Necklace Stolen From Titanic Exhibit

image

Writing in the New York Times, Roberta Smith pleads for the preservation of the American Folk Art Museum.

Two posts in Lens, the New York Times’ photography blog, are worthwhile reading. The first is a question and answer with Pete Brook about prison photography projects.

Q. But then why is it important? If it’s not going to change anything, why devote so much time to prison photography?

A. Well, a lot of people don’t want to talk about prisons. There’s no incentive for anyone in society to look at prisons for the failure that they are. Politicians don’t win if they appear to be soft on crime. And then you have the media, which is after ratings. It wins by stoking up emotions. With ‘American Idol,’ it’s making people sentimental. With politics, it’s making people divided and angry. And with crime, it’s making people afraid.

The second is a feature on photographer Lori Grinker’s exploration of the branches of her family, Jewish refugees who were scattered from Lithuania.

For Ms. Grinker, the project has become more than a personal journey. “You don’t have to be a Grinker to want to understand how a family gets broken up and becomes other,” she said. “Whether you are Iraqi refugees, Jewish, Asian or African, it’s about putting together the pieces of the puzzle. It’s about the experience of diaspora.”

A gold-plated necklace on display with artifacts recovered from the Titanic has been stolen. Associated Press via Washington Post.

The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat curated to the most exacting standards by the bots at paper.li.

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‘Zoot Suit’ and History – Part 9

April 1, 1942, Bernstein

Image: Isadore Bernstein’s name appears on a list of  undesirables.  Credit: The National Archives at Riverside.


To recap briefly, I have been digging into the historical basis of the movie “Zoot Suit,” which I saw this summer in the Last Remaining Seats series.  The Times ignored the 1943 Zoot Suit Riots for several days, in what must be one of the worst news decisions the editors ever made, so I was forced to dig  into the government records at the National Archives in Riverside for further information.

The problem of subversives is one of the recurring themes in the reports on the 11th Naval District, which included the Los Angeles area. This figures into the Navy’s analysis of the Zoot Suit Riots, alleging that various communists and sympathizers (author Carey McWilliams, newspaper publisher Charlotta Bass and ACLU attorney A.L. Wirin among them) are trying exploit the incidents to further their presumed agendas.

On the jump, more about the Navy’s program to root out subversives, from documents found at the National Archives in Riverside. Notice that in the case of Helmuth Mundkowski, even though his Americanism was unquestioned, his father’s activities were enough for him to be dismissed from a secret Navy project.

“Zoot Suit” and History, Part 1| Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8

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Clifton’s Closing for $3-Million Renovation [Updated]

Clifton's Brookdale

Photo: Clifton’s Brookdale Cafeteria.


My Los Angeles Times colleague Roger Vincent reports that Clifton’s Brookdale cafeteria is closing Sept. 26 for an extended renovation. [If you haven’t read Mary Mallory’s post on Einar Petersen’s murals at Clifton’s and elsewhere downtown, check it out.]

Vincent says that Andrew Meieran plans to remove the metal facade that was installed in the 1960s as part of the attempts to modernize the historic buildings on Broadway. The kitchen will be new, the menu will be similar and the dining room will be unchanged, Vincent says. Plans call for a tiki-themed bar in the basement and a third-floor speakeasy. [The password is swordfish!]

While the cafeteria is closed for the $3-million renovation, expected to take three to six months, a bakery headed by Holden Burkons will open in the front.

[Update: Mary Mallory notes that on the third level of Clifton’s is a historic exhibit, which showcases the only known plan and furniture by Einar Petersen. ]

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Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

hearse_cadillac_02

Photo: 1962 Cadillac hearse listed for sale on Craigslist at $30,000.


Queen of the Dead – dateline September 19, 2011

•  The 108-year-old Steuben Glass company has announced they are closing shop—specifically, their Corning, NY, factory, and their 1950s-chic Madison Avenue shop. Steuben, of course, is responsible for all those paperweights, bowls and other tchotchkes world leaders give one another, and those wedding/bar mitzvah/christening gifts you find in your great-aunt’s apartment after she dies and wonder what you are going to do with. “This is one of America’s oldest handicrafts consumer goods. It’s world famous,” says businessman Leonard Stern. “It would be like France hearing that Baccarat was closing down.” And it is certainly not going to be easy for glass-blowers to find new jobs.

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Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated +]

Sept. 18, 2011, Mystery Photo

[Update: This is Anne Heywood.]

Here’s another mystery photo, courtesy of Steven Bibb!

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Shofar Flash Mob!

Greek Vase
Photo: The Volute Krater, which is being  returned to Italy. Credit: Minneapolis Institute of Arts


Adam Nagourney of the New York Times explores the different philosophies of treating history at the Reagan and Nixon presidential libraries.

But another exhibition that just opened at yet another presidential museum not far away — the Watergate installation at the Nixon Presidential Library and Museum in Yorba Linda — has offered a stark challenge to the Reagan tribute here, exposing both the different ways that these two museums have chosen to remember their subjects and the different positions that the two former presidents hold in the nation’s and the Republican Party’s memory.

Mark Gonzales of the Chicago Tribune reports on White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen taking his oldest son, Ozzie Jr., to the Negro Baseball Leagues Museum.

“I think being here in Kansas City, everyone should take a look at it, especially Latino and African-American players. To go look at it, all the stuff we went through and we come from different countries and play this game, to making a lot of money. Besides that, it will help baseball.”

The Los Angeles Public Library’s photo collection has a feature on the “Shades of L.A.” project, an effort to explore the city’s ethnic communities. The project also included oral history interviews with people such as African American attorney Walter Gordon Jr.

The Minneapolis Institute of Arts is returning a stolen Greek vase to Italian authorities. The vase was traced through a photo to art dealer Giacomo Medici, who was convicted of dealing in looted art. Mike Boehm in the L.A. Times Culture Monster.

The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat carefully curated to the most exacting standards by the bots at paper.li.

A shofar flash mob on Sunday in New York:   Triangle Square on Broadway and 66th street across the street from Lincoln Center 2:30pm; JCC in Manhattan (334 Amsterdam Avenue @76th Street) on the street 3:30pm

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Daily Mirror Road Trip: Wavecrest 2011 [Updated]

Wavecrest 2011

Photo: Model A woodie. Credit: Larry Harnisch/LADailyMirror.com


I haven’t been to Wavecrest, the annual gathering of woodies at Moonlight Beach, in more than a decade, so I drove down Saturday. Here’s what I saw:

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Mystery Photo

Random Shot

Photograph by Larry Harnisch/L.A. Daily Mirror


So … where was I when I took this?

Posted in Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Found on EBay – New Rosslyn Hotels

Rosslyn Hotel

Rosslyn Hotel

Photo: The Rosslyn Hotels at 5th and Main via Google street view.

A luggage sticker for the Rosslyn Hotels on Main has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $4.99.

Posted in Architecture, Downtown, Found on EBay | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated ++]

Sept. 16, 2011, Mystery Photo
Sept. 16, 2011, Mystery Photo

[Update: Here’s a closer look]
[Update 2: This is Kay Winter in 1940. If she looks familiar it’s because she changed her name to Dorothy Comingore.]

Here’s another mystery photo from Steven Bibb!

There’s a new photo on the jump!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , | 10 Comments

John Wayne Gacy Victim May Be Exhumed

Last Crown Vic

Photo: The last Crown Vic rolls off the Ford assembly line.


Leslie Luebbers,the director of the Art Museum at the University of Memphis and head of the Paul Revere William Project will give a lecture on the famed African American architect on Feb. 22 at 10:30 a.m. at the Hilton Hotel in Palm Springs. Tickets are $10. The lecture is part of Modernism Week, Feb. 16 – 26.

Sherry Marino, a Chicago-area woman whose son Michael was supposedly one of John Wayne Gacy’s victims, is asking for the  remains to be tested because she suspects the body was misidentified. Erin Meyer in the Chicago Tribune.

John Bishop is a man on a mission — saving pipe organs. Jennifer Levitz in the Wall Street Journal.

Art collector G. Jan Beekhuis is withdrawing about 20 paintings from Michigan’s Holland Museum over the dismissal of the museum’s director. Associated Press via Chicago Tribune.

The last Ford Crown Victoria, favored by taxi fleets – and police departments – rolled off the assembly line. James Barron takes a look in The New York Times’ City Room blog.

The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat curated from only the finest Twitter feeds by the discriminating bots at paper.li.

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Silver Lake Hammer Murder – Part 2

Sept. 16, 1941,  Murder House
Sept. 16, 1941,  Murder House
Sept. 16, 1941: The Silver Lake Hammer Murder turned out to be far more complicated than I expected. This segment looks at the lives of victim Florence Stricker and her husband, Dr. George H. Stricker, up to the time of the killing.

ALSO

Silver Lake Heiress Killed

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Found on EBay – Los Angeles Examiner

Aug. 1, 1936, Examiner Aug. 1, 1936, Times

The Aug. 1, 1936, edition of the Los Angeles Examiner has been listed on EBay. I thought it would be illuminating to compare it to the cover of The Times.  Both are eight-column pages, but The Times has crammed in far more stories, plus a three-column index in the lower left corner.  We sure  like headlines like “SHIRLEY TEMPLE DEATH PLOT!”   [The Times: “Shirley Temple Plot Traps Young Suspect.”]
Bidding on the Examiner (d. 1962) is Buy It Now for $45 or make an offer.

Posted in 1936, Film, Found on EBay, Front Pages, Hollywood | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo

Sept. 15, 2011, Mystery Photo

Aug. 1, 1937, New Faces

Here’s another mystery photo courtesy of Steven Bibb!

Update: This is Linda Perry, one of Warner Bros.’ finds from 1937. 

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Heiress Beaten to Death in Silver Lake

Sept. 15, 1941, Comics
Sept. 15, 1941, Author

2153 Moreno Drive
2153 Moreno Drive, via Google’s street view.


Sept. 15, 1941: The murder house is on one of those narrow, curving streets above Silver Lake Reservoir, 2153 Moreno Drive. Her husband came home from work and found her beaten to death in a closet. Her name was Florence A. Stricker, 42. The newspapers called her an heiress and said she was worth a fortune, although estimates ranged from $250,000 to $1 million. The whole house was ransacked and several diamond rings and a diamond Masonic pin were missing.

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Posted in 1941, Art & Artists, Cold Cases, Columnists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD, World War II | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Found on EBay – J.D. Salinger Note

J.D. Salinger

This note attributed to J.D. Salinger has been listed on EBay. As with anything on EBay, an item and vendor should be thoroughly evaluated before submitting a bid. The note is listed as Buy It Now for $50,000.

Posted in Books and Authors, Found on EBay | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Hasbro Cooking … Without a Light Bulb

Hasbro Oven

Photo: Hasbro Easy-Bake Ultimate Oven. Credit: Hasbro.


Many people have wondered what would become of Hasbro’s Easy-Bake oven with the demise of the incandescent light bulb. The answer is a complete redesign with a heating element. Associated Press via Washington Post.

Archimedes Palimpsest

Photo: A sample of the manuscript. Credit: Walters Art Museum.


The Walters Art Museum in Baltimore is preparing an exhibit titled “Lost & Found: The Secrets of Archimedes,” which will be on display from Oct. 16 to Jan. 1.

The Archimedes Palimpsest is a medieval manuscript that was copied in the 10th century and reused as a prayer book in the 13th century by scraping the pages and and rotating them 90 degrees. In 1998, the manuscript was sold at Christie’s for $2 million and since then a team of scientists has been working to recover Archimedes’ original writings.

It was in horrible condition, having suffered a thousand years of weather, travel and abuse,” said Archimedes Project Director and Walters Curator of Manuscripts and Rare Books Will Noel. “Detailed detective work and the serendipitous discovery of important documents and photographs allowed us to reconstruct what happened to the Palimpsest in the 20th century, when it was subject to appalling treatment and overpainted with forgeries. A team of devoted scholars using the latest imaging technology was able to reveal and decipher the original text.”

Walters Art Museum press release | Archimedes Palimpsest website

The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat curated from Twitter feeds by the bots at paper.li.

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Posted in Books and Authors, Crime and Courts, Food and Drink, Museums, Music, Obituaries | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Cruising Bunker Hill, 1940s

Bunker Hill film

Writing for On Bunker Hill, my crime buddy Nathan Marsak has done a breakdown of shots in a 6-minute film that turned up at archive.org. The footage was apparently filmed as background for an unidentified movie.

Let’s see if we can unravel a bit of the mystery about who shot the film.

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Posted in Architecture, Downtown, Film, Transportation | Tagged , , | 11 Comments

Found on EBay – B.H. Dyas

Dyas tenns racket
This lightly (if at all) used Wilson tennis racket from B.H. Dyas in Los Angeles has been listed on EBay. Dyas was a sporting goods store in Los Angeles, and items don’t show up terribly often. Bidding on this racket and cover starts at $9.99.

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Coming Attractions: Cheryl Crane

cheryl_crane_lana_turner_jerry_giesler_nd_crop

April 5, 1958, Cheryl Crane

Photo: Cheryl Crane and Lana Turner in court. Credit: Los Angeles Examiner collection, USC.

April 5, 1958: Cheryl Crane is held in the death of Johnny Stompanato.


Mary Mallory points out that Cheryl Crane will be discussing her new book, “The Bad Always Die Twice,” at 7 p.m. on Thursday at Vroman’s in Pasadena.

Posted in 1958, Books and Authors, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood | Tagged , , | 1 Comment