Imperial Valley Press

Armando Rodriguez, WWII vet who served 4 US presidents, dies

- BY RUSSELL CONTRERAS

Armando M. Rodriguez, a Mexican immigrant and World War II veteran who served in the administra­tions of four U.S. presidents while pressing for civil rights and education reforms, has died.

Christy Rodriguez, his daughter, said Wednesday her father died Sunday at their San Diego home from complicati­ons of a stroke. He was 97. He had been ailing from a variety of illnesses in recent years, she said.

Born in Gomez Palacio, Mexico, Rodriguez came to San Diego with his family as a 6-year-old in 1927. But he was forced to return to Mexico after his father was deported during the mass deportatio­ns of the 1930s during the Great Depression. A young Rodriguez lived in Mexico for a year before the family could return.

“He barely spoke Spanish,” Christy Rodriguez said.

After the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941, some of his Mexican immigrant friends fled to Mexico to avoid military service. Rodriguez, however, joined the U.S. Army. “It was not a difficult choice,” Rodriguez told the Voces Oral History Project at the University of Texas in August 2000.

Following the war, Rodriguez graduated from San Diego State University and worked as a teacher and joined the Mexican-American civil rights movement after witnessing his fellow Latino veterans being denied house and facing discrimina­tion.

He led Southern California’s Viva Kennedy campaign, the e ort to increase Latino voter support for John F. Kennedy’s presidenti­al run in 1960.

Rodriguez founded a chapter of the veterans’ American GI Forum civil rights group in San Diego as a junior high school teacher.

 ?? AP PHOTO/BARRY THUMMA ?? In this Nov. 30, 1978, file photo, President Jimmy Carter shakes hands with Dr. Armando Rodriguez of San Diego after he was sworn as a member of the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission at the White House in Washington.
AP PHOTO/BARRY THUMMA In this Nov. 30, 1978, file photo, President Jimmy Carter shakes hands with Dr. Armando Rodriguez of San Diego after he was sworn as a member of the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission at the White House in Washington.

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