Bangladesh News

Friday
Jan 09th
Home arrow Features arrow Sneaking Into History
Sneaking Into History PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 06 June 2008

By RICHARD VALLES

It was spring 1968. I was a teenager and had just gotten my driver’s license when I decided to take my parents’ Chevy Impala from Paramount, the suburb where we lived, into downtown Los Angeles.

I had heard that Robert F. Kennedy would be giving a speech on Olvera Street, near Union Station, and I wanted to shake his hand.

I approached the street, pulled over and parked. I grabbed my Honeywell Pentax and followed the crowds. I climbed onto the bandstand that would serve as the platform for Senator Kennedy’s speech.

Guards were shooing away anyone without a press pass, but I dodged them and lay on my stomach behind the bass player of a mariachi band.

Sweltering, I waited two hours for the senator to arrive. Although I never got that handshake, I did manage to preserve a moment in history.

Richard Valles is a photographer.

Comments Add New
Write comment
Name:
Email:
  We don't publish your mail. See privacy policy.
Title:
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.
 
< Prev   Next >