Paul Coates, Nov. 21, 1960

 
 

  Nov. 21, 1960, Mirror Cover  

Nov. 21, 1960: Paul Coates writes about the “strange passivity” in the Soviet citizen.

He quotes another reporter: "There's no city in the world where I'd feel safer for my wife and kids than Moscow. They can walk anywhere, at any hour, and I know they'll be all right.

"These Russians are probably the kindest, warmest people you'll meet anywhere. Yet I know that within a half-hour their collective attitude could change violently if a voice on those loudspeakers ordered them to change."

On the jump, Howard Hughes takes an interest in Norma Jean Baker’s career in the latest chapter of Maurice Zolotow’s biography, “The Real Marilyn Monroe.”

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Posted in Columnists, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Paul Coates | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo — Updated

  Nov. 17, 2010, Mystery Photo  

Update: This is Polly Walters! Congratulations to Mike Hawks and Mary Mallory (who not only identified Polly, but even named the photographer. Very impressive!) And thanks to Eve for suggesting her!

Here’s our mystery guest. Last week’s mystery woman was Diane Baker and the weekend mystery guest was Mary Astor, late in her career. I took a closer look at a photo from “Return to Peyton Place” and found another page of her notorious diary in The Times archives!

There’s a new photo on the jump!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | 15 Comments

Death in Miami

One magazine, October 1954
In August 1954, a couple parking at a North Miami “lovers lane” found the body of a 27-year-old man in a pool of blood.  About 500 yards away, police located a 1950 convertible with blood spatters on the seat and a .22-caliber shell on the floor. Investigators traced the car to William T. Simpson, an Eastern Air Lines steward who had just returned on a flight from Detroit. One of his co-workers said Simpson was upbeat on the return to Miami because he was looking forward to a date.

One phase of the investigation began searching for leads on the murder weapon, which was identified as a Beretta. The other phase of the inquiry focused on Simpson’s friends and traced his movements through Miami night spots, determining that Simpson was gay.

In canvassing neighborhoods, detectives learned that for several months, people had noticed a young man hitchhiking on Biscayne Boulevard around 23rd or 24th Street and whenever he was picked up, the car was trailed by another man in a green Chevrolet. As the hitchhiker and the green Chevrolet appeared almost nightly, people began to suspect they were running some kind of racket.

In searching for anyone who owned a Beretta .22, police acting on a tip picked up Charles W. Lawrence, who was identified in a lineup as the Biscayne Boulevard hitchhiker. After 15 minutes of interrogation, Lawrence admitted killing Simpson while “resisting his advances,” according to the Miami Daily News.  Lawrence identified his partner as Lewis Richard Killen, who drove a green Chevrolet.

Killen told police that he and Lawrence had been working a scheme in which Lawrence would be picked up by a gay man while hitchhiking and trailed by Killen to a remote spot where the two would rob their victim. Lawrence claimed he didn’t plan to kill Simpson but just wanted to frighten him.

The gay community that was revealed during the homicide investigation horrified editors at the Miami Daily News, which responded with a three-part series by Jack W. Roberts that is republished in books on gay history. On the jump, the series – which can only be described as appalling beyond belief, even for the 1950s – and news stories about Simpson’s killing. Notice especially Part 2 of the series, which deals with the LAPD’s harassment of gays and quotes Deputy Chief of Detectives Thad Brown.

Lawrence and Killen were charged with first-degree murder, but convicted of manslaughter.

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Posted in #courts, #gays and lesbians, 1954, Crime and Courts, Homicide | 6 Comments

Matt Weinstock, Nov. 19, 1960

  Nov. 19, 1960, Comics  

Nov. 19, 1960: Parallels between the bus system and the Owens Valley aqueduct? Matt Weinstock has the story.

DEAR ABBY: Please advise me if I was right or wrong for accepting a diamond ring from a man who, at the time, was still married, claimed he was going to get a divorce but instead was….

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Paul Coates, Nov. 19, 1960

  Nov. 19, 1960, Mirror Cover  

Nov. 19, 1960: Paul Coates writes about his encounter with a con man in the Soviet Union. And Marilyn Monroe takes up modeling in Part 6 of Maurice Zolotow’s "The Real Marilyn Monroe."

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Nov. 19, 1940

 
 

  Nov. 19, 1940, Italian Base Reported Seized  

  Nov. 19, 1940, Thanksgiving  

Nov. 19, 1940: CONFIDENTIAL COMMUNIQUE to Vivien Leigh: Be smart and quit giving out interviews about your great love. Three are people who disapprove, Jimmie Fidler says.

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November 19, 1960: Gene Autry a Contender in American League Expansion Team

November 19, 1960: Sports cover

Nov. 19, 1960: Hank Greenberg, former baseball star who was part owner of the Chicago White Sox, was out as the potential bidder for the American League baseball team hoping to start play in Los Angeles in 1961. So who was in?

The Times reported that several people were talking about taking over, including Gene Autry, the former cowboy star described by the paper as a “television tycoon.”

Autry got into the ownership sweepstakes only after talking to Greenberg about carrying the new baseball team’s games on Autry’s radio station, KMPC. Dodger owner Walter O’Malley had moved his team’s games from KMPC to KFI. Now Autry was in the mix as a potential owner.

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Posted in Dodgers, Downtown, Sports | 1 Comment

Ritchie Valens and ‘Donna’


Feb. 5, 1959, Donna Ludwig.

Feb. 5, 1959: Here’s a story I neglected to post in my original coverage of “The Day the Music Died,” an interview with Donna Ludwig of Granada Hills, the subject of Ritchie Valens’ song “Donna.”

The Times said: While in one of their long telephone conversations one night last September, Donna said, she chided him about writing that promised song for her. “While we were talking, right there on the telephone, he wrote the words to ‘Donna’ and he read them to me.

“He called me the next night and sang the song to me and played the guitar. It was wonderful. I didn’t believe it was going to be recorded.”

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Matt Weinstock, Nov. 18, 1960

 
 

  Nov. 18, 1960, Comics  

Nov. 18, 1960: A woman who missed a court date arrives with a note from her doctor saying that she’s ready to “resume her occupation,” and that, of course, is why she was in court, Matt Weinstock says.

DEAR ABBY: There are six of us children (all married) in the family and every Christmas we go through the same thing. We have always pitched in to buy our parents one nice gift from all of us. One sister is behind three years for her share and one brother has never put in his share. We would rather buy one nice gift than six cheaper ones. none of us are poor. What do you suggest?

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Paul Coates, Nov. 18, 1960

 
 

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Nov. 18, 1960: One glance at the front page shows the Mirror was nothing like The Times — but all of that is going to change in a little more than a year….

Paul Coates writes about the problem of alcoholism in the Soviet Union …. and Jim Dougherty goes on a date with Norma Jean Baker in Chapter 5 of Maurice Zolotow's biography of Marilyn Monroe.

Also on the jump, Chester Otto Weger describes beating three women to death at Starved Rock State Park in Illinois.

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Posted in Columnists, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Paul Coates | 1 Comment

Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Nov. 18, 1940

  Nov. 18, 1940, Italians Driven Out of Greece  

  Nov. 18, 1940, Vultee  

 

Nov. 18, 1940: Note to Realtors: The Basil Rathbone house is NOT for sale! Jimmie Fidler says.

[Note: This is how errors were often handled at one time. Rather than publish a correction, The Times would “fix” the mistake in later stories.] 

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Former Mirror Writer Beaten to Death – Update

Roby Heard: Man wearing glasses and a telephone headset. Roby Heard, 1921-1960.


Note: This is a blog post from 2010. 

This is something I wrote in 2002 at the request of Det. Rick Jackson of the LAPD’s cold case unit. Jackson said that the “murder book” for 1960 was missing and that the department had no information the case, so I pulled this together from news accounts.

There was some speculation at the time of the killing that Heard had been assaulted by a couple of young self-styled Nazis who were attacked while picketing a Sammy Davis Jr. performance, but that theory was eventually abandoned.  The case was eventually closed by the LAPD, and as I recall it was based on what was aired on an old TV program. One website attributes the killing to Clarence Best.

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Posted in Homicide, LAPD, Obituaries | 4 Comments

Matt Weinstock, Nov. 17, 1960

  Nov. 17, 1960, Comics  

Nov. 17, 1960: Matt Weinstock discovers “2,000 Years With Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks.” “A wildly creative ad-libber who wrote for Sid Caesar for 10 years, Brooks could well become the hottest satirist in town,” Weinstock says.

DEAR ABBY: The company psychologist told my husband that he has an IQ bordering on "genius." Consequently, no one can live with him anymore. Everyone else, in his opinion, is now "stupid," "infantile" or "lame-brained." (I am included). He belittles me in front of the children. Ninety percent of the time he is a wonderful husband and loving father. He has a brilliant future with a well-known company and we have all the material things I could hope for, but his mental "superiority" is causing me heartaches.

And more on Clark Gable….

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Posted in art and artists, Columnists, Comics, Matt Weinstock, Nightclubs, Obituaries | 1 Comment

Paul Coates, Nov. 17, 1960

  Nov. 17, 1960, Mirror Cover
 

  Nov. 17, 1960, Marilyn Monroe  

Nov. 17, 1960: Clark Gable dies in Room 209 of Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital at the age of 59… Paul Coates reports on impressions of President-elect Kennedy in the Soviet Union … and the Mirror publishes Part 4 of Maurice Zolotow’s biography of Marilyn Monroe, in which marriage is arranged for the 15-year-old “man trap.” 

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Nov. 17, 1941

 
 

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  Nov. 17, 1941, Tom Treanor  

Nov. 17, 1941: Fibber and Molly McGee are at Palm Springs. Molly hasn't been feeling well, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Wildfire Destroys 61 Homes in Bradbury

 
 

  Nov. 17, 1980, Fire  

  Nov. 17, 1980, Fire Damage  

Nov. 17, 1980: A brush fire roars through Bradbury. On the jump, a story by the master, Eric Malnic, who notes that race car driver Mickey Thompson lost six vehicles but saved his house. (Thompson and his wife were shot to death in the driveway of their Bradbury home in 1988.)

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Matt Weinstock, Nov. 16, 1960

 
 

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Nov. 16, 1960: Matt Weinstock has an item on the demolition of the Haig Prince Building at 2nd and Broadway, which was built in 1898. 

DEAR ABBY: This morning I received a telephone call from a man who would not tell me his name. He just told me to give my husband a message….  

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Paul Coates, Nov. 16, 1960

 
 

  Nov. 16, 1960, Mirror Cover  

Nov. 16, 1960: Paul Coates files the first story in his series on the Soviet Union. He writes from Moscow: “This is the other side of the moon. A place so strange to western eyes that it defeats my most determined attempts at accurate description.”   Fifty years later, it may be hard to understand how unusual Coates’ trip was. In the early 1960s, the Soviet Union was viewed as mysterious, secretive and very dangerous to the free world. It’s not quite like having tea with Osama bin Laden, but almost.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Nov. 16, 1940

 
 

  image  
  Nov. 16, 1940, Paul Robeson  

Nov. 16, 1940: Clark Gable and Carole Lombard are packing for a trailer trek to Nebraska, where they'll visit her relatives, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Mary Astor Mystery Photo

2010_1116_Mary_Astor_01 mary_astor_1959_0121_crop

At left, the publicity still from “Return to Peyton Place.” At right, Mary Astor in a 1959 photo.

2010_1116_Mary_Astor_01 Mary_Astor_1961

At left, the publicity still from “Return to Peyton Place.” At right, a photo of Mary Astor from 1961.

Oh, Harnisch, why don’t you let go of this and move on to something fun? Because this is fun. At least my idea of fun. I went down into the archives last night and rooted around in the Mary Astor photos. Most of them are from “The Maltese Falcon” era with a smattering of pictures from the silents but I found a few from the late 1950s and early 1960s, though nothing from “Return to Peyton Place.”

To be frank, I have a hard time convincing myself these are the same lady.

The good news is that I found another page of her diary. She met George Kaufman and “I fell like a ton of bricks as only I can fall,” she says.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | 10 Comments