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June 13, 1960: Matt Weinstock writes about a sign that says “25 Cents to Eat Your Own Sandwich.” And Abby tackles the question of whether any sound is made by a plane that crashes in the desert with no living thing to hear it. |
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June 13, 1960: Matt Weinstock writes about a sign that says “25 Cents to Eat Your Own Sandwich.” And Abby tackles the question of whether any sound is made by a plane that crashes in the desert with no living thing to hear it. |
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June 13, 1960: The gist of Bruce Russell’s cartoon seems to be that speeding is bad. Either that or driving through a huge skull is dangerous. On the jump, bone marrow injections offer hope for cancer patients, and TV viewers request a rerun of a "The Margaret Bourke-White Story" starring Teresa Wright with Eli Wallach as Alfred Eisenstaedt. |
| A landslide closes the Hill Street tunnel, which was demolished when the “nose” of Bunker Hill was removed in June 1955. |
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June 13, 1910: Police find that the athletic burglar who was caught the other day has refined tastes in reading. No funny papers or issues of Argosy for him. The incarcerated scholar asks for Edward Gibbon’s “History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,” Volume Three. Or a little Suetonius. |
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June 12, 1940: “New Yorkers say Al Jolson is revolving among Ruby Keeler, Jinx Falkenberg and Broadway dancer Gloria Cook,” Jimmie Fidler says. |
| “I’m No Good … No Good … No Good!” |
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June 12, 1960: The LAPD, which has kept detailed statistics for decades, finds that major crimes declined 5.7% in 1959 after a three-year increase. Of the 3,124 people who applied to be officers, 256 joined the Police Department. Also, a look at Israel’s trial of Adolf Eichmann on charges of war crimes. UPI writer Joseph W. Grigg says Eichmann was generally unknown until after the war, even in Germany, and The Times clips support that claim. As far as I can determine from ProQuest, Eichmann’s name didn’t appear in The Times until Jan. 4, 1946. That story is on the jump, along with a report on the execution of Lord Haw Haw. Below, an undated audio clip of Lord Haw Haw |
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June 12, 1910: Work continues on the Panama Canal, an example of American ingenuity, where the slogan is “1915 or Bust.” Also on the jump, a Times editorial against picketing by strikers. The Times’ staunch opposition to picketing will be a factor in the October 1910 bombing of the building. |
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A map by Charles Owens shows the fighting in France. |
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June 11, 1940: “Why don't they give more romantic roles to Humphrey Bogart?” Jimmie Fidler asks. |
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June 11, 1980: Ever since Sinatra and the Bee Gees sang the National Anthem at Dodger Stadium, everybody wants to try…. |
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June 11, 1960: After Sandy Koufax retired, he spent some time as a clearly uncomfortable member of NBC's baseball coverage. So it's surprising to find a Times critic praising Koufax's ability as a communicator. Koufax and fellow Dodger Charlie Neal were the key parts of a baseball program on radio station KDAY and Don Page, The Times' radio critic, thought the Dodger left-hander was "becoming a first-rate sports commentator." |
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June 11, 1910: If this building looks unfamiliar it’s because it never left the drawing board. This is a proposal by Lyman Farwell for a new City Hall to be built on the Temple Block at Spring and Main streets. If you know Los Angeles history, you know that the present City Hall didn’t open until 1928, which means it took 18 more years. As long as that may seem, it’s a blaze of lightning compared to the construction of Union Station, which was proposed about 1905 and opened in 1939. Lesson: Large civic projects take forever in Los Angeles. Notice that the story refers to the odd shape of the Temple block and remember that Spring Street took an oblique angle at 1st that was straightened out during construction of City Hall to alleviate traffic congestion. On the jump, an update on the metalworkers' and brewery strikes, and the capture of an athletic burglar. |
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June 10, 1960: One of Matt Weinstock’s readers pleads for understanding of rattlesnakes. They’re not a menace to humanity, they are just misunderstood. Why does a woman say she's been shopping when she hasn't bought anything? Abby has the answer. |
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June 10, 1960: The Lakers started selling season tickets for their new home in Los Angeles and what a different world it was. Season ticket holders would be assured of at least 25 home games in the new Los Angeles Sports Arena. Back then, the NBA regularly set games in neutral sites and it was unclear how many dates the Lakers would get at home. "If the Lakers are successful in obtaining two or three more home dates, the ticket holders will be billed the additional amounts," a small story in The Times reported. –Keith Thursby |
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June 10, 1960: The Times brings out an extra about a mob of “fanatic leftists” in Tokyo that attacked a car carrying White House Press Secretary James Hagerty and U.S. Ambassador Douglas A. MacArthur II … And an angry Richard Nixon responds to New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's criticism of leadership of the Republican Party. On the jump: Stylish ties and the latest in cuff links and tie clips from Swank for Father’s Day … and at the movies, “Sergeant Rutledge.” Of course, if you want Luger cuff links you’ll have to check here. |
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June 10, 1910: An AMA convention in St. Louis finds out what a Nautsch dancer is. On the jump, the complicated case of Police Capt. Charles E. Dixon and Hampshire Hotel operator William D. Gage. Dixon, the head of the department’s “purity squad,” summoned Gage for questioning and accused him of “practices of degeneracy,” The Times said. Unfortunately, despite all the coverage of the case, none of the stories alludes even obliquely to what sort of “degeneracy” was involved. I would assume Gage was accused of being gay, but that’s only a guess. Whatever the accusation, Gage reacted furiously. I’m posting quite a few stories about this incident because it reflects the nature of graft in this era. Gage was apparently falsely accused, complained to the Police Commission and was pressured to withdraw his accusations. When Gage refused to yield, he received threatening phone calls and his hotel on South Broadway was apparently targeted by a large number of unsavory guests, a technique that will appear in the 1930s harassment of Clifton’s Cafeterias and Clifford Clinton. (See also the Harry Raymond bombing.) Dixon was eventually fired and became a rancher in Orange County. In 1911, he testified before a grand jury about misconduct in the "Good Government” (Goo-Goo) administration. Buried way down in one of the stories is a line that Sgt. Charles E. Sebastian, the future police chief and mayor, has been promoted to lieutenant. |