Nixon Demands Firm Civil Rights Plank

 
July 26, 1960, Nixon
Los Angeles Times file photo

July 26, 1960, Nixon  
Los Angeles Times file photo

July 26, 1960: Vice President Richard Nixon helps his wife, Pat, from a car as they are surrounded by a crowd at the Sheraton-Blackstone Hotel in Chicago. The relatively light security, compared to what we know today, is stunning.

On the jump, the Republicans skirmish over their campaign platform, photos from the convention, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. marches for civil rights, and pieces by Times Political Editor Kyle Palmer and James Reston of the New York Times.

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Posted in 1960 Republican Convention, Front Pages, Photography, Richard Nixon | 1 Comment

Matt Weinstock, July 25, 1960

 
Juy 25, 1960, Comics

July 25, 1960: The Mirror overhauls its comics lineup and layout, introducing Johnny Hart’s “B.C.,” Cal Alley’s “The Ryatts” and Bill Hoest’s “My Son John.” Gone are “Priscilla’s Pop,” “Out Our Way” “Day Shift” and “Earth People.” Coming up in August, the Mirror will change its nameplate as part of a gradual redesign. 

Matt Weinstock writes about a trial in which jurors found a driver guilty of killing a pedestrian after reenacting the incident (which you’re not supposed to do, folks!)

CONFIDENTIAL TO PARENTS IN A QUANDARY: Give your daughter the same educational advantages as your son. An old Chinese proverb — and a good one to apply: "To raise a son without learning is raising an ass; to raise a daughter without learning is raising a pig."

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

Paul Coates Is on Vacation

 

July 25, 1960, Mirror Cover

Paul Coates is on vacation until Aug. 8.

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Posted in 1960 Republican Convention, Columnists, Front Pages, Paul Coates, Richard Nixon | Comments Off on Paul Coates Is on Vacation

Movieland Mystery Photo

 July 24, 2010, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

 July 25, 2010, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Here’s another picture of our mystery fellow!

Update: Saturday’s picture is Mark Damon and "Diane" Cannon in a publicity photo for "This Rebel Breed," published March 20, 1960.

Sunday’s picture is Mark Damon "fem heartthrob" in a publicity photo for "In Times Like These," published Feb. 22, 1956.

Please congratulate Dewey Webb and Pat in Michigan for identifying the mystery fellow and his mystery companion; Mike Hawks and Mary Mallory for identifying our mystery man; and Barbara Klein for identifying the mystery woman.

I had hoped to have a special Republican National Convention edition of the mystery photo – but alas, there are no photos of movie folks at the convention. Instead we have our mystery fellow with a mystery companion.

Last week’s mystery woman was Helen Parrish! Her mystery companion was Jerry Giesler.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | 7 Comments

Republicans Fight Over Party Platform

 
1960_0725_nixon_03_crop
Los Angeles Times file photo

July 25, 1960: Vice President Nixon greets well-wishers in Chicago.

July 25, 1960, Times cover

July 25, 1960, Editorial Cartoon  

Cartoonist Bruce Russell is sure the GOP has the election in the bag.

July 25, 1960: "The issues that shaped the Republican Convention were those forced on it by Nelson A. Rockefeller…. whether he meant to or not, Nelson Rockefeller was summoning the Republican Party to repudiate the administration and policies of Dwight D. Eisenhower before the Party faced the nation in November."

— Theodore H. White, "The Making of the President 1960"  (Page 191)

Times Political Editor Kyle Palmer says: “The transition from Eisenhower
to Nixon will entail changes greater than many have realized or
expected, but from all indications the break will represent no great
fundamental changes in philosophy. Nixon is a younger more politically
acute leader. He has seemed during his relatively short time in national
politics to have a sort of genius in political action.”

On the jump, a caption writer pokes humor at some Native Americans who were honored at the GOP convention. Plus more photos and an item by James Reston of the New York Times.

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Posted in 1960 Republican Convention, art and artists, books, Front Pages, Photography, Politics, Richard Nixon | 1 Comment

Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, July 24, 1940

 
July 24, 1940, Fires

July 24, 1940, Tom Treanor

July 24, 1940: Jimmie Fidler asks, “Wot's this about Marjorie Rambeau getting out of hand on ‘Tugboat Annie Returns’ and Warner Bros. mulling discontinuation of plans to make an ‘Annie’ series?

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Nixon, Rockefeller OK Platform in Secret Talk – Goldwater Furious!

 
1960_0724_nixon_workers_crop
Los Angeles Times file photo

July 24, 1960: Young Republican members Lloyd LeMere of Oak Park, Ill., and Chris Economos of Berwyn set up a sign painting shop at the convention center in Chicago.

image

July 24, 1960: Vice President Richard Nixon and New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller meet to draft a platform for the presidential campaign – and Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater calls it a “Munich” for the Republican Party. Goldwater accuses Nixon of selling out on every point that separated him from Rockefeller, whom Goldwater describes as the "leader of the Republican left."

The Nixon-Rockefeller platform says, in part: Our program for civil rights must assure aggressive action to remove the remaining vestiges of segregation or discrimination in all areas of national life — voting and housing, schools and jobs. It will express support for the objectives of the sit-in demonstrators and will commend the action of those businessmen who have abandoned the practice of refusing to serve food at their lunch counters to their Negro customers and will urge all others to follow their example.

“Our program for health insurance for the aged shall provide insurance on a sound financial basis through a contributory system under which beneficiaries have the option of purchasing private health insurance.”

On the jump, pieces by Kyle Palmer, James Reston, Goldwater and Rockefeller’s text of the platform.

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Paul Coates and Matt Weinstock, July 23, 1960

 image
 

July 23, 1960: A redhead (why is it always redheads?) beats a traffic ticket … The Democrats need a good song and the Republicans draft campaign “blanks.”

CONFIDENTIAL TO ED: If you are willing to admit you are all wrong when you are all wrong, then you are all right.

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Republicans Gather in Chicago

 
1960_0723_march_crop
Los Angeles Times file photo

July 23, 1960: The Republicans are gathering in Chicago to select their choice in the 1960 presidential campaign. Stay tuned to the Daily Mirror….

Posted in Politics, Richard Nixon | Comments Off on Republicans Gather in Chicago

Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, July 23, 1940

 
July 23, 1940, Halifax Spunrs Hitler's Peac

July 23, 1940, Tom Treanor

July 23, 1940: “Come to think about it, I've never heard Joan Crawford make a catty remark about anyone,” Jimmie Fidler says.

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Movieland Mystery Photo

      July 19, 2010, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo 

Update: This is Helen Parrish in an undated photo.

Feb. 23, 1959, Helen Parrish

Feb. 23, 1959, Helen Parrish

Feb. 23, 1959: Helen Parrish dies of cancer at 35.
 

Regular Daily Mirror reader Carmen was supposed to be our guest host this week, but I couldn’t find any photos of her mystery star in our archives! Stay tuned while we try again…..

Just a reminder on how this works: I post the mystery photo on Monday and reveal the answer on Friday … or on Saturday if I have a hard time picking only five pictures; sometimes it's difficult to choose. To keep the mystery photo from getting lost in the other entries, I move it from Monday to Tuesday to Wednesday, etc., adding a photo every day.

I have to approve all comments, so if your guess is posted immediately, that means you're wrong. (And if a wrong guess has already been submitted by someone else, there's no point in submitting it again).

If you're right, you will have to wait until Friday. There's no need to submit your guess five times. Once is enough. The only reward is bragging rights. 

Last week’s mystery guest was Marguerite Chapman! The weekend mystery guests were Philip Ober and Hans Conreid!

There’s a new photo on the jump!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | 33 Comments

Matt Weinstock, July 22, 1960

 
July 22, 1960, Comics

July 22, 1960: Does “earthquake weather” actually exist? Matt Weinstock has the answer.

CONFIDENTIAL TO MOREY: When a man plays poker, the only one who is SURE to "clean up" is the host's wife, Abby says.

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, July 22, 1960

 
July 22, 1960, Mirror

July 22, 1960: Paul Coates takes a look at President Eisenhower's golf game, writes a follow-up on a peace march and muses on staggered work shifts to ease rush-hour traffic.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, July 22, 1940

 
July 22, 1940, Soviet

July 22, 1940, B-17

July 22, 1940: “If Los Angeles police want to cut down on traffic hazards they'd better do something about the shorts our glamour girls are parading, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Pages of History

 
Big Table 3

"I was seeing Pershing Square, Los Angeles, now for the first time…the nervous fugitives from Times Square, Market Street SF, the French Quarter — masculine hustlers looking for lonely fruits to score from, anything from the legendary $20 to a pad at night and breakfast in the morning and whatever you can clinch or clip; and the heat in their holy cop uniforms, holy because of the Almighty Stick and the Almightier Vagrancy Law; the scattered junkies, the small-time pushers, the queens, the sad panhandlers, the lonely, exiled nymphs haunting the entrance to the men’s head, the fruits with the hungry eyes and jingling coins; the tough teen-age chicks — 'dittybops' — making it with the lost hustlers … all amid the incongruous piped music and the flowers — twin fountains gushing rainbow colored: the world of Lonely America squeezed into Pershing Square, of the Cities of Terrible Night, downtown now trapped in the City of lost Angels … and the tress hang over it all the like some type of apathetic fate."

— JOHN RECHY: Big Table 3


dropcap_I_vadisf you read Norman Mailer’s article for Esquire on the 1960 Democratic National Convention, you might notice a description of Pershing Square by John Rechy and wonder “What’s Big Table 3?” Thanks to EBay, I now have a copy of the magazine and here’s the answer: 

Big Table (1959-1960) was edited by Irving Rosenthal and Paul Carroll, who began the journal after resigning from Chicago Review over criticism of what was intended as the first installment of William S. Burroughs’ “Naked Lunch.”

In fact, almost the entire staff of Chicago Review resigned after Chicago Daily News writer Jack Mabley wrote a scathing column about the issue headlined “Filthy Writing on the Midway.”  As reconstructed from the Village Voice and the Chicago Reader, Mabley's Oct. 25, 1958, column read in part:

"Do you ever wonder what happens to little boys who scratch dirty words on railroad underpasses? They go to college and scrawl obscenities in the college literary magazine. A magazine published by the University of Chicago is distributing one of the foulest collections of printed filth I've seen publicly circulated.

"I don't recommend anyone buying the thing out of curiosity because the writing is obscure to the unbeat generation, and the purple prose is precisely what you can see chiseled on washroom walls.

"The beat generation has quite a representative on the Midway. I haven't had much contact with these people, but I get the impression they are young, intellectual, need baths and have extreme contempt for the less fortunate than themselves, which is almost everybody. I'm sure these words won't bother them because they wouldn't be caught dead reading anything so plebeian, even for a good sneer . . .

"The obscenity is put into their writing to attract attention. It is an assertion of their sense of bravado, 'Oh boy, look what I'm doing' just like the little kids chalking a four letter word on the Oak Street underpass.

“What is legally obscene and what is not? If anyone used these words orally in the street, he would be arrested. If the obscenity in the magazine were read in a public performance as a literary presentation, the performers would be arrested and charged with indecency, in my opinion. Yet, in print, stamped 'this is literary,” they get away with it.

"To save argument, let's concede that I am a bluenose. I am disturbed by the increasing legal tolerance of obscenity. I abhor public circulation of vulgarity and coarseness. I think it is evidence of the deterioration of our American society. I think it is dangerous. We are  going overboard in the liberal side — in the courts, in literature, in popular men's magazines and paper-cover books. The Chicago magazine is abundant evidence of this trend.
 

"I don't put the blame on the juveniles who wrote and edited the stuff, because they're immature and irresponsible. But the University of Chicago publishes the magazine. The trustees should take a long hard look at what's being circulated under their sponsorship." (If anyone has a scan of the original column, please send it along).

But the controversy wasn’t over. More than 400 copies of Big Table 1, which included further excerpts of "Naked Lunch" and Jack Kerouac's "Old Angel Midnight," were seized by postal authorities because of "obscenity and filthy contents," according to the University of Chicago's website on Carroll's papers. An initial ruling found Big Table 1 to be obscene, but that was overturned on appeal by Judge Julius Hoffman (yes, the “Chicago Seven” Julius Hoffman). The journal ceased publication after five issues.

Bonus fact: The title of Big Table was suggested by Jack Kerouac, inspired by a note on his writing desk: “Get a bigger table.”

As for novelist John Rechy, the excerpt quoted by Mailer (who also had an item in Big Table 3) is from “The Fabulous Wedding of Miss Destiny,”  written about “a flaming drag queen”  while Rechy was renting a room on Hope Street in downtown Los Angeles. 

A highly revised version, titled “Miss Destiny: The Fabulous Wedding,” appears in Rechy’s “City of Night.”

According to WorldCat, Big Table is available in many local libraries.Or you can buy copies from various book dealers.

On the jump, a page from Big Table 3.

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Posted in #gays and lesbians, art and artists, books, Downtown, Parks and Recreation | 2 Comments

Matt Weinstock, July 21, 1960

 
July 21, 1960, Comics

July 21, 1960: About that monorail – Matt Weinstock reports on some unusual ideas for mass transportation. 

CONFIDENTIAL TO “TEMPTED”: The best reason for doing the right thing today is tomorrow, Abby says.

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, July 21, 1960

 
July 21, 1960, Mirror

July 21, 1960: Paul Coates writes about taking his son to the Democratic National Convention. “It’s a gyp,” the young man says afterward.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, July 21, 1941

 
July 21, 1941, Russians Hold Lines

July 21, 1941, RAF

July 21, 1941: WARNERS' "MALTESE FALCON" SET AT A GLANCE: Mary Astor "blowing" her lines when the assistant director informs her that hubby Manuel del Campo (now with the RCAF) is long distancing … Gladys George: "Now I know what became of my favorite publicity man–I recognized his style today in a German war communique" … Five-foot Peter Lorre demonstrating ju-jitsu holds on six foot-two inch Barton MacLane … Tough-guy Humphrey Bogart and writer Louis Bromfield heatedly arguing — about the proper methods of petunia culture! … Lee Patrick, staggering to a seat after lugging a 50-pound statue of the falcon through a long scene: "If a role like this makes me an 'artist' — so's a hod carrier!" … Director John Huston (son of Walter) ruefully accepting first aid after sitting on a fish hook accidentally misplaced by comedian Elisha Cook Jr. who makes trout flies as a hobby," Jimmie Fidler says. 

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The Case of ‘Tiger Man’ Figueroa

 
 

image

Above, George E. “Tiger Man” Figueroa, as portrayed in a courtroom sketch by The Times. At right, Figueroa’s recent bride, Sarah, who was badly beaten and shot in the head.

July 21, 1910, Sarah Figueroa 

July 21, 1910, Figueroa Case

July 21, 1910: The Times publishes the sensational story of George “Tiger Man” Figueroa of Santa Monica, who was sentenced to hang for beating his young wife, Sarah, and shooting her in the head after she refused to go to bed with his drinking companion.  Figueroa was pardoned by Lt. Gov. A.J. Wallace, who temporarily served as governor while Hiram Johnson was running for vice president on the Progressive Party ticket with Theodore Roosevelt.

The Times goes off on a tangent about the curse of the ill-gotten Cariega fortune and a little detective work shows that this refers to a claim brought in 1905 by Figueroa’s aunt Eloise against the estate of Juan B. Careaga on the charge that she was his illegitimate daughter.

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Matt Weinstock, July 20, 1960

 
July 20, 1960, Comics

July 20, 1960: Speaking at a meeting of property tax protesters, one Brentwood homeowner said: "My assessed valuation has been increased 179 3/4%. My taxes will now be more than my mortgage payments. I think we should protest on a moral basis," Matt Weinstock says. 

DEAR ABBY: "With vacation near, my husband and I are disagreeing over his friendship with a young, single neighbor. She has a cottage near ours and gets my husband there on various pretexts — 'stopped-up drains,' 'blown fuses,' etc. Once he's there, she takes his time discussing her problems (boyfriends, business, family) with him. Since he hasn't enough time to listen to MY problems, or to fix my drain or replace my fuses, how can he justify giving his time to this single woman?"

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