.
By Reyes Martinez Lopez, Jose Antonio Ortega and Paul Valdez
Collection Overview
Title: Juan Federico "Freddie Freak" Miguel Arguello Trujillo Chicano Movement Collection, 1965-2009
Primary Creator: Juan Federico Miguel Arguello Trujillo
Extent: 25.0 Cubic Feet
Arrangement:
The records are arranged into four series, as follows:
Series 1, Publications, newspapers and periodicals, 1965-1994
Series 2, Audiovisual materials, 1970s-1990s
Series 3, Coors boycott, 1970-2000
Series 4, Ephemera, 1975-2008
Subjects: Chicano Movement -- Colorado., Chicano Movement -- United States, Hispanic Americans -- Civil Rights -- Colorado, Mexican Americans -- Civil Rights - Colorado, Pueblo (Colo.) -- History -- 20th century, United Mexican American Students (University of Colorado-Boulder)
Forms of Material: Audiovisual materials, Newspapers, Photographs
Languages: English, Spanish;Castilian
Abstract
The Juan Federico “Freddie Freak” Miguel Arguello Trujillo Chicano Movement Collection contains audio, visual, and printed material related to the Mexicano peoples’ struggle against racism and discrimination in Colorado. The archives compiled by Trujillo chronicles his participation in the Chicano Movement as chairman of the Aztlán Boycott Coors Committee; activities of the United Mexican American Students (UMAS) organization on the University of Colorado-Boulder campus; the short-lived electoral campaigns of el Partido de La Raza Unida; United Farm Workers union organizing efforts; and the events surrounding the deaths of Ricardo Falcón and Los Seis de Boulder. Material in the collection spans five decades, from 1965 through the present.
Scope and Contents of the Materials
The collection compiled by Juan Federico “Freddie Freak” Miguel Arguello Trujillo contains materials relating to the Chicano Movement in Colorado. This includes: alternative press publications, photographic slides, audio and video recordings of poetry recitals, speeches at political demonstrations, as well as teatro and musical performances, unpublished manuscripts collected by Trujillo, and other memorabilia related to the Chicano Movement in Colorado. The collection is divided into four series. They include Series 1, Publications, newspapers and periodicals, 1965-1994; Series 2, Audiovisual materials, 1970s-1990s; Series 3, Coors boycott, 1970-2000; and Series 4, Ephemera, 1975-2008.
Collection Historical Note
Given the name Juan Federico Miguel Arguello Trujillo at birth, “Freddie Freak” acquired his colorful moniker as a result of his deep involvement in the hippie counterculture which gained prominence in the United States during the 1960s Vietnam War era.
Trujillo was born in 1938 in the southern Colorado town of Trinidad, the son of Juan Federico Trujillo, a coal miner who died three months before Freddie was born. Trujillo’s mother, Clorinda Arguello, whose family moved to southern Colorado from the northern New Mexico settlement of Santuario de Chimayó, had lost her hearing during her adolescence due to a botched medical procedure. His mother’s disability and the death of his father made for a tough beginning for Trujillo, but it also instilled in him a strong independent streak. When Freddie was seven years old the Trujillo family made the move north to Denver and a life in the historic Five Points area of the city. Trujillo’s older half-sister was employed as a barmaid at a lounge on Larimer Street, and Freddie began shining shoes and selling newspapers to help earn extra money for the family. Trujillo proved to be adept at the type of street hustling that thrived down on Larimer Street during the 1950s post-World War II era and, while still only a teenager, he managed to furnish his mother’s two-bedroom house, complete with living room furniture, kitchen appliances, and even a washing machine. But by the time he was sixteen, Trujillo had also dropped out of school, and he had acquired a taste for alcohol which would plague him well into the future.
Following a marriage and the births of three children, Trujillo’s personal life began to unravel, and his liquor consumption brought him to the brink of mental and physical collapse. In 1965, Trujillo checked himself into the Fort Logan Mental Health Center, and after 18 weeks of intensive 24 hour a day treatment, he emerged feeling as though he had been awarded a new lease on life. After Trujillo was released, counselors at the rehabilitation center where he went through his convalescence helped to get Freddie enrolled in a job placement program and he was trained in the arts of printing and color separation. When he was offered the opportunity to compete for a job working for Pruitt Press &Publishing, a company located in Boulder, Colorado which specialized in the printing of Christmas cards, Trujillo jumped at the chance to go live and work in the cultural center that Boulder was rapidly developing into. It was in Boulder where Trujillo would acquire the unique style of dress and mannerisms for which he would become known. Though he enjoyed the work of a printer, Trujillo was disturbed by the racist and sexist treatment of Chicanos and Chicanas who worked with the printer’s union at the large printing company, and this caused Trujillo to quit his position at the publishing company and take to the road, hitch-hiking his way to Berkeley, California in 1969 to partake of the Haight-Ashbury hippie scene.
Trujillo describes his introduction to the Chicano Movement in terms of experiencing an epiphany. In his view it was destiny that he became a foot-soldier in the struggle for Chicano liberation. In 1970, Trujillo participated in the summer program offered by the United Mexican American Students – Equal Opportunity Program (UMAS-EOP), and that fall enrolled for undergraduate classes at the prestigious University of Colorado in Boulder. As a Chicano activist, Trujillo put to use the experience he had gained while promoting free concerts and other events for Familia Security, who helped bring legendary bands such as The Grateful Dead to Boulder. Trujillo participated in student government and was elected to a CU Senate position as the organizing power of minority students grew on the Boulder campus. Trujillo’s understanding of the flow of monies through the University made him an adept organizer, and he played an integral part in bringing events such as La Fiesta de la Gente, and numerous other musical, theater, and dance performances by Chicano artists to the campus. During the early 1970s, the University of Colorado in Boulder was the scene of a flowering of Chicano culture and political awareness. This was a frightening spectacle to the power structure at the University, which responded in a reactionary fashion by cutting out those programs which had made it possible for the enrollment of Chicano students at CU-Boulder, a university with a total enrollment exceeding 20,000 students to jump from less than 50 Chicanos in 1968, to over 1200 by 1972. This policy of discrimination against Chicanos led to escalating conflict between University of Colorado officials and Chicano student activists.
A major antagonist of the Chicano student movement in Colorado proved to be Joe Coors, millionaire beer magnate, and University of Colorado Board of Regents member. A coalition of minority interest groups rose to protest discriminatory hiring practices at the Coors Brewery Company in Golden, Colorado, and Coors was placed high on the list of those to be targeted by radical factions of the Chicano community. A nationwide boycott of Coors Beer by the Chicano people was called for by UMAS, and the Aztlán Boycott Coors Committee was formed, which Trujillo rose to chair. The boycott proved to be an effective tactic; at one point the University of Colorado itself stopped serving Coors Beer at banquets and in the student lounge, and the boycott quickly spread throughout the United States. In his role as chairman of the Boycott Coors campaign, Trujillo traveled to California, Arizona, and New Mexico, as well as throughout the state of Colorado, making numerous public appearances to speak on the issues raised by the boycotters. Trujillo was also a strong supporter of César Chávez and the United Farm Workers Union’s non-violent struggle to improve the lives of the many Mexicano agricultural workers and their families who toiled under inhumane working conditions for miserably low wages.
Trujillo’s commitment to the Chicano Movement was fortified by the deep sense of loss and anger he shared with many other members of the Chicano community in Colorado following the tragic death of Ricardo Falcón. Falcón was gunned down in the town of Oro Grande, New Mexico following a confrontation with a White gas-station attendant over water to cool the radiator of the disabled car Falcón and other delegates from Colorado’s La Raza Unida Party were traveling in on their way to the historic LRUP National Convention held in El Paso, Texas in the late summer of 1972. The one-time coordinator of the UMAS tutorial program, Falcón was a well-respected organizer within the Chicano community of Colorado. He was also a close acquaintance of Trujillo.
In May 1974, Trujillo participated in the seizure and occupation of the building housing the UMAS-EOP offices on the CU-Boulder campus. The purpose of the occupation was to draw attention to the financial aid crisis facing Chicano students whose reliance on financial aid to attend college put them in a precarious position as the University chose to continue to slash money and programs for disadvantaged students. The occupation of Temporary Building 1 (TB-1) on the University of Colorado campus ended with the deaths of six young adults who were killed in two separate explosions which rocked the city of Boulder in late May of 1974. Killed in the first explosion were Neva Romero, Una Jaakola, and Reyes Martínez. The second explosion, which occurred two days later, claimed the lives of Florencio “Freddie” Granados, Heriberto Terán, and Francisco Dougherty. A lone survivor, Antonio Alcantar, was severely maimed, physically and psychologically. Five of those killed had been students at CU, two held degrees from the University of Colorado, and all had ties to UMAS. The Boulder bombings and the deaths of Los Seis de Boulder marked a climactic point during the Movimiento period of Chicano history.
As one of the original eight Chicano student occupiers of TB-1, a group which included Neva Romero, Trujillo felt a responsibility and duty to keep the memories of Los Seis de Boulder alive. In 1975 Trujillo was a key organizer of the first commemoration to honor the deaths of Los Seis, and has been an active participant and planner at subsequent annual commemorations which continue to be held throughout the state of Colorado. Since 1975 Trujillo has also made numerous presentations at colleges and universities on the topic of Los Seis de Boulder, UMAS, and the Chicano Movement in Colorado.
Trujillo moved to Pueblo, Colorado in 1978 and was a founder and contributor to La Cucaracha news magazine, working on layout and as a photographer during the publication’s eight year tenure. In addition to Los Seis de Boulder commemorations, Freddie Freak also continues to participate in organizing annual Cinco de Mayo parades and fiestas in Pueblo, as well Día de la Raza celebrations, and Columbus Day protest events. He has also produced several videos for community access television in Denver, Colorado. In September 2008 Trujillo donated the contents of his personal archives collection to Colorado State University-Pueblo, the first donation to the newly inaugurated Southern Colorado Ethnic Heritage and Diversity Archives.
Juan “Freddie Freak” Trujillo lived in Pueblo with his compañera de vida Francis, whom he met in Boulder in 1973. He passed away of cancer in 2020. He died in Pueblo, CO.
Subject/Index Terms
Administrative Information
Repository:
Colorado State University-Pueblo Library
Access Restrictions:
There are no access restrictions on this collection
Use Restrictions:
Not all of the material in the collection is in the public domain. Researchers are responsible for addressing copyright issues.
Acquisition Method:
Realizing the political and historical magnitude of those events he was witnessing and participating in, Trujillo took it upon himself to become a recorder and collector of the unique history of the Chicano Movement in Colorado. An enduring image of Freddie Freak is that of him down on one knee with arm extended, microphone in hand, capturing on tape the sounds of movement rallies and speeches. Freddie Freak’s commitment to preserving the Chicano people’s unfolding history was recognized by his peers, and many individuals donated material to what was termed the “Colorado Chicano Movement Archives.” Over the course of the nearly four decades that he managed the archives, Brian Sánchez, Esther Sánchez, Ray H. Otero, Shirley Romero Otero, Juan Espinosa, Deborah Espinosa, Larry Medina, Pablo Carlos Mora, Rita J. Martínez, José Esteban Ortega, Cleopatra M. Estrada, David Martínez, Produccíones Estrella Roja, and La Cucaracha magazine all made substantial contributions to Freddie Freak’s collection.
Related Materials:
Jose E. Ortega Papers, Garcia Family Papers, Rick F. Manzanares Papers, David Marquez Papers, Mitchell Kaufman Papers, Deborah Martinez Martinez Papers, Andres de Pineda Papers, David A. Sandoval Audiovisual Collection, United Mexican American Students Records, George Autobee Papers
Preferred Citation:
Juan Federico “Freddie Freak” Arguello Trujillo Chicano Movement Collection, Colorado State University-Pueblo Library, University Archives and Special Collections
Processing Information:
Assistant Archivist Reyes Martinez Lopez completed processing of this collection in June 2009; Archivist Beverly Allen and Martinez Lopez created the finding aid. Student Intern Rufina Baca processed and added Series 4 Ephemera in spring 2022.
Box and Folder Listing
Browse by Series:
[
Series 1: Publications, Newspapers, and Periodicals, 1965-1994],
[
Series 2: Audiovisual Materials, 1970s-1990s],
[
Series 3: Coors Boycott, 1970-2000],
[Series 4: Ephemera, 1975-2000s],
[
All]
- Series 4: Ephemera, 1975-2000s
- Box 1
- Item 1: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Boycott Lettuce" button, "Boycott Non-Lettuce" button.
- Item 2: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Cesar Chavez Stamp" button
- Item 3: Colrado Chicano Movement - "Semania De La Raza" button.
- Item 4: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Boycott Grapes" button, "Boycott Farah Pants" button.
- Item 5: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Boycott Grapes" button, "Boycott Grapes", button.
- Item 6: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Huelga! UFWOC" button, "U.F.W.O.C." button.
- Item 7: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Boycott Grapes" button, "Boycott Non-UFW Grapes" button.
- Item 8: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Cesar Chavez Non-Violence" button.
- Item 9: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Boycott Lettuce" button, "Don't Buy Non-Union Lettuce" button.
- Item 10: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Boycott Non-Union Lettuce" button, "Buy Only UFWOC AFL-CIO Lettuce" button.
- Item 11: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Non-Violent Action" button, "Viva La Justicia" button.
- Item 12: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Support Farm workers" button, "Support Farm workers" (small) button.
- Item 13: Colorado Chicano Movement - "U.F.W.O.C. Huelga Delano" button.
- Item 14: Colorado Chicano Movement - "La Tierra Mia April 22, 1970" button.
- Item 15: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Brewery Workers" (x2) button.
- Item 16: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Help! Boycott Coors Beer" button, "Pipe Fitters Local Union #208" button.
- Item 17: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Help! Boycott Coors Beer" button.
- Item 18: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Nixon Eats Lettuce" button, Boycott Lettuce" button.
- Item 19: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Boycott Coors" button.
- Item 20: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Our Dignity is not for Sale Boycott Coors" button.
- Item 21: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Help! Boycott Coors Beer" button, "Don't Drink Coors Beer" button.
- Item 22: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Basta Ya! No Compren Cerveza Coors" button.
- Item 23: Colorado Chicano Movement - "No to Coors" pin, "No to Coors" (duck) pin.
- Item 24: Colorado Chicano Movement - "No Coors" red, white, green, beaded.
- Item 25: Colorado Chicano Movement - "I don't drink Coors" button, "No Coors" button.
- Item 26: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Viva La Huelga" (Zapata) button, "Viva La Huelga" (Zapata) button.
- Item 27: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Nosotros Venceremos" (Zapata) button, "Tierra O Muerte" (Zapata) button.
- Item 28: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Tierra-O Muerte" (Zapata) button.
- Item 29: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Viva La Huelga" (Zapata) button.
- Item 30: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Free Los Tres, Stop Repressive Drugs" button.
- Item 31: Colorado Chicano Movement - "La Raza Unida De Aztlan" button.
- Item 32: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Aztlan Yo Soy Chicano" button.
- Item 33: Colorado Chicano Movement - "I Shall Endure Free Corky Gonzales" button.
- Item 34: Colorado Chicano Movement - "I Shall Endure Free Corky Gonzales" button.
- Item 35: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Raza Si!" button, "Viva La Justicia" button.
- Item 36: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Por Mi Raza" button.
- Item 37: Colorado Chicano Movement - "El Espiritu De Aztlan" button.
- Item 38: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Bala Revolucion Con Educacion" button.
- Item 39: Colorado Chicano Movement - "La Raza Unida Party" button.
- Item 40: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Viva La Justicia" button.
- Box 2
- Item 1: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Denver March POW WOW, 1989" button.
- Item 2: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Denver March POW WOW, 1989" button.
- Item 3: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Denver March POW WOW, 1990" button.
- Item 4: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Denver March POW WOW, 1991" button.
- Item 5: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Denver March POW WOW, 1994" button.
- Item 6: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Big Mountain" (Native American) button.
- Item 7: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Denver March POW WOW, '04" button.
- Item 8: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Listen to the Drum, Census, '90" button.
- Item 9: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Heal the Sacred Circle, Free Leonard Peltier" button.
- Item 10: Colorado Chicano Movement - "U.F.W. Flag" button, "U.F.W. Flag" (pink) button.
- Item 11: Colorado Chicano Movement - "August 29, Commemorate the Chicano Moratorium" button.
- Item 12: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Peace and Dignity Journey" button.
- Item 13: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Operation Huitzilochtli" button.
- Item 14: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Two hundred years of racism is enough!" button.
- Item 15: Colorado Chicano Movement - "200 Years of Misery" button.
- Item 16: Colorado Chicano Movement - "200 Years of Misery" button.
- Item 17: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Bala Revolucion Con Educacion" button.
- Item 18: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Save Indian Resrevations" button.
- Item 19: Colorado Chicano Movement - "March 24, 1979 WSAC, Political Youth Conference, Yo Soy Chicano" button.
- Item 20: Colorado Chicano Movement - "UMAS 40th Year Anniversary" button.
- Item 21: Colorado Chicano Movement - "UMAS Ya Basta" button, "UMAS Aztlan" button.
- Item 22: Colorado Chicano Movement - "UMAS Aztlan" button.
- Item 23: Colorado Chicano Movement - "UMAS Por Mi Raza El Espiritu" button.
- Item 24: Colorado Chicano Movement - "UMAS Aztlan" button.
- Item 25: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Raza Regents Saiz, Trujillo" button.
- Item 26: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Viva La Causa" (Zapata) button, "Viva La Causa" (Zapata) button.
- Item 27: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Free Peltier" button.
- Item 28: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Free Peltier" button.
- Item 29: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Free Peltier" button.
- Item 30: Colorado Chicano Movement - "C.A.S.A, Hermandad General De Trabajadores" button.
- Item 31: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Free Ernesto Vigil Ahora" button.
- Item 33: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Por Tido De La Raza Unida" button.
- Item 34: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Aztlan, Yo Soy Chicano" button.
- Item 35: Colorado Chicano Movement - "M.E.CH.A." button.
- Item 36: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Free all Political prisoners, Free Peltier" button.
- Item 37: Colorado Chicano Movement - "La Gente" button.
- Box 3
- Item 1: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Brown Beret" Patch.
- Item 2: Colorado Chicano Movement - "I'm Proud to be a Chicano" Patch.
- Item 3: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Jose Martin Ortega" button.
- Item 4: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Lalo" button.
- Item 5: Colorado Chicano Movement - "In Loving Memory of Teodoro "Ted" Martinez" button.
- Item 6: Colorado Chicano Movement - "An American Original Zoot Suit" button.
- Item 7: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Dia De Los Muertos Sugar Skull" button.
- Item 8: Colorado Chicano Movement - "We Belong to the Earth" button.
- Item 9: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Aztec/Mayan Calander" button.
- Item 10: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Chicano Power" button, "Chicano Fist" button.
- Item 11: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Che Guevara" button, "Fist with Wings" button.
- Item 12: Colorado Chicano Movement - "A.H.O.R.A. It Begins Now" button.
- Item 13: Colorado Chicano Movement - "A.H.O.R.A. It Begins Now" button.
- Item 14: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Una Cucaracha En Cada Casa" button.
- Item 15: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Justicia Ambiental Ya" button.
- Item 16: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Somos El 99%, Occupy Greely" button.
- Item 17: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Skull" (x3) button.
- Item 18: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Chicano" button.
- Item 19: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Centro Amigo Latino" button, "Mestizo" button.
- Item 20: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Fiesta Chiuahua Imported Beer Mexicana" button.
- Item 21: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Un Arbol Crece Chueco No Se Puede Enderesar" button.
- Item 22: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Hispanic American Democrats" button.
- Item 24: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Mexico Flag" pin.
- Item 25: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Solidaridad Pa' Siempre" button.
- Item 26: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Numero Uno Colorado Jobs for Progress" button.
- Item 27: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Budweiser Cinco De Mayo" button.
- Item 28: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Geronimo" button.
- Item 29: Colorado Chicano Movement - "El Pueblo Unido" pin.
- Item 30: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Cinco De Mayo, 1987" button.
- Item 31: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Free Veronica Vigil" button.
- Item 32: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Custer Got Siouxed" button.
- Item 33: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Aztec Denver" button.
- Item 34: Colorado Chicano Movement - "National environmental, keep America beautiful postage stamp" pin.
- Item 35: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Cheyenne Postage" pin.
- Item 36: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Shoshone Postage" pin.
- Item 37: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Discover Columbus Legacy" button.
- Item 38: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Midwest Canto al Pueblo, Cinco De Mayo" button.
- Item 39: Colorado Chicano Movement - "Women Unite Women" button, "UMAS 40th Year Anniversary" button.
- Box 4
- Item 1: Protest - "U.S. out of El Salvador" button.
- Item 2: Protest - "Stop U.S. Wat on Nacaragua" button.
- Item 3: Protest - "Political Prisoners of U.S.A. Fascism" button.
- Item 4: Protest - "Free South Africa" button.
- Item 5: Protest - "P.O.W.'S Never have a Nice Day" button.
- Item 6: Protest - "Guatemala Vencera" button.
- Item 7: Protest - "Wisconsin Alliance" button.
- Item 8: Protest - "Freedom Now!" button.
- Item 9: Protest - "Stop U.S. War on Nicaragua" button.
- Item 10: Protest - "Hands Off Central America" button.
- Item 11: Protest - "Boycott Japanese and Russian Goods" button.
- Item 12: Protest - "Center for Cuban Studies" button.
- Item 13: Protest - "Chiles, Junta No!" button.
- Item 14: Protest - "No Human Being is Illegal" button.
- Item 15: Protest - "The Cops & the Klan go Hand in Hand" button.
- Item 16: Protest - "Political Asylum for Hector Marroquin" button.
- Item 17: Protest - "Cuba-Chile-Vengeran!" button.
- Item 18: Protest - "Freeze War Not Wages" button.
- Item 19: Protest - "Stop U.S. Intervention" button.
- Item 20: Protest - "El Salvador is Spanish for Viet Nam" button.
- Item 21: Protest - "Peace Corps" button.
- Item 22: Protest - "Peace Corps, Work For Peace, Nov. 13-14" button, "Peace Corps, Work for Peace, Oct. 15" button.
- Item 23: Protest - "Just Peace" button,
- Item 24: Protest - "Freedom Summer '84" button.
- Item 25: Protest - "Work for Peace, Nov. 13-14" button.
- Item 26: Protest - "Peace on Earth, Work for Peace" button.
- Item 27: Protest - "Think Globally, Act Locally" button.
- Item 28: Protest - "People to People, Aid to Vietnam" button.
- Item 29: Protest - "Friendshipment, Peace Corps" button.
- Item 30: Protest - "March Against the War, Nov. 6, N.P.A.C." button.
- Item 31: Protest - "Stop Gun Violence" button.
- Item 32: Protest - "Vietnam Veterans Against the War" button.
- Item 33: Protest - "People Before Profits! No Nukes!" button.
- Item 34: Protest - "Vietnam Moratorium, Nov. 14-15" button.
- Item 35: Protest - "No Nukes, Not Now, Not Ever" button.
- Item 36: Protest - "Troops Out Now!" button.
- Item 37: Protest - "Wounded Warrior Project" button.
- Item 38: Protest - "Iraq out of Kuwait, U.S. out of the Middle East!" button.
- Item 39: Protest - "Stop Nuclear Power! Stop Nuclear Weapons!" button.
- Item 40: Protest - "Don't Register for World War III, the War Without Winners" button.
- Item 41: Protest - "I Support Our Troops, Operation Desert Storm" button.
- Box 5
- Item 1: Political - "Kennedy" button.
- Item 2: Political - "Viva Carter" button.
- Item 3: Political - "Our President Franklin D. Roosevelt" button.
- Item 4: Political - "Anti-Trump" button.
- Item 5: Political - "Anti-Trump" button.
- Item 6: Political - "Latinos, Chicanos, Mexicanos Against Trump" button.
- Item 7: Political - "10 Points for Obama" button.
- Item 8: Political - "UFCW for Obama '08" button.
- Item 9: Political - "2016 Hillary" button.
- Item 10: Political - "Clinton Gore" button.
- Item 11: Political - "Adelante con Clinton" button.
- Item 12: Political - "Latinos, Chicanos, Mexicanos Against Trump" button.
- Item 13: Political - "Martinez State Senate" button.
- Item 14: Political - "Elect Bob Martinez" button.
- Item 15: Political - "Re-elect Bob Martinez, District #32" button.
- Item 16: Political - "Matinez, State Senate" button.
- Item 17: Political - "Ruben Valdez, Lt. Governor" button.
- Item 18: Political - "Tom 4 District 2" button.
- Item 19: Political - "1990 Census, You Count" button.
- Item 20: Political - "Rally Around the Flag" button.
- Item 21: Political - "Night of the Nighthorse, November 3,1992" button.
- Item 22: Political - "Night of the Nighthorse, November 3, 1998" button.
- Item 23: Political - "Ben Nighthorse Cambell, U.S. Senate" button.
- Item 24: Political - "Ben Nighthorse Cambell, U.S. Senate" button.
- Item 25: Political - "Thurgood Marshall Postage Stamp" pin.
- Item 26: Political - "Mondale Ferraro '84" button.
- Item 27: Political - "Don Sandoval for State Senator" button.
- Item 28: Political - "Don Sandoval for State Senator" button.
- Item 29: Political - "Webb for Mayor" button.
- Item 30: Political - "Stop the Grand Jury Free veronica Vigil" button.
- Item 31: Political - "Romer. Governor" button.
- Item 32: Political - "Gary Hart (x2)" button.
- Item 33: Political - "Vote Yes on Y & Z" button.
- Item 34: Political - "Vote Democratic" button.
- Box 6
- Item 1: Political - "Free Nelson Mandela" button.
- Item 2: Political - "Mao Zedong"red star button.
- Item 3: Political - "Mao Zedong" button.
- Item 4: Political - "Mao Zedong" red, gold button.
- Item 5: Political - "Red, white, blue, hedgehog" button.
- Item 6: Political - "My Vote Our Future" button.
- Item 7: Political - "Save Your Library, Vote No on 60,61, and 101!" button.
- Item 8: Political - "Midterms Matter, Vote 11-2-10" button.
- Item 9: Political - "Pro-Choice on Everything " button.
- Item 10: Political - "No 47, Save Colorado's Economy" button.
- Item 11: Political - "No 31" button.
- Item 12: Political - "I Voted Democratic" button.
- Item 13: Political - "Vote in the Streets" button.
- Item 14: Political - "I Voted Today!" button.
- Item 15: Political - "I Voted Today!" button.
- Item 16: Political - "Step up and Register to Vote" button.
- Item 17: Political - "Kaplin Powell Ortega" button.
- Item 19: Political - "Don't Blame Me, I Voted Libertarian" button.
- Item 20: Political - "Pro-Choice on Everything" button.
- Item 21: Political - "My Vote Our Future, Vote Nov. 4" button.
- Item 22: Political - "U.S. Flags" (x3) button.
- Item 23: Political - "Take Pride in America" button.
- Item 24: Political - "Keep it Made in America" button.
- Item 25: Political - "National Democratic Convention" button.
- Item 26: Colorado - "Ski Closer" button.
- Item 27: Colorado - "I Love CU" button.
- Item 28: Colorado - "I Like Boulder" button.
- Item 29: Colorado - "Center for Student Involvement" button.
- Item 30: Colorado - "I love trains, Rio Grande Scenic Railroad" button.
- Item 31: Colorado - "Earth Day Everyday, Colorado Wildlife Federation" button.
- Item 32: Colorado - "Colorado State University-Pueblo, Diversity Resource Center" button.
- Item 33: Colorado - "Colorado State University" button.
- Item 34: Colorado - "Metropolitan State College" button.
- Item 35: Colorado - "CU, Redefining Sustainability" button.
- Item 36: Colorado - "Colorado Lakewood, CO '76" button.
- Item 37: Colorado - "Chaplains Association for Native Americans" button.
- Item 38: Colorado - "Bishop Castle, Colorado" button.
- Box 7
- Item 1: Pop Culture - "I Love NY" button.
- Item 2: Pop Culture - "I Love Coffee" button.
- Item 3: Pop Culture - "Silence of the Lambs Part 2" button.
- Item 4: Pop Culture - "Party" button.
- Item 5: Pop Culture - "How Far did you Drive!" button.
- Item 6: Pop Culture - "Right On" button.
- Item 7: Pop Culture - "I am Loved" button, "Touch Me" button.
- Item 8: Pop Culture - "Skin Diver" button, "Dancers" button.
- Item 9: Pop Culture - "Men use Condoms" button.
- Item 10: Pop Culture - "Denver Nuggets" button.
- Item 11: Pop Culture - "New Kids" button.
- Item 12: Pop Culture - "Harley Davidson" pin.
- Item 13: Pop Culture - "Walt Disney World" button.
- Item 14: Pop Culture - "Wolverine" button.
- Item 15: Pop Culture - "Ronald McDonald" button.
- Item 16: Pop Culture - "Jammin" button.
- Item 17: Pop Culture - "Christmas Dino" button.
- Item 18: Pop Culture - "TAZ" button.
- Item 19: Pop Culture - "I'm not easy" button.
- Item 20: Pop Culture - "Chill Out" button.
- Item 21: Pop Culture - "Old Fart" button.
- Item 22: Pop Culture - "Pinocchio" button.
- Item 23: Pop Culture - "Mikey Mouse - Did I Goof?"
- Item 24: Pop Culture - "Mickey"
- Item 25: Pop Culture - "Mikey and Minnie" button.
- Item 26: Pop Culture - "I am Acting My Age" button.
- Item 27: Pop Culture - "Yippie", "Mushrooms", "Pink Flower" buttons.
- Item 28: Pop Culture - "Miller high Life" and "Blue/Silver" buttons.
- Item 29: Pop Culture - "Peace Sign" button.
- Item 30: Pop Culture - "Bull" and "Ring of Fire" buttons.
- Item 31: Pop Culture - "Black Cat" button.
- Item 32: Pop Culture - "If You Got 'Em" button.
- Item 33: Pop Culture - "Will Trade Wisdom" button.
- Item 34: Pop Culture - "Pi" and "Y" buttons.
- Item 35: Pop Culture - "Question Authority" button.
- Item 36: Pop Culture - "Leaf, Star" and "Leaf, Man" buttons.
- Box 8
- Item 1: Pop Culture - "Get Your Caca Together" button.
- Item 2: Pop Culture - "Holyfield vs. Tyson II" button.
- Item 3: Pop Culture "Hard Rock" button.
- Item 4: Pop Culture - "John Lennon, Yoko Ono" button.
- Item 5: Pop Culture - "Winnie the Pooh" button.
- Item 6: Pop Culture - "Pooh" button.
- Item 7: Pop Culture - "No Cows" button.
- Item 8: Pop Culture - "I'm Driving" button.
- Item 9: Pop Culture - "Budweiser - Brewed in Colorado" button.
- Item 10: Pop Culture - "So Reach" button.
- Item 11: Pop Culture - "Borat" button.
- Item 12: Pop Culture - "God Grant Me" button.
- Item 13: Pop Culture - "Yippie!" button.
- Item 14: Pop Culture - "Peace Sign" button.
- Item 15: Pop Culture - "Wavy Peace Sign"
- Item 16: Pop Culture - "Butterfly" button.
- Item 17: Pop Culture - "Love" button.
- Item 18: Pop Culture - "Flower Power" button.
- Item 19: Pop Culture - "Teddy Bears USA 37" button.
- Item 20: Pop Culture - "Batman" button.
- Item 21: Pop Culture "Joker" button.
- Item 22: Pop Culture - "Fist Peace Sign" button.
- Item 23: Pop Culture - "Are You Stoned Or Just Stupid" button.
- Item 24: Pop Culture - "Fred Flinstone" button.
- Item 25: Pop Culture - "Happy, Joyous, Free" button.
- Item 26: Pop Culture - "Blue Square" button.
- Item 27: Pop Culture - "Up Yours" button.
- Item 28: Pop Culture - "It's Just the Tripple Lattes Talking" button.
- Item 29: Pop Culture - "Inoperative" button.
- Item 30: Pop Culture - "AH-Shit " Emoji button.
- Item 31: Pop Culture - "BU__SH__Happens" button.
- Item 32: Pop Culture - "John Lennon Yoko ono" button.
- Item 33: Pop Culture - "You're A Shithead" button.
- Item 34: Pop Culture - "I'm Hooked on Knitting" button.
- Item 35: Pop Culture - "I'm A Patient" button.
- Item 36: Pop Culture - "Yin Yang" button.
- Item 37: Pop Culture - "Experience" button.
- Item 38: Pop Culture - "Go Rodeo" button.
- Item 39: Pop Culture - "Peace" button.
- Box 9
- Item 1: Protest - "Anti-Racism" button.
- Item 2: Protest - "Sabian" button.
- Item 3: Protest - "S.R.O." button.
- Item 4: Protest - "ULLR" button.
- Item 5: Protest - "Free Bobby" button.
- Item 6: Protest - "Supported and Publicize the 7 PT. Peace Proposal" button.
- Item 7: Protest - "Not All Prisoners Are Home" button.
- Item 8: Protest - "Stop the Pipeline" button.
- Item 9: Protest - "The Longest Walk (1978)" button.
- Item 10: Protest - "Chicago Fight Back, Deember 27-28" button.
- Item 11: Protest - "iCuba-Chile Vengeran!" button.
- Item 12: Protest - "Mondale Ferraro Nosotros" button.
- Item 13: Protest - "Abolish Apartheid" button.
- Item 14: Protest - "Don't Tread on Me" button.
- Item 15: Protest - "No TCAP" button.
- Item 16: Protest - "Proteccion Sierra Club" button.
- Item 17: Protest - "We Won't Talk" button.
- Item 18: Protest - "Women Against Nukes" button.
- Item 19: Protest - "Out of SE Asia Now" button.
- Item 20: Protest - "Hugs Not Drugs" button.
- Item 21: Protest - "Anti-Gangs" button.
- Item 22: Protest - "You Can't Scare Me" button.
- Item 23: Protest - "Stop Torture" button.
- Item 24: Protest - "Stop the Abuse of Power" button.
- Item 25: Protest - "Malcolm X" button.
- Item 26: Protest - "Malcolm X" button.
- Item 27: Protest - "I Have A Dream" button.
- Item 28: Protest - "Dr. Martin Luther Kig, Jr." button.
- Item 29: Protest - "Martin Luther King, Jr." button.
- Item 30: Protest - "Martin Luther King, Jr" button.
- Item 31: Protest - "Martin Luther King, Jr." button.
- Item 32: Protest - "Martin Luther King, Jr." button.
- Item 33: Protest - "We're in Here for You" button.
- Item 34: Protest - "No Confidence" button.
- Item 35: Protest - "HQ2" button.
- Item 36: Protest - "We Charge Genocide!" button.
- Item 37: Protest - "Stop U.S. Intervention" button.
- Item 38: Protest - "Attica Means Fight Back!" button.
- Item 39: Protest - "Bring Our Carnales Home Now" button.
- Box 10
- Item 1: Organizations - "PCC Facilitator Fred Trujillo" name tag.
- Item 2: Organizations - "Juan" button.
- Item 3: Organizations - "USC Student" button.
- Item 4: Organizations - "El Movimiento" name tag.
- Item 5: Organizations - "News Media" medal.
- Item 6: Organizations - "1978 Colorado State Fair" button.
- Item 7: Organizations - "Discover Pueblo" button.
- Item 8: Organizations - "Pueblo Education Coalition" button.
- Item 9: Organizations "Trio" button.
- Item 10: Organizations - "Make Them Count" button.
- Item 11: Organizations - "Make Them Count" button.
- Item 12: Organizations - "Migrant Head Start" button.
- Item 13: Organizations - "Academic Freedom" button.
- Item 14: Organizations - "We're Proud to Be Pueblo" button.
- Item 15: Organizations - "Don't Bank with Wells Fargo" button.
- Item 16: Organizations - "Performance Team Member" button.
- Item 17: Organizations - "I'm A Friend of KTSCTV" button.
- Item 18: Organizations - "It Takes a Whole Village" button.
- Item 19: Organizations - "United Way" button.
- Item 20: Organizations - "Designated Driver" button.
- Item 21: Organizations - "Join AFSCME, AFL-CIO" button.
- Item 22: Organizations - "History Lives" button.
- Item 23: Organizations - "Pueblo Eagle Festival" button.
- Item 24: Organizations - "Victim Justice: A New Day Dawns" button.
- Item 25: Organizations - "I'm the Heart of PCHC" button.
- Item 26: Ogranizations - "Protect Workers" button.
- Item 27: Organizations - "Mental Health Matters" button.
- Item 28: Organizations - "Chiropractic" button.
- Item 29: Organizations - "Chiropractice" button.
- Item 30: Organizations - "YWCA" button.
- Item 31: Organizations - "KRZA Volunteer" button.
- Box 11
- Item 1: Organizations - "Cancer is Non Partisan" button.
- Item 2: Organizations - "Breast Cancer Ribbon" button.
- Item 3: Organizations - "Be Strong" button.
- Item 4: Organizations - "Cure, Hope, Love, Faith" button.
- Item 5: Organizations - "We Can Do It!" button.
- Item 6: Organizations - "Frida" button.
- Item 7: Organizations - "Wilma Rudolph" button.
- Item 8: Organizations - "Survivor" button.
- Item 9: Organizations - "Marion Anderson" button.
- Item 10: Organizations - "LWV" button.
- Item 11: Organizations - "I Support GLBT People" button.
- Item 12: Organizations - "Gay Symbol" button.
- Item 13: Organizations - "Women's Respurce Center" button.
- Item 14: Organizations - "Donate Life" button.
- Item 15: Organizations - "Freedom the Alternative" button.
- Item 16: Organizations - "Colorado Department Health - Don't Forget Your Rubbers" button.
- Item 17: Organizations - "Colorado Department of Health - It Won't Work If You Don't Wear It" button.
- Item 18: Organizations - "Education/Safty", "Help Smoky Prevent Wildfires!" buttons.
- Item 19: Organizations - "Smokey Bear" button.
- Item 20: Organizations - "Clean Energy for All" button.
- Item 21: Organizations - "World Without Suicide" button.
- Item 22: Organizations - "Environment" button.
- Item 23: Organizations - "Uranium Leave It In The Ground" button.
- Item 24: Organizations - "Clean Water" button.
- Item 25: Organizations - "Suicide Prevention" button.
- Item 26: Organizations - "Healthcare for People" button.
- Item 27: Organizations - "Choose or Lose, vote 96" button.
- Item 28: Organizations - "Rock the Vote" button.
- Item 29: Organizations - "I Support Local Artists" button.
- Item 30: Organizations - "Have Pride Inside" button.
- Item 31: Organizations - "The Big Green Machine is on the Move!" button.
- Item 32: Organizations - "Freddie Trujillo United Farm Workers of America, AFL-CIO" medal.
- Folder 1
- Item 1: "Si Se Puede, 93 Cinco De Mayo 93, Cesar Estrada Chavez, 1927-1993", mini velour banner
- Item 2: "Symbols of Resistance", mini velour banner
- Item 3: "El Movimiento - The Chicano Movement in Colorado and Pueblo", Saturday, March 24, El Pueblo History Museum, poster
- Item 4: "Symbols of Resistance - A Tribute to the Martyrs of the Chicana Movement", Sunday, November 5, Rawlings Public Library, poster
- Item 5: "Monsanto Kills" red fabric banner
- Box 12
- Folder 1: "Freddie Freaks Out! Freddie Speaks Out!" Book Promotional Materials
- Promotinal poster and cards for the book release of "Freddie Freaks Out! Freddie Speaks Out!
Browse by Series:
[
Series 1: Publications, Newspapers, and Periodicals, 1965-1994],
[
Series 2: Audiovisual Materials, 1970s-1990s],
[
Series 3: Coors Boycott, 1970-2000],
[Series 4: Ephemera, 1975-2000s],
[
All]