Author Archives: lmharnisch

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About lmharnisch

I am retired from the Los Angeles Times

September 4, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 4, 1959: Paul Coates has the story of Lily Goldberg, who refused to believe that her son Gerald was guilty of writing bad checks, despite witnesses’ identification and testimony by a handwriting expert.
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September 4, 1947: Red Influences in Hollywood!

September 4, 1947: Hedda Hopper lists movies with Red influences: “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,” “Meet John Doe,” “The Farmer’s Daughter” and “A Song to Remember.” “What recent picture can you recall in which a member of Congress has been presented as an honorable, intelligent, patriotic public servant? In what picture has an industrialist been shown as a straightforward, decent human being?” she asks. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Life Magazine, September 4, 1944

September 4, 1944: Life magazine’s cover story is on Secretary of State Cordell Hull in a portrait by Karsh. Alfred Eisenstaedt celebrates 15 years as a photojournalist, and a photographer snaps photos at Hollywood and Vine. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 4, 1944

September 4, 1944: “Mildred Pierce” is shelved until Jack Warner is satisfied with the script, which means Joan Crawford is out of a picture, so she is taking a trip to New York, Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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September 4, 1933: Man Kills Wife and Daughter, Commits Suicide Over Pink Bedroom

September 4, 1933: A man fatally stabs his estranged wife and daughter, then slits his throat after an argument because his wife had the bedroom painted pink. Continue reading

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September 4, 1781: Los Angeles Is Founded

September 4, 1781: Los Angeles is founded. A look at various chronicles of its birth. Continue reading

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September 3, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 3, 1959: Former Gov. Goodwin Knight is reinventing himself as a TV commentator, Paul Coates says. A letter writer tells Dear Abby that their trash can is loaded with empty beer cans every morning because of a neighbor who knocks back a case every night and doesn’t want the garbage man to know.
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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 3, 1944

September 3, 1944: Phil Terry, the tall bespectacled young man whose career took a terrific nose dive just before and after his marriage to Joan Crawford, is on the beam again, Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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September 3, 1943: Los Angeles Tattoo Shops

September 2, 1943: One of my favorite finds from the city archives — a visit to Los Angeles’ tattoo shops. Continue reading

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September 3, 1941: Widow Accused of Killing Ft. MacArthur Officer

September 3, 1941: Maj. George Tucker of Ft. MacArthur, stabbed several times in the abdomen, says the knife slipped. His widow (yes, the wounds were fatal) says they had been drinking heavily and she didn’t remember exactly what happened. Continue reading

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September 3, 1907: A Oration for Labor Day

September 3, 1907: The Times criticizes Hearst papers “for their persistent efforts to teach the working people of America that they are the slaves of the ‘predatory rich’; that every corporation is a conspiracy to rob; that all capitalists are brainless brutes; that the government of the United States is a corrupt glutocracy.” Continue reading

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September 2, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 2, 1959: E.A. Gillmann provides song to the forlorn mob of Pershing Square, hauling a piano and Gospel songbooks in a 1941 Chrysler and, with help, wheeling the piano into the square, Paul Coates says. Continue reading

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Black Dahlia: Ask Me Anything, September 2025

This month’s Ask Me Anything on the Black Dahlia case, including a progress report on Heaven Is HERE! and look at the “Black Dahlia” edition of “Clue” based on the infamous list of 22 suspects. Continue reading

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September 2, 1947: Miss Muscle Beach of 1947

September 2, 1947: Vivian Crockett is chosen as Miss Muscle Beach of 1947 in the annual Labor Day contest in Santa Monica. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 2, 1944

September 2, 1944: Michael Todd has discovered an unpublished score by Victor Herbert and signed Jeannette MacDonald to star in the operetta, Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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September 2, 1910: Police Quell Labor Riot Over Body of Ironworker Killed at Alexandria Hotel

September 2, 1910: Louis Jeffries, a Baker Iron Works employee, is crushed by a steel girder during construction of the Alexandra Hotel Annex. Workers carrying his body to an ambulance on Spring Street are assaulted by union supporters who are picketing the building. Continue reading

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September 1, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 1, 1959: Paul Coates tells the story of Jean Elizabeth Wood, 26, an attractive young woman wearing a black party dress who stood in the middle of a darkened desert highway and refused to move out of the way of an oncoming truck. Continue reading

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September 1, 1949: L.A. Warned on Water

September 1, 1949: I thought it would be fun to dip into the Mirror from its early days as a tabloid. At that time, Paul Coates was covering nightclubs. Continue reading

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September 1, 1947: 1,000 World War II Veterans Now in LAPD Uniforms

September 1, 1947: More than 1,000 new LAPD officers are World War II veterans. “We’re going to have a young and strong Police Department,” Assistant Chief Joe Reed says. Continue reading

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Schaber’s Cafeteria and Einar Petersen

Mary Mallory profiles Schaber’s Cafeteria in downtown Los Angeles, which featured murals by Einar Petersen. An encore post from 2012. Continue reading

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