Category Archives: Comics

November 21, 1959: Matt Weinstock, Nov. 21, 1959

November 21, 1959: Matt Weinstock has the story of a man who keeps getting tickets for not having a front plate on his French Panhard. The problem is there’s no place for a license plate. Continue reading

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November 20, 1959: Matt Weinstock

November 20, 1959: Matt Weinstock looks over L.A. football, college and pro, and says: It could be that the Dodgers did L.A. a disservice in their magnificent drive for the pennant and their World Series victory.  Every team here is now expected to be not only victorious but also spectacular.  Continue reading

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November 19, 1959: Matt Weinstock

November 19, 1959: Matt Weinstock writes about a “Pyramidologist” who says his study of the Great Pyramid shows that the day will bring something ominous — and that the Earth will end Jan. 28, 2001. Continue reading

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November 19, 1941: Hollywood Model Dies of Botched Abortion

November 19, 1941: Angelka Rose Gogich was 18 when she died at Glendale Emergency Hospital after undergoing an abortion. She had be working as a model, hat check girl and dancer under the name Rose Ann Rae. Continue reading

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November 18, 1941: Private Detective Held in ‘Love’ Killing

November 18, 1941: Private detective Edwin Crumplar is charged in ‘love slaying’ of Irene Wilder, who died of an infection after Crumplar shot her in the stomach. Jimmie Fidler says Alan Ladd’s romance with Sally Wadsworth won’t please Paramount. Continue reading

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November 17, 1959: Matt Weinstock

November 17, 1959: In a school project, a boy plants radishes in a circle rather than rows. Why? That’s how you get them at the market, he says. Now a commercial grower is trying the method to ease stoop labor, Matt Weinstock says. Continue reading

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November 17, 1941: Women Reporters

November 17, 1941: Reporter Mary Shaw Leader is posthumously honored for covering Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. Leader walked 15 miles to cover Lincoln’s speech. Continue reading

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November 16, 1959: Matt Weinstock

November 16, 1959: A new teacher’s night out to celebrate a career change has an unusual twist, Matt Weinstock writes. Continue reading

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November 15, 1943: Riot at Tule Lake Internment Camp?

November 15, 1943: Something appears to be going on at the Tule Lake internment camp, but it’s unclear from contemporary coverage exactly what it was. Continue reading

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November 13, 1959: Matt Weinstock

November 13, 1959: As the city suffers under a heavy layer of smog, the copy desk wonders if L.A. will be abandoned by 1975, Matt Weinstock says. Continue reading

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November 13, 1941: U.S. Prepares to Round Up Japanese in Event of War

November 13, 1941: Atty. Gen. Francis Biddle “confirms reports that the government has plans for the segregation of Nipponese alien groups for a ‘temporary period’ if relations between the U.S. and Japan are broken off.” Continue reading

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November 12, 1959: Matt Weinstock

November 12, 1958: It has become a kind of game for the young men who pilot the jungle boats at Disneyland to invent bright new lines for their spiels during the voyage, Matt Weinstock says. Continue reading

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November 12, 1941: Crowds Line Broadway for Armistice Day Parade

November 12, 1941: Crowds line Broadway in downtown Los Angeles for the annual Armistice Day parade, which marked the end of what used to be called the Great War or the World War – until we had another one. Continue reading

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November 7, 1947: Santa Makes Second Appearance in Downtown L.A.

November 7, 1947: Santa Claus makes his *second* visit to downtown Los Angeles. Continue reading

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November 6, 1947: LAPD Officer Kills Black Suspect in Market Burglary

November 6, 1947: Clarence Wallas is shot during a struggle with Officer J.L. Brown during an attempted arrest in the burglary of a market. Officer R.F. Williams captures Roosevelt Everline, as he tried to flee. Continue reading

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November 5, 1959: Matt Weinstock

November 5, 1959: Los Angeles residents are hit by a large increase in property taxes and Matt Weinstock has the story. Continue reading

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Nov. 4, 1947: East L.A. Junior College Observes ‘Women’s Week’; Jokes Ensue

November 4, 1947: In a possible riff on Sadie Hawkins Day, the co-eds of East Los Angeles Junior College observe Women’s Week, devoted to frustrating the male students, at least according to The Times. And in the “Kinder, Gentler Time Dept.” Women’s Week ends with “slave day.” Continue reading

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November 3, 1941: Wingy Manone Puts the Swing in Swing Shift

November 3, 1941: Tom Treanor goes to a dance at the Glendale Civic Auditorium for swing shift workers, about 5,000 of them, from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. on a Saturday morning. Most of the couples are married, he says, and the wives are 18 or 19. Continue reading

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October 29, 1959: Matt Weinstock

October 29, 1959: An admirer goes all-out wishing Beverly a happy birthday, Matt Weinstock says. Continue reading

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October 27, 1907: On the Comics Page

October 27, 1907: Buster Brown was a popular feature of the Sunday comics. Like other cartoon characters of the era, Buster was fond of pulling pranks, but he usually learned his lesson the hard way and ended each strip with a long block of text titled: RESOLVED. Continue reading

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