Monthly Archives: April 2010

Dodgers Open With 11th Inning Win Over Cubs, 3-2

April 13, 1960: The Dodgers opened the season with another record crowd at the Coliseum, with 67,550 fans watching a 3-2 victory over the Cubs. Chuck Essegian's home run made the difference and Don Drysdale stuck out 14 as the … Continue reading

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Giants Open Candlestick Park With Win

    April 13, 1960: Candlestick Park opened in San Francisco and The Times' Al Wolf described the stadium as "magnificent." Candlestick Park?

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Union Officer Recalls Lowering U.S. Flag at Ft. Sumter

April 13, 1910: The Times marks the [Update: 49th — I think a 100-year-old correction is some sort of record] 50th anniversary of the firing on Ft. Sumter by interviewing an officer who was there, Lt. Col. W.H. Hamner, a … Continue reading

Posted in @news, Obituaries | 1 Comment

Matt Weinstock, April 12, 1960

  An Escape to Nature       There's this hideaway up near Lake Hughes and Sunday, responding to an urge to get away from mundane affairs, a group of weekend pioneers, equipped with enough picnic lunch for twice their number, … Continue reading

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, April 12, 1960

Barbara Stanwyck’s Son Thinks It Over Hollywood kids have a habit of making headlines the hard way. Some — like Barbara Burns, Eddie Robinson Jr. and Cheryl Crane — started precociously in their teens. Others — Dennis Crosby and Diana … Continue reading

Posted in #courts, Columnists, Front Pages, Paul Coates | 3 Comments

Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, April 12, 1940

June Storey in “Rancho Grande” with Gene Autry. April 12, 1940: Seen in profile, W.C. Fields' expression is touchingly nose-talgic, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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A Second Look at Reagan’s Campaign Claims

April 12, 1980: “It is often said of Reagan that he never met a statistic or an anecdote he didn't like if it helped him illustrate the evils of big government,” according to The Times’ Bill Stall and William Endicott.   … Continue reading

Posted in Politics | 1 Comment

Otis Chandler Named Publisher of The Times

  Photograph by Frank Q. Brown / Los Angeles Times  Norman Chandler, left, during the luncheon to announce that his son, Otis, was the new publisher of The Times. April 12, 1960: Otis Chandler is named publisher of the Los … Continue reading

Posted in @news, Photography | 2 Comments

Mule Driver Doesn’t Swear – Even When Kicked in the Head

  April 12, 1910: The geometry of the eternal triangle is particularly complicated in the case of David Perry Doak, who kept a home in Los Angeles with  Jessie May Doak – and a ranch at Klamath Falls, Ore., with … Continue reading

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Matt Weinstock, April 11, 1960

“ ‘Library Fever’ Is Similar to Other Mental Disturbances.”   Pay-as-You-Breathe Plan       Everyone, it seems, wants to help the beleaguered councilmen find a way to raise desperately needed revenue.  And it is a heartening thing indeed to witness the … Continue reading

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, April 11, 1960

  Patty Gardenseed Walks the World       John Chapman . . . born 1773 . . . in Pennsylvania . . . a pioneer . . . also known as Johnny Appleseed . . . he devoted his life … Continue reading

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Jimmie Fidler, April 11, 1940

  “Weird experiments of a mad scientist.” Are there any other kind?  April 11, 1940: Ode to mayhem: "And now, Miss Velez, DO try to act like a lady!"

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Pacific Ocean Park

  April 11, 1960: Happy Easter from Pacific Ocean Park (1958-1975). Adult admission is $10.75, USD 2009. On the jump, African Americans across the South begin an Easter week boycott of stores with segregation policies.

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Emergency Medical Training for Police, Firefighters

  April 11, 1910: Dr. Charles Zerfing, the police surgeon, wants police officers and firefighters to be trained in “first aid to the injured.” Zerfing also wants an automobile ambulance equipped with emergency supplies, The Times says. Zerfing’s actions come … Continue reading

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, April 10, 1940

  April 10, 1940: How come Metro finds such difficulty in fitting Hedy Lamarr with a story? The biography of Lola Montez has never been screened.

Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood | 2 Comments

John Paul Stevens, a Cautious Jurist, Named to Supreme Court

  Dec. 19, 1975: President Gerald Ford chats with Supreme Court Justice Warren Burger, center, after John Paul Stevens, right, was sworn in as the court’s newest member.  Dec. 20, 1975: The Times’ Linda Mathews covers Senate confirmation hearings on … Continue reading

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Two U.S. Hostages Go On Iranian TV as ‘Confessed Spies’

    April 10, 1980: One of two unidentified hostages shown on Iranian TV gives a tour of a warehouse apparently used for intelligence by the NSA and CIA. On the jump, do doctors spend more time with male or … Continue reading

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L.A. Mayor Drives Electric Car

   Mayor Alexander’s electric car! April 10, 1910: Mayor George Alexander says he’ll still be chauffeured on his official duties but is learning how to drive an electric Waverly phaeton for personal use. The 70-year-old mayor of Los Angeles says, … Continue reading

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Matt Weinstock, April 9, 1960

Bed Burners Beware     Too often there are stories in the papers about persons who are badly, even fatally burned by falling asleep with a lighted cigarette.  Well, something has been done about them.     An amendment to the fire … Continue reading

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, April 9, 1960

Mash Notes and Comment       (Newsletter) "VAGABONDING WITH VANDERBILT, by Cornelius Vanderbilt . . .     "I WRITE AS I PLEASE . . .       "People are always writing me and asking why I don't write 'exactly' what … Continue reading

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