Monthly Archives: June 2012

97 Years and a Lifetime of Stories

Francisca in 1923

Yesterday, June 2, marked the 109th anniversary of the birth of my paternal grandmother, Francisca Riojas De La Garza.  She died in February 2001 at the age of 97.  She was the last of my grandparents.  My mother’s mother had died in México City in 1940.  My paternal grandfather died in Dallas in 1969, and my other grandfather passed away in a suburban Dallas nursing home in 1983.  I have a smattering of distinct memories of my paternal father; unfortunately, I really didn’t get to know my mother’s father.  But, as in most families, I know a lot about all of them.  They each led interesting lives, equally filled with joy and tragedy.  A friend of mine once said, if she knew how much fun her grandkids would be, she would have had them first.  Grandparents hold a special place in the family unit.  Really good grandparents shepherd their loved ones through life with their own tales of growing up way back when.  They keep families together.  They are the center of the clan; the matriarch or patriarch who seems to know and see everything.  When they die, it’s still unexpected.  When Francisca passed away, my father’s large family appeared to disintegrate.  No one gathered for Thanksgiving or Christmas Eve.  No more birthday or wedding celebrations.  Everybody – especially us grandkids and great grandkids – went our separate ways; creating our own families and thereby, our own lives.  I guess that happens sometimes – even in the closest of families.

Francisca was small, barely 4’11,” but she had a strong personality accompanied by an even stronger voice.  Small women always seem to have the most indomitable of spirits.  I should know – one gave birth to me.  Francisca was born in Rosales, Coahuila, México in 1903, the 4th of 11 children; the oldest daughter.  Her father, José Manuel Riojas, was a captain in the Mexican military; a tall blond, blue-eyed man who actually worked as a bounty hunter under the direction of Venustiano Carranza, a leading figure in México’s bloody revolution that began in 1910.  Her mother Concepción died in 1918 of the “Spanish flu;” the pandemic that took millions of lives across the globe at the close of World War I.  Francisca cared for her mother as any loving daughter then or now would; feeding and bathing her, changing her clothes, praying for her, holding her hand tightly as Concepción took her last breath – without concern for her own health or fear of the unknown.  She then became a surrogate mother to her younger siblings.  In 1920, as the revolution came to a close, José Manuel moved his family to Eagle Pass, Texas, a town just north of the Rio Grande.

That’s where Francisca met her future husband, Epigmenio De La Garza, a local carpenter ten years her senior.  They married shortly before Christmas 1924 in another small South Texas town.  Not in the Catholic Church, as Mexican tradition would have dictated, but in civil court.  The church wouldn’t allow them to wed – they were first cousins.  It was one of those classic long-held family secrets that no one really knew about and no one really cared to discuss; certainly not around the Christmas tree while the kids opened presents.

The De La Garza family had arrived in South Texas in the 1580’s.  Texas and the rest of what is now the American Southwest were all part of Nuevo España, or New Spain.  The De La Garzas came as explorers and ranchers, not conquerors.  They considered the indigenous peoples friends and confidants, not vermin.  They established large communities, including schools and churches.

Juan Ignacio de Castilla y Rioxa arrived in Veracruz, México in 1732 with an entourage of fellow military officials and clergymen.  His goal was simple – he planned to marry a young woman with whom he’d been corresponding.  The Castilla y Rioxa family was related to Spanish royalty, descendants of the “Kingdom of Castilla.”  One of their ancestors was Queen Isabella, the monarch who funded Christopher Columbus’ voyage 240 years earlier.  Some time towards the end of the 18th century, the name Rioxa metamorphosed into Riojas, and in the 1860’s a Riojas married a De La Garza.

But, my grandparents weren’t concerned about family – royalty or not.  They wanted to build a life together.  They had 11 children; 4 of them – 2 boys and 2 girls – died as infants.  It’s difficult to understand how life was like a century ago, when couples had so many children and accepted the deaths of some as a cold, hard fact of their world.  No one of my grandparents’ generation feared death the way people do now.  Back then, it was the norm; another cycle of life to be respected and honored.  It wasn’t so normal, however, for a person to live as long as Francisca did.

The best part of a long, healthy life is the ability to recount your history and share it with your loved ones.  Every elderly person has some story, though, that seems almost too fantastic to be true.  But, they’re the kind of real-life experiences that could have only happened way back when; in another time and another place.

When she was about 8 or 9, Francisca was visiting an uncle’s ranch and playing with her cousins beside a stream that ran behind the main house.  The girls suddenly noticed a group of government men – federales – off in the distance.  Francisca’s cousins dared her to shout “¡Viva Carranza!” at them.  Apparently not one to back down from a challenge, my grandmother climbed atop a mound of dirt and shouted just that: “¡Viva Carranza!”  It startled the men who turned in her direction.  But, they immediately saw that it was just a small girl; a brat, they probably thought.  After a moment, however, they turned a canon towards the girls – surely just intending to teach them a lesson – and fired a shot into the stream.  Water drenched Francisca who hadn’t yet retreated.  The blast caught the attention of others nearby and propelled Concepción out of the ranch house.  Seeing that it was her own daughter soaking wet, she charged forward and grabbed my grandmother by one of her braids.  As Concepción ushered all the girls back into the house, several local men arrived at the stream with their own weapons, and a brief skirmish erupted.

Like I said, small women have the grandest of egos and they always seem to cause all sorts of commotion.

The day after my grandmother died, my father sat in a chair in the den of her house; staring out the patio door at the expansive back yard.  His father had built that large red brick house in 1957.  It had always been there, as far as I was concerned.  I knew no other home swelling with such memories of happiness and good food.

“What’s wrong?” I asked my dad, just trying to make conversation amidst all the gloom.

“Oh, just thinking about all the times we’ve spent in this house,” he replied quietly.

But, I already knew that.  Whenever a loved one dies – even if they’re very old – we feel sad; mournful not just because of their death, but our loss.  We can be selfish with those we love the most.  But, we reserve that right.

That home is gone now.  I mean, the large red brick house is physically where it’s always been on Midway Road in North Dallas.  Yet, the home is gone.

The memories are still here though – with me and my father.  Francisca’s body is gone as well – but she’s still around.  It’s just a natural part of the life cycle my parents and I don’t fear.

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June 2 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Actor Milo O’Shea (The Playboys, Only the Lonely, Broken Vows, The Purple Rose of Cairo, The Verdict, Sacco & Vanzetti, Romeo and Juliet, Barbarella) is 86.

 

Actress Sally Kellerman (M*A*S*H, The Boston Strangler, Brewster McCloud, Fatal Attraction) is 75.

 

Actor Stacy Keach (Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer, Conduct Unbecoming, Sunset Grill, Texas, Road Games, The Long Riders) is 71.

 

Drummer Charlie Watts (Rolling Stones) is 71.

 

Actor Charles Haid (Hill Street Blues, Delvecchio, Altered States, The Fire Next Time) is 69.

 

Composer – pianist Marvin Hamlisch (The Sting, The Way We Were, A Chorus Line) is 68.

 

Actor Jerry Mathers (Leave It to Beaver, The Trouble with Harry, Back to the Beach) is 64.

 

Actress Joanna Gleason (For Richer for Poorer, Crimes & Misdemeanors, Heartburn, Love & War, Mr. Holland’s Opus) is 62.

 

Actor – comedian Dana Carvey (Saturday Night Live, Clean Slate, It Happened in Paradise, Wayne’s World) is 57.

 

Singer Tony Hadley (Spandau Ballet) is 52.

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On June 2…

1749 – Author Comte Donatien Alphonse Francois de Sade (a.k.a. Marquis de Sade) was born in Paris.

 

1840 – Writer Thomas Hardy (The Return of the Native, The Mayor of Casterbridge, Tess of the D’Urbervilles) was born in Higher Bockhampton, England.

 

1857 – Composer Edward Elgar (Pomp and Circumstance) was born in Broadheath, England.

 

1865 – In an event marking the end of the Civil War, Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith signed surrender terms offered by Union negotiators.

 

1886 – Grover Cleveland became the first U.S. President to get married in the White House, when he exchanged vows with Florence Folsom.

 

1904 – Olympic swimmer – actor Johnny Weissmuller was born in Banat, Austria-Hungary (now Romania).

 

1924 – In one of the most ironic pieces of legislation in American history, Congress passed the Indian Citizenship Act, which granted U.S. citizenship to all Native Americans.

President Calvin Coolidge posed with four Osage Indians after Coolidge signed the bill granting Indians full U.S. citizenship.

 

1953 – The coronation of 27-year-old Queen Elizabeth II of England was broadcast, becoming one of the first international news events to be given complete coverage on television.

 

1985 – Kareem Abdul-Jabbar became the all-time leading point scorer in the National Basketball Association playoffs.  He rang up a total of 4,458 points, smashing the previous record held by Jerry West, also of the Los Angeles Lakers.

 

1997 – Timothy McVeigh was convicted on 15 counts of murder and conspiracy for his role in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.

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Rielle Hunter Writes Memoir

Former U.S. Senator John Edwards

Gosh, who could have seen this coming?  Rielle Hunter, the woman whose affair with John Edwards destroyed both his presidential ambitions and his reputation, has penned a “tell-all memoir” (is there any other kind?) that will be published June 26 by BenBella Books.

In 2006, Hunter had been hired to produce a documentary detailing Edwards’ 2008 presidential run.  The two began an affair that resulted in a daughter, Frances Quinn Hunter, born in February 2008.  By then, rumors of the illicit relationship had become more persistent.  But, Edwards had managed to convince his friend and campaign aide Andrew Young to tell the press he was the baby’s father.  Young was married with children.  He and his wife, Cheri, brought Hunter into their home and hopscotched around the country in the months before the baby’s birth.

To keep his affair with Hunter secret – as cads and politicians are wont to do – Edwards allegedly paid her off with money from a campaign donation provided by millionaire socialite Rachel Mellon.  On May 31, a North Carolina jury acquitted Edwards on 1 of 6 counts of campaign fraud against him.

Entitled “What Really Happened: John Edwards, Our Daughter, and Me,” Hunter’s book is billed as providing her inside story of the affair that Edwards hid for months from his cancer-stricken wife, Elizabeth, and the American public.

“We are delighted to publish Rielle Hunter’s memoir,” said Glenn Yeffeth, publisher of BenBella Books.  “A lot has been said.  But no one has heard the truth of what really happened until now.”

As a writer, I keep banging my head on my faux wood computer desk wondering why my twisted mind couldn’t have concocted such a dramatic tale that makes every soap opera produced in the Western Hemisphere look like a Hallmark holiday special.  No one would consider it plausible, but it’d still make for a hell of a read.  I almost don’t want to know the kind of advance Hunter got from the publisher, but it’s obvious salacious lifestyles remain popular with the American people.

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Cartoon of the Day

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Quote of the Day

“Mothers were given the talent to bear children.  That talent doesn’t belong to men.  When a man says he wants to get married to another man, we in Zimbabwe don’t accept it.  We can’t talk of women’s rights at all if we go in that direction.  It will lead to extinction.  Our customs look down on women as inferior.  Men pay cattle and money to get a wife and expect women to obey them.  Women will surely lose.  Men say that women are not as knowledgeable as us.  The attitude of men still despises women.”

– Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe, speaking at an HIV/AIDS conference.

What?!  Men can’t raise children?!  Men have been raising children since the beginning of time.  How the hell do you think we got this far?!  He’s starting to sound like a feminist.  Comparing women to cows?  Now, he sounds like a Catholic priest!

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Dumb, Dumber, Dumbest

Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), left, with his father, Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX). A study found the younger Paul’s oratory to be at an eighth-grade level. Photo courtesy Ed Reinke, Associated Press / October 2, 2010)

As if we don’t have any more reason to loathe our Congressional representatives, along comes this Los Angeles Times report that proves how pathetic they’ve become.  The nonpartisan Sunlight Foundation claims that the degree of discourse in both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives has dropped one full grade – down to the sophomore level.  High school sophomore, that is.  So, if you call these people sophomoric, you’re not being disrespectful; you’re just being honest.  I feel vindicated!

“Congress is changing as an institution, and what you see is more and more members gearing their speeches as sound bites or YouTube clips,” said Lee Drutman, a senior fellow at the Sunlight Foundation.  “You can [hark] back to a golden age of Congress when members quoted Shakespeare on the floor and really engaged in debate and talked to each other and tried to reason back and forth.”

The report came out last week.

Consider Everett M. Dirksen, the legendary Republican senator from Illinois, who defended a civil rights bill in 1964 by paraphrasing 19th century French writer Victor Hugo: “Stronger than all the armies is an idea whose time has come.”

But, in an analysis of floor debates over the last several years, the study found that newer lawmakers tended to speak at a lower grade level than the veterans of congressional speechifying.  And political moderates among both Republicans and Democrats tended to carry on at a higher grade level than those more partisan liberals or conservatives.

Thus, it should be no surprise that the lawmakers at the bottom of the list, speaking at the lowest grade level, are among the most ardent tea party Republicans in the freshman class.  Rep. Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina, Rep. Robert Woodall of Georgia and Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky were the bottom three – all speaking at about an eighth-grade level, the study found.

On the surface, I know this is ripe for mockery and a plethora of “Saturday Night Live” skits.  But, if you consider the important role our elected officials play in the formation of national and foreign policies, then it actually becomes disturbing.  There’s a sharp difference between speaking in a palatable vernacular and just talking stupid.  That the relatively neophyte “Tea Party” has already had such a dramatic impact on both houses of Congress and elected individuals who can’t even form complete sentences also says a lot about the American electorate.

If you’ve ever listened to President George W. Bush or half-term Alaska governor Sarah Palin, then you know some folks not only can’t, but shouldn’t speak publicly.  Yet, both those clowns appealed to a wide range of people and made into high-ranking positions of power.  With his frequent verbal stumbles, Bush made the U.S. the laughing stock of the world.  Here we are – the richest, most powerful nation on the planet – and we had a Chief Executive who couldn’t even pronounce the word “nuclear.”  I think Sarah Palin only made it into the governor’s mansion because there weren’t enough people in Alaska to vote otherwise.  The largest state in the Union (geographically) has a population smaller than the city of Dallas.  But, when she said “refudiate” in a 2010 interview and then compared herself to William Shakespeare, I’m sure it made even Alaskans cringe.

Has it really gotten that bad?  I knew reading and writing skills among our grade and high school students have been dropping for years – much to the chagrin of, well, no one in Congress who seem more concerned with gay marriage and Obama’s birth certificate.  But, if adults can’t speak properly in public, why should kids?  Why criticize the younger generations for being so obsessed with cell phones and video games?  It’s really kind of frightening to realize any one of those kids could be sitting in the Oval Office and many others will be in Congress – all trying to balance budgets and pass laws.  What are they going to do?  Communicate via Twitter?  I’m afraid that’s where we’re headed, but I still hate to think that’ll be the case.

In the meantime, I’ll keep reading, writing and speaking out publicly about the issues that matter most to me.  Besides, I feel an obligation to refute all that stupidity coming out of Washington.

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This Is How God Did It

In honor of the 220th anniversary of Kentucky’s entrance into the Union, I present this treasure.  The state of Kentucky opened the 70,000 square foot “Creation Museum” in 2007, furthering making the U.S. a mockery of the world.  The “museum” concept is based on Christian biblical lore; “casting its characters and animals in dynamic form and placing them in familiar settings.”  Yes, of course – what else would you expect?  Scientific facts?  But, the museum became distressed when it learned that Budget Travel doesn’t include it on its must-see sites in Kentucky.

The museum offered this heartbreaking statement recently:

“The creation science group that runs the museum, Answers in Genesis, expressed disappointment.  The group said, ‘Curiously, despite being a clear winner in terms of votes received, the Creation Museum does not appear on the Budget Travel List.  We are certainly aware many evolutionists fear exposing children to the sort of critical thinking encouraged by a visit to the Creation Museum. And while we never discourage parents from taking their children to museums such as the number two choice on Budget Travel’s list – the Field Museum of Chicago, home of ‘the biggest Tyrannosaurus rex fossil ever dug up’ – we do suggest they go armed with a bucketful of discernment.’”

Altogether now – break out your banjos!

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June 1 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Actor – producer – director Andy Griffith (The Andy Griffith Show, Matlock, A Face in the Crowd, No Time for Sergeants, From Here to Eternity) is 86.

 

Singer Pat Boone (Love Letters in the Sand, April Love, Moody River, Ain’t That a Shame, I Almost Lost My Mind, Friendly Persuasion, Don’t Forbid Me) is 78.

 

Peter Masterson (actor: The Exorcist; as Carlos Bee Masterson director: Arctic Blue, Night Game, Full Moon in Blue Water, The Trip to Bountiful) is 78.

 

Actor Morgan Freeman (Driving Miss Daisy, Glory, Unforgiven, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, Queen, Another World, Outbreak, Amistad) is 75.

 

Actor Rene Auberjonois (Coco, The Ballad of Little Jo, Gore Vidal’s Billy the Kid, Police Academy 5, Pete ’n’ Tillie, McCabe and Mrs. Miller, Brewster McCloud) is 72.

 

Actor Jonathan Pryce (Hamlet, Julius Caesar, Macbeth, Carrington, Barbarians at the Gate, The Age of Innocence, Glengarry Glen Ross, Jumpin’ Jack Flash, Brazil) is 65.

 

Guitarist Ron Wood (Rolling Stones, since 1975) is 65.

 

Actor Powers Boothe (Guyana Tragedy: The Story of Jim Jones [1980]; Skag, Sudden Death, Nixon, Extreme Prejudice, The Emerald Forest) is 64.

 

Singer Graham Russell (Air Supply) is 62.

 

Actress Diana Canova (Soap, I’m a Big Girl Now, Throb, Home Free) is 59.

 

Singer Ronnie Dunn (Brooks & Dunn) is 59.

 

Actress Lisa Hartman (Knots Landing, Tabitha, Bare Essentials, Deadly Blessing, Red Wind) is 56.

 

Keyboardist Alan Wilder (Depeche Mode) is 53.

 

Drummer Mike Joyce (The Smiths) is 49.

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On June 1…

1638 – An earthquake struck Plymouth, MA, causing a great deal of damage, but no fatalities.

 

1792 – Kentucky entered the United States as the 15th state.

 

1796 – Tennessee became the 16th state to join the union.

 

1796 – Physicist Sadi Nicolas Leonard Carnot, pioneer in thermodynamics, was born in Paris.

 

1801 – Brigham Young, founder of the Mormon Church, was born in Whittingham, VT.

 

1831 – Sir James Clark Ross, an English navigator and explorer, discovered the magnetic North Pole while on his Arctic exploration.

 

1869 – Thomas Edison received a patent for his electric voting machine.

 

1878 – Poet John Masefield (Sea Fever, A Wanderer’s Song, Cargoes, The Wanderer, A Consecration, To-Morrow, Spanish Waters, Christmas Eve At Sea) was born in Ledbury, England.

 

1911 – Bradford and Leeds became the first cities in Great Britain to have trolley cars installed.

1926 – Actress Marilyn Monroe was born Norma Jean Baker Mortenson in Los Angeles, CA.

 

1941 – The Mediterranean island nation of Crete fell to German forces during World War II.

1957 – Don Bowden became the first American to break the four-minute mile, timed at 3 minutes, 58.7 seconds.

 

1961 – FM multiplex stereo broadcasting debuted in Chicago, Los Angeles and Schenectady, NY.  The FCC adopted the standard a year later.

1980 – CNN, the world’s first 24-hour television news network, made its debut from Atlanta, GA.

 

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