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Tom Treanor gets a brief interview with jeweler Louis Cartier, in exile at the Aviz Hotel in Lisbon.
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July 30, 1940: Margaret Lindsay can't stand men who smoke big cigars, Jimmie Fidler says. |
| Los Angeles Times file photo Update: "Marjorie Bennett playing the movie struck maid in 'M'Lord, the Duke' at the Hollywood Playhouse," according to caption information on a photo marked March 4, 1934.
Please welcome Carmen as this week’s guest host for the mystery photos.
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Notice how steep Bunker Hill used to be! |
| I stumbled across a copy of “Los Angeles: A Guide Book,” produced for the 1907 National Education Assn. convention, listed on EBay for $9.99 and remembered that I had seen a digitized copy on Google books. The book offers brief snapshots of the city as it was a century ago and because it was produced for teachers it focuses on educational facilities and is loaded with facts for tourists.
There’s also a handy map of downtown as it was in 1907. You can download the pdf here. |
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July 29, 1960: Matt Weinstock reminisces about trying to catch grunion and implies it’s nothing but a snipe hunt. Dear Abby: My husband never swears around the house or anywhere else, but the minute we start to play golf he swears a blue streak. |


July 29, 1945: “For two minutes the pinnacle of the chromium-girt Empire State stood out sharp and clear in the drizzle while orange-red flames licked around. Then the soft fog closed in again to hide the scene from the horrified sight of thousands of midtown office workers who had rushed to the windows at the sound of the explosion, which echoed over central Manhattan like a blockbuster.”
| Los Angeles Times file photo Republican National Convention delegates cheer Lodge and Nixon. |
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July 29, 1960: NBC Chairman Robert W. Sarnoff sends telegrams to John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon suggesting a series of televised debates. The debates will become one of the cultural milestones of the 1960s. A Times editorial quotes Barry Goldwater: "This great Republican Party is our historic house …. I am proud to call myself a Republican as well as a conservative…. We must remember that Republicans have not been losing elections because of more Democrat voters. We have been losing elections because conservatives too often fail to vote." On the jump, Times Political Editor Kyle Palmer and James Reston of the New York Times assess the upcoming campaigns. |
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July 28, 1960: Matt Weinstock on Stephen Potter’s “One-Upmanship,” “Lifemanship” and the political trend of “growthmanship.” CONFIDENTIAL TO S.K.: I don't blame career girls for resenting the expression "old maid." In my vocabulary there are no "old maids" — just "unclaimed jewels," Abby says. |
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July 28, 1960: Paul Coates is on vacation until Aug. 8 |
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Tom Treanor, who was killed covering World War II for The Times, looks back at the use of dirigibles in the Great War.
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July 28, 1941: Robert Cummings, a captain in the United States Air Corps Reserve, has been ordered to pack duffel for an emergency call to duty, Jimmie Fidler says. |
Photograph by Rick Meyer / Los Angeles Times Among Eric Malnic’s many accomplishments at The Times was becoming a specialist on airplane crashes and he was proud of getting a pilot’s license as part of the beat.
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| Former Times city editor and columnist Bill Boyarsky says:
The news of Eric's death, while not unexpected, is sad. He fought hard to live. I met Eric when I came to the Times in 1970 and he was one of the young reporters and their families who greeted the Boyarskys, strangers from Sacramento, with friendship, inviting us to parties, making us feel we were part of something. Nancy and I often recall those days. They were like our family. We worked together over the years, drank at the Redwood and shared the camaraderie of a wonderful newsroom. I got to know Eric even better when I became city editor. I was thrown into the job with limited editing and executive experience. Eric was immediately most supportive with advice and with his excellent and steady work.
He was covering the aviation industry and pursued those complex plane crash investigations with intensity, speed and great success. He was, as you know, one of the great rewrites, and when there was a big story, Eric was there to do it. During the 2000 Democratic convention our then infant website wanted frequent updates from the streets and convention hall. This was the new journalism that requiring the speed and skill of the old journalism. I asked Eric if he was interested. He grabbed the assignment and whipped out his many updates quickly and accurately, with the mixture of calm and excitement required of a good rewrite person. Ed Boyer, another top rewrite man, writer and editor, shared the assignment. It was just great watching them work every day. Eric's career reached back to the old Times. I'm sure he worked for Smoky Hale, the legendary old time city editor. From there, he transitioned into the new Times of Bill Thomas, growing professionally, becoming a valued member of Thomas' eclectic collection of talents. Through it all, Eric was the complete professional–loyal to the paper but never blindly, willing to undertake any assignment, considerate and fair to his colleagues, helpful to newcomers and young people on their way up. He represented the best in journalism.
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| Los Angeles Times file photo July 28, 1960: Republican presidential nominee Richard Nixon and his wife, Pat, wave to delegates.
Times editorial cartoonist Bruce Russell shows that Richard Nixon has experienced hair. I mean, is this a joke or what? Readers must have been wondering what happened when Paul Conrad arrived at The Times.
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July 28, 1960: The Times brings out an extra on Richard Nixon’s nomination at the Republican National Convention and publishes an editorial endorsing him. On the jump, The Times’ cover, photos, Times Political Editor Kyle Palmer on Nixon and James Reston of the New York Times on President Eisenhower. |
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July 27, 1960: Matt Weinstock on a man who found the County Jail’s drunk tank to be a friendly place. CONFIDENTIAL TO A NEIGHBOR WHO IS WISE TO HER: A new broom sweeps clean. Buy one. And start with your own doorstep. |

July 27,1960: Eisenhower motorcade / Los Angeles Times file photo
President Eisenhower covers his head under a storm of confetti as he arrives in Chicago to address the Republican National Convention.

| July 27, 1960: Vice President Richard Nixon wins some – but not all – of what he wants on a civil rights plank for his 1960 presidential campaign.
Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater says: “If a liberal civil rights plank is adopted, the South will leave the party this year. I don’t know what Nixon is thinking of. I don’t think he can get elected if he keeps on doing what he is doing.” On the jump, the entire text of the Republicans’ revised civil rights statement, photos, and analysis by Times Political Editor Kyle Palmer and James Reston of the New York Times. |

| July 26, 1960: Is the standing ovation really necessary? Most of the time, it’s not, Matt Weinstock says.
CONFIDENTIAL TO SORRY SARI: Next time a fellow asks you up to see his etchings, skip the art and look for the handwriting on the wall, Abby says. |
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| July 26, 1960: The “Peanuts” story line involved Lucy drawing a political cartoon and submitting it to a newspaper. Because readers never saw the cartoon, the Mirror asked artist Charles Schulz what it looked like. Here’s his answer.
Paul Coates is on vacation. |
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Tom Treanor, who died covering World War II for The Times, files a report from Portugal on trying to interview the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.
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July 26, 1940: Jimmie Fidler says “The Marx Brothers and MGM are tiffing, with the studio insisting the freres' next pic be made for $800,000 or LESS!” I was sure Fidler had already run the item on Joan Crawford and the New York doorman who refused to let her rain-drenched fans into the lobby but I can’t find it. Sound familiar? Preview tonight: “The Drive by Night!” |
All I knew about this movie going in was that it had been remade with Mark Hamill in 1995 (the remake also starred Christopher Reeve and Kirstie Alley, and was respectably directed by John Carpenter, but in 1995 all my friends and I cared about was Mark Hamill). I had the impression that the whole idea of a town full of evil kids was fairly corny. I did not expect the original "Village of the Damned" to be so down-to-earth, and so very unsettling.
Things begin quietly — very quietly — as everyone in the village of Midwich, England, suddenly and collectively passes out one afternoon. Tractors crash into trees, record players run down, bathtubs overflow, irons burn holes in shirts … even the animals are out cold. Britain's military rolls in and is standing there wondering what to do when suddenly everyone in Midwich wakes up again. There seem to be no ill effects (well, except for the poor guy who fell asleep flying a plane).
And then, two months later, all the Midwich women of childbearing age realize they're pregnant.
The movie's adapted from "The Midwich Cuckoos," a novel by John Wyndham — who also wrote the wonderful "Day of the Triffids," another tale of mayhem lurking just beneath the peaceful British countryside. Here the action moves at a fairly tranquil pace, introducing an array of mostly likable, relateable characters inhabiting Midwich.
Our heroes are scientist Gordon Zellaby (George Sanders) and his wife, Anthea (Barbara Shelley), with Anthea's brother Alan (Michael Gwynn) providing a military connection. After the mass loss of consciousness, everyone pretty much just dusts themselves off and says "Mustn't grumble" and gets back to work.