Bus Strike Begins!

 

  Nov. 6, 1960, Bus Strike  

  Nov. 21, 1960, Strike Ends  

Nov. 16-21, 1960: Another bus strike ends after six days, with MTA mechanics winning a raise of 54 cents an hour to be given in three steps. Officials say that the raises will probably require an increase in the 20-cent [$1.43 USD 2009] basic fare.

Interestingly enough, the city traffic department set up an emergency ride-sharing program using a map that divided the city into large zones. Motorists were encouraged to pick up people at bus stops in these zones and give them a ride downtown. People seeking a ride from downtown to the outlying areas were to stand in areas designated for various zones.

And yes, the main commute was to and from downtown Los Angeles.

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Matt Weinstock, Nov. 15, 1960,

 
 

  Nov. 15, 1960, Comics  

Nov. 15, 1960: A copyreader named Mike knows how to liven up a newsroom tour, Matt Weinstock says.

DEAR ABBY: I am a very happily married woman with a family. I really love my husband but I can't help this schoolgirl crush I have on my doctor. Recently I had a little surgery….

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The Real Marilyn Monroe

 

 
 

  Nov. 15, 1960, Mirror Cover  

Nov. 15, 1960: The Mirror continues Maurice Zolotow’s series on Marilyn Monroe. And on the jump, Mrs. S.C. Harris is worried about Paul Coates!

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Nov. 15, 1940

  Nov. 15, 1940, Greeks Rout Italians  
  Nov. 15, 1940, Great Dictator  

Nov. 15, 1940: Ernest Hemingway will come to Hollywood to help adapt his "For Whom the Bell Tolls" to the screen, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Movieland Mystery Photo — Updated

  Nov. 13, 2010, Mystery Photo  

I often wonder why people in movie stills sometimes have such dilated eyes. Then I found this very freckled mystery guest with about the most extreme example I’ve ever seen.

  Nov. 15, 2010, Mystery Photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Updated: Our freckled mystery guest with the dilated eyes is Mary Astor!

This week’s mystery guest was Diane Baker (with a surprise appearance by Valerie Gearon!)

There’s a new photo on the jump!

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A Victim of ‘Retrocephalitis’

  Nov. 15, 1910, Benjamin Sheppard  

Nov. 15-17, 1910: Benjamin Sheppard was a large, powerful garbage worker, a victim of “retrocephalitis” that turned him into a “animal-man.” At least that’s what The Times reported. And yes, he was African American.

"That Sheppard is a victim of this peculiar ailment is further proved, according to the Receiving Hospital attendants, by his gorilla-like features and poise. He has the sunken neck, long sinewy arms, oval-shaped head, beady eyes, distended lips and slouchy ambling gait of the man-beast," The Times said.

Sheppard (or Shepherd in the Herald stories)  was discussing religion with fellow African Americans in an alley on 5th Street between Spring and Main when there was evidently a disagreement and he drew a .41-caliber revolver.

Traffic Officer A. Arguello, assigned to Fifth and Main, chased Sheppard toward Spring, and Sheppard jumped into a parked automobile and told the chauffeur drive away. As Sheppard and the chauffeur argued, Arguello punched Sheppard, knocking him into the street, where he began firing at the officer. As Arguello sought cover behind the auto, one of Sheppard’s shots hit a pedestrian, Giovanni Simoni,  penetrating his lung.

Although the original stories said Simoni was badly injured and expected to die, later coverage said that his condition had improved.

Sheppard, meanwhile, was examined at the Receiving Hospital, where he was deemed a victim of “retrocephalitis” that had turned him into an “animal-man” of stunning strength. Further investigation showed that he was the son of a Baptist preacher and had been confined to an insane asylum in his native Alabama.

Officials decided to send him to the county hospital’s mental ward for evaluation and he put up a struggle before being taken from the jail.  "You are going to hang me," he cried. "I know all about it. You are going to string me up like they do niggers in the South," The Times said. 

There’s no further information on the case in The Times or the Herald, so we don’t know the ultimate outcome.

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From the Vaults: ‘The Howling’ (1981)

Howlingposter Well, Joe Dante's horror classic "The Howling" was not at all what I expected! Every werewolf movie is necessarily idiosyncratic, of course — it's not like "Dracula" or "Frankenstein," with an established storyline and characters to follow or riff on. With werewolves, you have people who turn into wolves, but from there you can go wherever you like. Dante's film (written by John Sayles, picking up from Terence Winkless) starts as a contemporary noir, then develops into a sort of backwoods psychodrama before finally revealing itself as a werewolf movie. It's a fascinating mix.

TV news anchor Karen White (Dee Wallace, now Dee Wallace-Stone) rounds up her news crew and goes to confront an L.A. serial killer named Eddie, who's been stalking her. Eddie does something horrible off-camera before authorities dispatch him; utterly traumatized, Karen consults her psychiatrist, George Waggner (Patrick Macnee), who suggests she recuperate at his woodland retreat up north. Soon Karen's off to "The Colony" with her mustachioed husband, Bill Neill (Christopher Stone).

But things are weird up there, even beyond the residents' self-help blather about energies and assertiveness training and EST ("Another five years of real hard work, and maybe I'll be a real human being," quips one). Karen hears strange animal noises in the night. Nearby cattle are mutilated. An older resident, Erle Kenton (John Carradine), mutters angrily about his teeth and tries to hurl himself into a campfire. And a sexy thing called Marsha tries to put the moves on Bill! Karen calls her city friend Terry (Belinda Balaski), who figures out that Eddie may still be around — and that this "Colony" thing may be a cover for something very hairy.

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Matt Weinstock, Nov. 14, 1960

 
 

  Nov. 14, 1960, Comics  

Nov. 14, 1960: Matt Weinstock has J. Farrington Barrington Arrington’s solution to deadlocked juries — like the one in the Finch case. 

DEAR ABBY: After reading the letter from LIAR'S WIFE, who for years was unknowingly "the other woman," I would like to offer what I hope will be some consolation. Cheer up, Honey, you can't be married to the world's biggest liar — because I am!

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The Real Marilyn Monroe

 
 

  Nov. 14, 1960, Mirror Cover  

Nov. 14, 1960: The Mirror begins publishing Maurice Zolotow’s biography of Marilyn Monroe (and yes, Clark Gable, her co-star in “The Misfits” dies in a few days). On the jump, Simone Signoret says that if Monroe is in love with her husband, Yves Montand, "it proves she has good taste. For I am in love with him too."

Paul Coates will be filing stories from the Soviet Union. Stay tuned!

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Nov. 14, 1941

  Nov. 14, 1941, P-38 Crash  

Nov. 14, 1941: One unpublicized reason for Lou Costello's New York jaunt is a conference with his pal, Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, anent screening of His Honor's life story — with Costello in the title role, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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On the Frontiers of Technology: Teletext

  \May 3, 1981, Teletext  
  image  

Nov. 14, 1980: KCET-TV Channel 28 and KNXT-TV Channel 2 plan to experiment with teletext. Young persons reading this with the free wifi at Starbucks, gaze at the screen shots and give thanks for your netbooks. 

The Times’ Lee Margulies says: “Teletext is a process in which a broadcaster is able to transmit printed matter in the normal television signal so that a viewer who has a special decoder unit can receive information on his screen. By using a keypad attached to the set, the viewer can select from hundreds of different 'pages' of information and read them on the screen, either in place of the picture or superimposed over it.”

Hartford Gunn, vice president and general manager at KCET,  "said that teletext will be a new medium, combining some elements of newspapers and television but not replacing either."

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Nov. 13, 1940

  Nov. 13, 1940, Wrecks Drown 70  

  Nov. 13, 1940, Blast  

Nov. 13, 1940: Insiders are saying good champagne will be $100 a case before New Year's, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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Movieland Mystery Photo

  Nov. 8, 2010, Mystery Photo  
  Photograph by Art Rogers / Los Angeles Times  

Here’s our mystery guest for the week. Last week’s mystery fellow was Michael Ansara and the weekend guest was Robert Mitchum’s brother John, who also performed as John Mallory.

There’s a new photo on the jump!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | 82 Comments

Famed Writer Tours L.A.

 
 

  Nov. 13, 1910, Chalmers  

Nov. 13, 1910: Times reporter Willard Huntington Wright (yes, that is the future mystery writer S.S. Van Dine), explores Los Angeles with British author William J. Locke, who was once famous for such works as “The Beloved Vagabond.” 

Wright and  Locke go to the movies, where they see a western and listen to "obscure and unknown Jenny Linds, assisted by colored pictorial masterpieces, render passionately "You're Just the Kid for Me, Bo."

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Found on EBay — Silverwoods

Silverwoods Shirt Silverwoods Shirt

This shirt from Silverwoods, one of the more upscale menswear shops in Los Angeles, has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $24.99.

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Matt Weinstock, Nov. 12, 1960

  Nov. 12, 1960, Comics

 

Nov. 13, 1960: Matt Weinstock has the story of a Pittsburgh reporter in town for an episode of “Day in Court” — who got a ticket for jaywalking in Hollywood. 

CONFIDENTIAL TO "MARRIED TO A MAMMA'S BOY": Don't send him back to his Mamma to grow up — he will only grow AWAY from you. Raise him with the children.

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Former Mirror Writer Beaten to Death

 
 

  Nov. 12, 1960, Mirror Cover  

Nov. 12, 1960: Here’s the sad story of Roby Heard, a former Mirror rewrite man who was beaten to death with a hammer in a killing that was unsolved for many years.

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Posted in Front Pages, Homicide, LAPD | 1 Comment

Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Nov. 12, 1940

  Nov. 11, 1940, Great Dictator  

  Nov. 11, 1940, Suicide  

Nov. 12, 1940: Eddie Albert, with a brand new schooner yacht, is readying for another Mexican cruise — and Warners are worried, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood, Suicide | 1 Comment

Corners of Los Angeles – 5th and Hill

 

  5th_hill_postcard_ebay  

 

  April 8, 1929, Corners of Los Angeles  

I stumbled across one of these features recently and thought I’d post another. This one is from April 8, 1929. Ben S. Lemmon was a telegraph editor at The Times and wrote occasionally for the paper from 1907 to 1929. He died in 1937 at the age of 48.

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Matt Weinstock, Nov. 11, 1960

 
 

  Nov. 11, 1960, Comics  

Hm. Not just a Vulcan, but a Vulcan who uses wheresgeorge.com!  Clearly ahead of his time!

Nov. 11, 1960: Matt Weinstock has the story of a man who brought his family to L.A. from Indiana and got  work at an aircraft plant but was laid off after a few months and has been trying to get welfare.

DEAR ABBY: How can I stop loving someone who is on my mind night and day? I must forget him because…

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