Am deep in the vaults for an upcoming...something, when I stumbled across an ad in the then-Santa Ana Register for the 1969 Orange County Fair. The theme for that year? "Fiesta of Fun," with its logo a clown wearing a sombrero that read, "¡Vamos Amigos!" (upside-down exclamation point in the original!). The theme was picked to celebrate California's bicentennial in the wasichu world, and the text for the ad boasted that the fair would feature mariachi bands strolling around the fairgrounds to give attendees a feel of "Old Mexico."
Was this the only time in the history of Orange County where Mexicans were encouraged to stroll around and play their music? And that gabachos got the upside-down exclamation point right? And that there wasn't a single Letter to the Editor railing about creeping bilingualism? Oh, for those halcyon dias!
Anyhoo, since I don't have the logo, here's the mariachi classic, "Adelita," as sung by Nat King Cole. That cat could sing:
MaryJ: That's one of the biggest loads of lies I've ever heard�and, considering I read Barbara Coe's email, consider that HILARIOUS!
Mexicans in the 60s were nice people who learned English and respected American laws and American people. It was only after the La Raza movement took hold that they became nasty, anti-American, entitlement-driven, etc. and therefore, unpopular. That, and the fact that the numbers streaming over the border became untenable. No one wants to invite 10 people to dinner and have 300 show up. That does tend to piss people off.
Dang G... you keep Killing it with this Info. Good Job!