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1978:
When BGSU met Latino music, at WBGU 88.1FM
By
Alan Abrams, La Prensa Senior Correspondent
Part One of a
Two-part Series
Bowling Green,
OH:
Thirty years ago, Benito Lucio, Jr. was a student at
Bowling Green
State University, majoring in physical education, with Spanish as
his minor. That year—1978—he was not only elected president of
BGSU’s Latino Student Union, but he started the first Latino FM
radio program in Northwest Ohio on WBGU 88.1FM. His first co-host
was his then-classmate, future community activist Margarita De
León. |

DJ Benito Lucio |
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You may remember him as El Super Mex. He was born
in San Benito, Texas to parents who were migrant farmworkers in
Montana,
Colorado, Texas, Illinois, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. As a
child, he and his family lived for eight years in a migrant camp.
And he has
never forgotten his roots. This is further illustrated in part two
of this series.
“In 1978, when
I was president of the Latino Student Union,” recalls Lucio, “the
Black Student Union asked if we would support them in their
campaign to get airtime. I said we would, and after it was
successful, I was told that there was a bloc of 30 hours a week
airtime that we could have as well. So we went on the air.
“Margarita was
our second DJ. I remember once we both were on the air together.
We noticed there was a switch on the control panel. Margie
accidentally hit the switch, and it knocked us off the air. We
were sitting there talking on the air, but all our listeners heard
was dead silence.
“I always
remembered the importance of music to the workers in the fields.
When I was working in the fields with my family, I remember all
the cars that were parked by the fields with their radios on. I
had this connection.
“I thought
I’ll be able to do this show on the radio, and it is pretty cool.
But I also knew what it was like out there in the fields. I
started to think of how the workers could be getting information
from my show. So all of my interests came together.
So how did
Tejano music come to BGSU?
“But the big
problem was that I knew nothing about Latino music. When I was in
college, I was into rock and roll, like Santana and
Black Sabbath. My dad knew Tejano Freddie Fender
from back in Texas. But I didn’t know crap.
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“So I started
reaching out to people. I went to dances to get connected to the
musicians. I went to Texas and saw Carlos Guzmán, the
Tejano music legend. I came back with 700 albums. My little Camaro
was so weighted down, that I had to drive slowly all the way back
to BG,” remembers Lucio, who still has that music in his
collection.
“Thanks to
Carlos Guzmán, I began to talk with the record companies and
develop ongoing connections. I also got to meet many of the
artists such as Lisa López and Little Joe, who gave
me an interview. And I got to meet Selena in 1993.”
Remember these
names at WBGU 88.1FM?
“During the
formative years, they were all on the show at various times:
Isabel Sánchez (La Babé), Ofelia Ibarra (Juana Pelona), Johnny
Sánchez, Israel Zamarripa (Mr. IZ), Ramiro Zamarripa (Ram), Angie
Rios, her sister and Nora Bautista (the Super
Mex Angels), Richard Romero, Robert Torres, Bobbie Rios, La
Tigresa, David García, Fred Gutiérrez, and Valley
Girl.
“Diana
Almanaza, La Estrellita, was la más bonita
and the youngest Latina DJ that we had on the radio…and the
one I remember the most…for her smile. She was a great young lady.
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Freddy Gutierrez |
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“These are the
DJs from WBGU…what a great group of people that volunteered their
time to bring Tejano/Latino music and Latino pride to the
community. I was blessed to have worked with all these folks,”
says Lucio.
Co-host De
León, being of Puerto Rican descent, loved salsa, merengue, and
bachata. Their respective music was blended into a variety of
formats, to honor these musical traditions.
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Richard Romero
chuckles when he remembers those days. “I was the disco instructor
(for LSU dances). That’s how I met my wife. I was pretty smooth,”
says Romero, now Deputy Safety Director for the City of Lorain and
also Chair of the Ohio Commission of Hispanic/Latino Affairs.
“I was the
events coordinator for the Latino Student Union at BGSU, so I used
to go on the station mainly to promote our events. I was also a
student publisher – I published the first LSU student magazine,”
recalls Romero, who graduated in 1983.
Like Romero,
Margarita De León also came to BGSU from Lorain, OH. She met her
future husband, Toledoan Sylvestre Durán, Jr.
at BGSU. His father, Sylvestre Durán Sr., is a
longtime baile promoter who still has a DJ show in
Fostoria, OH.
Lucio, who
moved to Columbus, OH in 1984, says he left the show and the
station in 1995 because “I was taking on more responsibility in
Columbus. And I had a daughter, so I scaled back.
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Richard Romero, 1982 |
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“I was honored
to be a part of Tejano history. I was also a DJ in Fostoria and I
taught Celso Rodríguez all about Tejano music. In
the 1980s, I got to meet everybody.” Rodríguez later developed a
very successful formatting of Tejano music on WRED 95.7FM. |
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Today, the show is called “La Unica,” broadcasting on WBGU 88.1FM
every Sunday for four hours, from 8:00AM to noon. The DJs include
Freddy Gutiérrez, his son-in-law Geraldo Rosales,
Rudy “Jalapeño” Lomeli, Joe Cardenas, Maribel,
and Daniel.
Editor’s Note: Thanks to the research of BGSU’s
Gloria Enriquez Pizana, on “July 1978, Lo Mejor de Bowling Green
Radio Program, WBGU 88.1, South Hall, BGSU, commenced its Latino
radio programming. In short, Spanish program was given air time
by WBGU FM. La Union de Estudiantes Latino (LSU) contributed $300
toward Mexican and Puerto Rican music for the radio library.
NEXT WEEK: Benito Lucio, Jr., moves to Columbus as a migrant
ombudsman but his love for radio and Tejano music continued.
El Super Mex,
Benito Lucio Jr., continues his community involvement in Columbus
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Margarita De
León |
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DJs Juan
Sánchez, Joe Muñoz, and Celso Rodríguez were instrumental in the
success of Woodville’s WRED 95.7FM. La Prensa Archive Photo, circa
1991.
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