Jim Murray, March 28, 1961

  March 28, 1961, Lakers  

  March 28, 1961, Jim Murray  

March 28, 1961:  Here’s a lesson from the great Jim Murray in how to take down a major sports figure (Sonny Liston) with style and class:
 
The big point about Sonny is that he got in trouble with the law a second time while he was still on parole from prison. An armed St. Louis cop accosted him one night and Sonny not only disarmed him, he broke his leg in the process.

But, the story goes, it was the cop who asked for it, went out of his way to make trouble for Sonny and called him names. All I can say is, if you ever got a good look at Sonny Liston, you would have to conclude this cop is one of the all-time brave me.

To pick an argument with Sonny Liston on a St. Louis street corner at night with anything less than a Gatling gun is a new form of suicide. Sonny even had a friend — and two girls — with him. The cop is lucky he only lost a leg. In fact, I'm glad Sonny can't read this.

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From the Vaults — ‘Vamonos Con Pancho Villa!’

 

 

“Vamonos Con Pancho Villa!” (“Let’s Go With Pancho Villa!”) is the surprisingly dark, roughly hewn story of six friends who call themselves “the lions of San Pablo” and join the Mexican Revolution as much for the adventure as the idealism. “Vamonos” is a study in the progression from loyalty to blind obedience and from courage to being tragically foolhardy.

Vamonos Con Pancho Villa The 1936 Mexican film was directed by Fernando de Fuentes from a novel by Rafael F. Muñoz and portrays Villa as a ruthless, cold-blooded killer who nonetheless is adored by his thousands of rag-tag troops. “Vamonos” is a bleak film of increasingly senseless violence and the alternative ending included on the DVD raises the bloodshed to the impossibly surreal.

(At right, writer Rafael F. Muñoz plays Martín Espinosa, who is shot to death while lighting bombs and throwing them at a fort.)

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Posted in 1936, classical music, Film, From the Vaults, Music | 1 Comment

What’s Troubling Today’s Young Women, Part 3

 

  March 28, 1961  

 

  image  

March 28, 1961: A group of young women asked USC sociology professor James A. Peterson to have lunch with them while he was lecturing on a local campus.

"We are all graduating at the end of this semester and none of us is engaged or even pinned,” they said. “We know we will never get married now and we want your advice to help us adjust to a life of being single."

At first, he thought they were kidding, but "they were dead serious,” he said.

Emphasizing the confusion facing young women, Peterson said: "Are they supposed to be career women, competing with men, clawing their way to the top in business? Or are they just supposed to be available when needed?"

ALSO

What’s Troubling Today’s Young Women, Part 1

What’s Troubling Today’s Young Women, Part 2

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Matt Weinstock, March 27, 1961

  March 27, 1961, Comics  

March 27, 1961: Matt Weinstock has a story about a penniless drunk who gets a bottle from a liquor store in the era when credit cards were a novelty. 
 
DEAR ABBY: I am married to a man who has a very ugly temper. The first time he hit me we had been married only three weeks and I was four months pregnant at the time.

His father used to beat his mother up so bad she would land in the hospital. He has a brother who slaps his wife around too. Is this a sickness that runs in their family? I never thought I could put up with the beatings I have taken (and over absolutely nothing). I don't want to raise our three children in a fatherless home, but what is a wife supposed to do when she is afraid to open her mouth for fear she'll get her teeth knocked out?

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Paul Coates, March 27, 1961

  March 27, 1961, Mirror Cover  

March 27, 1961: Paul Coates has the story of two students who went on vacation to Mexico and came back with a 12-year-old orphan. 
 
And Mirror reader Jerry Feldner sends a letter about the artistry of bullfighting.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, March 27, 1941

  March 27, 1941, Yugoslav Anti-Nazi Riots Spread  

  March 27, 1941, Comics  

March 27, 1941: I'm delighted to see that four speakers at a Japanese meeting here declared the Japanese people to be loyal to America. The Rev. Kengo Tajina declared that his son, though born in Japan, was "120 percent American" because this country had given him education, privileges and opportunity, Lee Shippey says.

Tom Treanor, who died covering World War II for The Times, writes about the concentration camps in Free France and the challenges that an aid group has in getting help for refugees.

"The job is all the more difficult because everybody has had just about enough of refugee and concentration camp problems. People shrink from them now. Or are we misjudging you?"

Vic Mature was robbed twice in a week in New York, losing the ruby and gold cufflinks Lana gave him, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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Jim Murray, March 27, 1961

 
 

  March 27, 1961, Angels  

  March 27, 1961, Jim Murray  

March 27, 1961: Philip Toll Hill Jr., the Santa Monican who won the Sebring sports car endurance race over the weekend for the third time, is a bachelor and a wiry, nervous, cold intellectual type who reads 10-pound books and plays the kind of music on his stereo set that even Stravinsky never heard of, Jim Murray says.

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What’s Troubling Today’s Young Women, Part 2

 
 

  image  

  March 27, 1961, Comics  

March 27, 1961: Parts of this series on young women are patronizing and naive, and perhaps reflect the first tremors of what was called the Generation Gap. Some of the attitudes about college being a marriage factory for young women are fairly musty – although certainly true in the 1940s and ’50s.

"She wants to go to college because it will make her a more interesting person and enable her to keep up with her husband — a college-educated husband, of course."

Still I wonder if the daughters of some of these women have any better idea of where they are headed:

One mother, whose daughter begins college next year, said: "They look and act so grown up in so many ways and yet they don't really know what they want to do. And you know, it's sometimes very difficult to help and advise them. You look and think, now what did mother do in similar circumstances? And then you realize those problems never existed in mother's time.”

And a young woman says: "I hate being called a teenager. It's a horrible, nasty, talking down to you word. If only my mother would listen to me sometimes when I want to talk about something instead of saying 'yes dear, no dear.' "

 

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Posted in 1961, Education, Jack Smith | Comments Off on What’s Troubling Today’s Young Women, Part 2

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

bullocks_collegienne_sundress_ebay bullocks_collegienne_sundress_ebay_label

This sun dress from the Collegienne department at Bullock’s Wilshire has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $8, but there is a reserve.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, March 26, 1941

 
 

  March 26, 1941, Yugoslavs Riot Against Axis Pact  

  March 26, 1941, Comics  

March 26, 1941: Tom Treanor wonders why women in defense plants are only being given office jobs, and he expects that to change before the year is out.

Titles of Robert Montgomery's next two pictures are worth a chuckle: "Unfinished Business" and "Heaven Can Wait," Jimmie Fidler says.

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Geraldine A. Ferraro, 1935 — 2011; ‘Housewife From Queens’ Made Political History

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  July 13, 1984, Geraldine Ferraro  

July 13, 1984– The Times’ Karen Tumulty profiles the Democratic vice presidential candidate: “Geraldine A. Ferraro likes to refer to herself as ‘a housewife from Queens,’ the conservative, blue-collar borough of New York where the television show "All in the Family was set." But if it's Archie Bunker's district that she represents in Congress, her supporters say, it was the big-hearted Edith Bunkers of her district who elected her."

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Posted in 1984, Obituaries, Politics | 1 Comment

What’s Troubling Today’s Young Women?

  March 26, 1961, Women  

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March 26, 1961: The Times begins a series on the views and expectations of high school and college women. Is it enough to go to college, nab a husband and start a family? Are they really considering going into the workforce and competing with … men? I especially like the teaser for Part 2: What these rather angry young women believe.

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Jim Murray, March 26, 1961

  March 26, 1961, Jim Murray  

March 26, 1961: Jim Murray gets letters from Groucho Marx and Hedda Hopper and he hasn’t been so nervous since the days he faced questions like “What is Marlon Brando really like?”

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What If a Thermonuclear Blast Hit the Valley?

 
 

  March 26, 1961, Valley Blast  

  March 26, 1961, Valley Blast  

March 26, 1961: So, if a nuclear blast from the Soviets (who else?) hit the San Fernando Valley, it would be bad. How bad?

"The Valley would not survive a direct hit," The Times said. 

"A thermonuclear blast in the Valley would be like a giant firecracker going off in a teacup," says Clifford R. Standing, Valley Civil Defense coordinator. "We'd all be part of the fallout and all our plans would be useless."

Some of the predictions:

Every woman five months or more pregnant would have miscarried in the shock and turmoil of the attack.

There would be "wild and panicky mobs and cool and calculating looters."

Bodies of victims would have to be collected and buried or burned.

Standing’s advice: "Families should begin now to construct shelters with walls and ceilings at least 3 feet thick and adequately stocked for a long siege."

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Found on EBay — Bullock’s Collegienne

Bullock's Westwood Bullocks Collegienne
This top from the Collegienne department at Bullock’s Westwood has been listed on EBay. Although Bullocks and Collegienne items are somewhat common on EBay, I don’t recall ever seeing anything from the Westwood store. Bidding starts at $14.99.
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March 25, 2011: Triangle Shirtwaist Fire Centennial

March 25, 2011: Memorial to victims of the Triangle Shirtwaist FireMarch 25, 2011: Site of the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire / Photograph by Eve Golden

Note: Daily Mirror reader Eve Golden went to Friday’s memorial for the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire victims and sends these photos. Continue reading

Posted in 1911, Fires, New York, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Paul Coates and Matt Weinstock, March 25, 1961

 

 
 

  March 25, 1961, Comics  

 

March 25, 1961: There was a prisoner who had a wooden leg, but that was only the beginning of his problems, Matt Weinstock says.

One of Paul Coates’ readers has some urgent information for Red Skelton about his lottery ticket!

DEAR ABBY: Where we live, it is the custom for parents to give their children $5 for every A and $2 for every B on their report cards. I am 13 and got two A's and four Bs and I didn't get anything. Do you think that is fair?

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, March 25, 1941

 
 

  March 25, 1941, Reds Pledge Aid to Turkey  

  March 25, 1941, Comics  

March 25, 1941: Tom Treanor has another column on Jan Valtin’s “Out of the Night,” which I have begun reading, thanks to the Los Angeles Public Library, and I must say that so far the book is much better than I expected. In fact it’s remarkably good. As Richard Krebs (Valtin was a pen name), the author was quite a figure in San Quentin, where he worked on the prison newspaper after being convicted of a 1926 assault. He was paroled in 1929 and pardoned in 1941.  

It took Robert Rossen three times as long (six months) to script "The Sea Wolf" as it took Jack London to write the novel, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Posted in 1941, art and artists, books, Columnists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Lee Shippey, Tom Treanor, Zombie Reading List | Comments Off on Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, March 25, 1941

The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

  Triangle Shirtwaist Co.  
  An undated photo of Triangle Shirtwaist Co. employees courtesy of HBO.  

  March 26, 1911, Triangle Shirtwaist Fire  

March 26, 1911: “A 13-year-old girl hung for three minutes by her fingertips to the sill of a 10th-floor window. A tongue of flame licked at her fingers and she dropped into a life net held by firemen. Two women fell into the net at almost the same moment. The strands parted and the two were added to the death list.

“A girl threw her pocketbook, then her hat, then her furs from a 10th-floor window. A moment later her body came whirling after them to death."

ALSO

Last Survivor of 1911 Sweatshop Fire Dies

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Posted in 1911, Fire Department, Obituaries | 4 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

  March 21, 2011, Mystery Photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Here’s this week’s mystery lady! Nobody identified our weekend mystery guest so I’m going to have to figure out how to proceed. Maybe I can find some more photos of her that will offer additional clews.
 
There’s a new photo on the jump!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | 36 Comments