol certificate. If I remember correctly was named a “patrol captain” this year.
My last report card from Robison Elementary School.
This fun film premiered on June 30, 1971.
I loved reading comic books when I was a kid. I loved Archie comics the most.

I did really well this year, and almost got all 1’s my last quarter. Mrs. Darnall was one of those teachers who didn’t like me too much. This was the year that another student, Steven Fontes, beat me up after I pushed him on the playground. Mrs. Darnall was not very empathetic. She thought I was a big weenie because I couldn’t stop crying. That was another low point for me, but life went on and I’m still here. Steve isn’t. May he rest in peace.

My last attempt at baseball. Summer 1971. My brother Charles was the coach. It was a humiliating experience, and I never went back to playing it after this. I had other talents and pursued those things instead.
Our neighbor Dolores Jaurigue insisted that I take this picture. In the months that followed, I’d begin junior high school and a whole new world would greet me. I put away my baseball uniform and never looked back.
This ad came out in the May 8, 1971 edition of the Arizona Daily Star. I’m not exactly sure when I saw it, but I know it wasn’t at a drive-in and it wasn’t part of a double feature. This was a funny movie, and some of the sillier, salacious lines of the film have stayed with me all this time.
Joni Mitchell released her masterpiece, “Blue” on June 22, 1971. What an amazing album. It would be a few years yet until I fell in love with it.
I am not exactly sure when I bought this, but it was around this time. I remember it was at a bookstore called Focus on Books at 920 E. Speedway, just west of Park. I was with my two sisters, who were doing laundry next door. This was one of the very first books I ever bought. I don’t know what compelled me to choose this one. I kept it for a very long time, but I think I let it go when I gave a bunch of books away before moving to Michigan in 1987.
The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour premiered on August 1, 1971. I would watch it every week. It was always a lot of fun and very entertaining. It lasted until May, 1974, the year Cher filed for divorce.

This album was released in August, 1971, just before I started junior high school. My brother Rudy bought it and we listened to it all the time. These guys were hilarious.

Stay tuned for Part II of My Life in Pictures: Junior High School… 1971-1973. Coming soon!