
Here’s another mystery photo, courtesy of Steven Bibb!
[Update: This is Sonja Ziemann from the 1961 film “The Secret Ways.” ]

Here’s another mystery photo, courtesy of Steven Bibb!
[Update: This is Sonja Ziemann from the 1961 film “The Secret Ways.” ]
Image: Save a Torah website. Credit: Saveatorah.org
Perhaps you remember James Barron’s April 30, 2008, feature in the New York Times about Rabbi Menachem Youlus of Save a Torah, who traveled the world, often at great expense and tremendous risk, to rescue Torahs. It’s a powerful account on an evocative subject:
The back story of how a Torah got from the fetid barracks of Auschwitz to the ark of the Central Synagogue at Lexington Avenue and 55th Street is one the pastor of the Lutheran church down the street sums up as simply “miraculous.”
It is the story of a sexton in the synagogue in the Polish city of Oswiecim who buried most of the sacred scroll before the Germans stormed in and later renamed the city Auschwitz. It is the story of Jewish prisoners who sneaked the rest of it — four carefully chosen panels — into the concentration camp.
It is the story of a Polish Catholic priest to whom they entrusted the four panels before their deaths. It is the story of a Maryland rabbi who went looking for it with a metal detector. And it is the story of how a hunch by the rabbi’s 13-year-old son helped lead him to it.
Does it sound too good to be true? Actually, it was.
Youlus, who called himself “the Jewish Indiana Jones,” was a complete fraud, according to federal prosecutors.
Questions about Youlus’ accounts were first raised by Martha Wexler and Jeff Lunden last year in the Washington Post.
The stories Youlus has told over the years resonate so powerfully because they meld this centerpiece of the Jewish religion with the cataclysm of the Holocaust, providing a reassuring sense of continuity and hope. As survivors, Youlus’s Torahs are brought out for Holocaust Remembrance Day, they’re used to teach lessons in religious schools, and for many people, such as Robert Kushner, they have become part of a deeply personal family narrative. Youlus says in a video on the Save a Torah Web site: “Every single Torah that I rescued has a story.”
The Jewish Chronicle | Barron updates the story in the New York Times | Jeff Lunden in the Washington Post | Associated Press via the Wall Street Journal |
The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat lovingly fashioned from Twitter feeds using Old World algorithms by the bots at paper.li. [Jada and Marc did NOT hook up, according to TMZ. I feel so much better now.]
Google has a bad habit of introducing a wonderful feature and then breaking it a few years later, as quietly as possible. The latest victim is Google’s online newspaper archives. Researchers may have noticed that the interface changed recently. This was not an accident.
Someone behind Google’s vast fortress of anonymity (ever try to contact a human being at Google besides “citizen” tech support?) issued a news release to Search Engine Land saying that the project was no longer accepting newspapers but would maintain an archive of what had already been digitized.
Searching this material has become clunky and difficult. The new search page is here. Researchers may also dig through the complete list of archived newspapers here.
Speculation is that the entire resource will silently disappear in a year or two as usage inevitably declines. A stunt like this is a sobering thought to anyone who has been relying on Google’s other features like Google Docs or Google Books. One flick of the switch and the cloud could be gone.
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This rather amazing cape with hood and feather boa from Bullock’s Wilshire has been listed on EBay. The vendor says she bought this about 1979. Bidding starts at $75.

Photo: Deep Thought (OK, not really) in the Living Computer Museum. Credit: Dionne Searcey/Wall Street Journal.
Dionne Searcey of the Wall Street Journal writes about the Living Computer Museum established by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen.
And of course, the computers — with less power than your average cellphone – are put to good use:
Museum workers are hoping others will be as interested in the obsolete gear as Mr. Allen. It already has attracted a following by putting some of the old servers online so technology aficionados can play old-school, largely text-based games like Zork—or otherwise access the computer dinosaurs—just for fun. Students and computer junkies stop by to view the collection by appointment.
To play Zork online telnet zorkonline.org. The user and password are zorkonline. Young persons with Windows-based machines: Click Start, go to Run and type in telnet zorkonline.org. Young persons with Macs: Go to the command prompt in Terminal and do the same thing. Young persons with Linux: You already know what I’m talking about.
The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat selected by Old World algorithms by the bots at paper.li.
Image: Listening to the radio, Oct. 28, 1945.
This is Part 6 of James Curtis’ 1975 interview with Dick Lane. In this segment, Lane discusses Jack Benny, roller derby, professional wrestling and Gorgeous George.
James Curtis’ interview with Dick Lane Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5

Photo: “CSI:NY” Sign on Spring Street. Credit: Photograph by Larry Harnisch/L.A. Daily Mirror.
“industry veterans have said that the days of shooting quintessential New York shows (like “Seinfeld” and “Friends”) in California are numbered.”
—New York Times, July 21, 2011
The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat sculpted from Twitter feeds to the most exacting specifications by the bots at paper.li. The bots that do L.A. Crime Beat seem to like TMZ’s story about Kim Kardashian porn tapes. They must have been studying SEO 101.

Image: Ed Jokisch retires, Feb. 18, 1972. Retirement cartoons are an LAPD tradition. This is what they looked like in the 1970s. Credit: Ed Jokisch family.
This is Part 3 of my interview with the late Ed Jokisch. Note: Toward the end of this segment Ed and I began going through photographs. There are many long pauses, so I clipped off the last eight or 10 minutes of the interview.
Ed Jokisch interview Part 1 | Part 2
In this portion, Ed discusses Inspector Hugh Farnum, Steve Hodel’s “Black Dahlia Avenger,” abortion rings; the arrests of Dr. Eric Kirk and Timothy W. Tully in an abortion ring in September 1948;
Dan Bechtell; Charles Stoker’s “Thicker ‘n’ Thieves“; the killings of Detectives Robert Endler and Charles Monaghan by Leaman Russell Smith on Feb. 1, 1964; Adolph Alexander; Dr. Leslie Audrain; Vern Rasmussen; Chief of Detectives Thad Brown; Detective Paul Freestone; Detective Harry Fremont; Chief William H. Parker;
The 1951 Bloody Christmas police beatings; Leonard Thalberg; Police Capt. Robert Lohrman; Detective Harry Fremont killing Jimmy Greene, suspected of shooting Officer Arturo “Art” Fraide, at Georgia Street Receiving Hospital on Feb. 26, 1947;
The shotgun slaying of mob attorney Samuel Rummel on Dec. 11, 1950; the “Two Tonys” murder of Anthony Brancato and Anthony Trombino on Aug. 6, 1951;
The Oct. 12, 1949, disappearance of Mickey Cohen associate Dave “Davy” Ogul; the Oct. 7, 1949, disappearance of Jean Spangler; Jimmy “the Weasel” Fratianno; the shooting of Endler and Monaghan;
The Feb. 15, 1946, kidnapping of Rochelle Gluskoter; Detective Jesse Haskins; Chief Clemence C.B. Horrall; Lee Jones of the LAPD crime lab, Inspector James Lawrence; Los Angeles County Coroner Ben Brown; Capt. Lohrman; Detective Stewart Jones; Charles Riblett,; Detective J.W. Wass;
Detectives Marty Wynn, Vance Braser and Capt. Jack Donahoe and the Dec. 20, 1946, arrest of Erwin Walker in the killing of Highway Patrolman Loren Roosevelt; the case was the basis for “He Walked by Night,” the film that inspired “Dragnet.”


June 27, 1947: Ray Bradbury, who once sold newspapers at Olympic and Norton, publishes “Dark Carnival,” a book of short stories.

This Witzel studio photo, which the vendor says shows a child performer named Hamilton, has been listed on EBay. I cannot locate anything on a child performer by this name. Bidding starts at $9.99.

Image: Help wanted, July 27, 1941. Credit: Los Angeles Times
Joe Light in the Wall Street Journal looks at job-hunting lessons from the Great Depression.
Interviews with historians and Depression-era job seekers suggest that the formula for finding work hasn’t changed much. Then, as now, those who relentlessly work at making personal connections have better luck landing jobs.
The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat made with soft Corinthian leather by the bots at paper.li.
Photo: 2003 Cadillac hearse for sale on EBay. Bidding starts at $10,000.
Queen of the Dead – dateline August 22, 2011
• The godfather of Mondo Cinema, Gualtiero Jacopetti, died at 92 on August 17. The director of the silly, can’t-look-away shockumentary Mondo Cane (1962), he influenced everything from John Waters to all those Faces of Death videos to cable’s “Shit Blows Up” shows to one of my own favorite films, The Wild, Wild World of Jayne Mansfield. Jacopetti’s own mondo was kind of scioccante, too: in 1961 he was in a car accident that killed his girlfriend, gorgeous British actress Belinda Lee; Italian papers say he will be buried next to her.
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What appears to be an original zoot suit, with reet pleat, drape shape and stuff cuff, has been listed on EBay. According to the vendor, this suit was in the wardrobe department of a movie studio. There is no label, unfortunately.
A perfect find for our continuing series. Bidding starts at $19.99.
“Zoot Suit” and History, Part 1| Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6

Photo: The LAPD pistol team puts on a demonstration at the Auto Club headquarters in 1934. Credit: “Three Cars in Every Garage: A Motorist’s History of the Automobile and the Automobile Club of Southern California,” Page 164.
Did they really do this? Yes, they really did.

Photo: The Santa Barbara Junior League Cookbook, 1939. Credit: L.A. Daily Mirror archives.
The Culinary Historians of Southern California will hold its annual used cookbook sale on Aug. 21 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Hollywood Farmers Market, at Ivar and Selma avenues. Magazines, menus and other ephemera will also be for sale. The Daily Mirror test kitchen has been inactive for some time, but we do enjoy picking through old cookbooks when we find them and years ago we had a particular soft spot for family recipe boxes we sometimes found in thrift stores. One can discover quite a bit of history in a family’s recipes. See you there!

Photo: Edsel Ford III, left, and Edsel Ford II at the wheel of the Model 40. Credit: Edsel and Eleanor Ford House.
David Streitfeld of the New York Times reports on how authors, restaurants and hotels can buy a positive Web review for $5. I call it the cyberclaque and it’s been around for years. The claque, in case you don’t know, was people who were paid to applaud (or boo) at the Paris Opera. Hector Berlioz wrote about it in his wonderful book “Evenings With the Orchestra.”
A restored Model 40 Special Speedster owned by Edsel Ford makes its debut at the Lodge at Pebble Beach. The custom auto was built on a 1934 Ford roadster chassis and designed by E.T. Gregorie based on Edsel Ford’s concept of European sports cars. Jerry Garrett in the New York Times’ Wheels blog.
David J gives an interview about his composition inspired by the Black Dahlia case. Steve Fast on WJBC.
Japanese Americans interned at Heart Mountain Relocation Center in Wyoming hold a reunion for the opening of a museum. Esmeralda Bermudez in the Los Angeles Times.
Kevin Nance of the Washington Post visits the National Civil Rights Museum, located in the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was shot.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“We can’t be maudlin about this. I mean, yes, we are a dying breed. We are disappearing from the face of the earth and all of that. That being said, perhaps this is a moment for people to acknowledge the contribution that has been made by women religious throughout our history in the United States.”
–Sister Mary Jean, 73, who has retired as head of SSM Health Care, on the way nuns used to run Catholic hospitals. Kevin Sack in the New York Times.
The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat made from Twitter feeds with Old World craftsmanship by the bots at paper.li.

I don’t care much for lists because they’re usually nothing but “flame bait.”* The BBC is an abundant source of these dictums, such as “100 Smashing Top-Drawer Books That Everyone Who Aspires to Cultural Literacy Should Read,” which is second only to AFI’s lists of “100 Classic Films That Ignore Your Favorite Director/Writer/Actor/Script Girl” in polluting the Web.
Note: This is funniest EBay entry I have seen in years. Bidding starts at $666.
Cursed Land and/or House
Five pounds of land removed from the center of the basement of the cursed house. If the bid goes over 80k, I will throw in the deed to the place after I settle with the bloodsuckers at IRS and the loansharks, if you want it.
I have often said that the Daily Mirror is a labor of love for everyone who contributes their work. And it is. There are a few minor expenses of operating the website, books for the Daily Mirror HQ, etc. I had planned to try some Google advertising on the site, but WordPress doesn’t like javascript and keeps eating the coding. When I was making the transition to an independent blog, one devoted reader insisted on sending me a check, which was not necessary, but greatly appreciated. In that vein, donations are certainly not necessary or expected, but greatly appreciated. Click here to donate via Paypal.