Jim Murray, The Marrying Kind

 
Jim Murray, Feb. 21, 1980

 
Feb. 21, 1980, Jim Murray  

 

Feb. 21, 1980: Pro golfers really, really love their old clubs! Ask Lou Graham.

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

 
Feb. 21, 1959, Hedda Hopper 

Feb. 21, 1959: Hedda Hopper says, “When the Navy’s Blue Angels took Janet Leigh for a ride in one of their jets she didn’t realize what a special occasion it was.”

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Legislators Debate Chessman and Death Penalty

Feb. 21, 1960, Caryl Chessman
Los Angeles Times file photo

Feb. 21, 1960: Caryl Chessman, center, after receiving a stay of execution, with attorneys George T. Davis and Rosalie Asher.

Feb. 21, 1960, Chessman

Feb. 21, 1960, Chessman

Feb. 21, 1960, Chessman

Feb. 21, 1960, Chessman

Feb. 21, 1960: A 60-day stay of execution for Caryl Chessman so the Legislature can weigh the death penalty carries political implications for Gov. Pat Brown, whose hopes of entering the presidential race might be affected by accusations that he is “soft” on crime. Vice President Richard Nixon says he supports the death penalty, but notes that he isn’t speaking specifically of the Chessman case.

Posted in #courts, Caryl Chessman, Photography, RFK | Comments Off on Legislators Debate Chessman and Death Penalty

Waiters Go On Strike

image 

Edmund Waller “Ted” Gale on the waiters’ strike.

Feb. 19, 1920, Tipping

Feb. 21, 1920: The Times satirizes a strike by members of the Southern California Waiters Assn. who wanted a raise of $1 a day [$10.66 USD 2008] and rejected restaurant operators’ offer of 50 cents a day.  The Times said waiters at first-class restaurants earned $7 to $8 a day in tips, or up to $85.28 USD 2008. 

Bonus factoid: The Times opposed the evils of tipping in a Feb. 19, 1920, editorial.

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Philadelphia Transit Strike Touches Off Riots

Feb. 21, 1910, Philadelphia Riot

Feb. 21, 1910, Philadelphia Riot 

The Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. declared the strike over April 5, 1910.

 Feb. 21, 1910, Philadelphia Riots

Feb. 21, 1910: Striking transit workers in Philadelphia dynamite a streetcar and burn or wreck two dozen more. Many strikebreakers brought in from New York are beaten by mobs, which also attack police officers.

March 13, 1910, Editorial

March 13, 1910: The Times editorializes against the Philadelphia transit strike and attacks AFL founder Samuel Gompers, who was called a “labor despot” in  an accompanying story. All of this helps set the stage for The Times bombing in October 1910.

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Found on EBay – Williams and Walker

williams_walker_dora_ebay 1898_0501_mcintyre_heath 
May 1, 1898: Williams and Walker share the stage with McIntyre and Heath at the Orpheum. 

“Dora Dean,” a song by Bert Williams and George Walker, has been listed on EBay. Many people are familiar with Williams and Walker but don’t realize they had a connection to Los Angeles and performed here many times. Bidding starts at $24.99.

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Matt Weinstock, Feb. 20, 1960

Feb. 20, 1960, Comics

“Please! My Life Is in Danger!”

 

Mediator in Middle

Matt Weinstock     The smoldering dispute between newspapermen and TV reporters over coverage of interviews almost broke out again this week at the press conference for labor Secretary James M. Mitchell.  Newspapermen contend subjects freeze when they see the cameras and are not as relaxed and responsive as they would be without them.  They prefer separate sessions, either before or after the cameramen have had theirs.  TV men insist on combined sessions and have walked out on Nelson Rockefeller and Gov. Brown, who don't.

    When the cameras moved in on Mitchell, who was aware of the clash, he quipped, "I'll be glad to offer my services as a federal mediator in this dispute — at my usual fee of $100 a day."

    It wasn't necessary.  The paper boys had a new strategy — the silent treatment.  They just sat there.  Usually they ask most of the intelligent questions and the TV men make the most of the answers.

image     Finally one TV man asked, "Are you fellows going to ask any questions?"

    "Go ahead," a newspaperman replied, "get your show on the road."

    Afterward the paper boys held an exclusive press conference with Mitchell in another room.

::


    EASILY THE
most casual robber of the week was the young man who came into the Jill and Jean cafe at 311 S. Spring St. around 4 p.m.  Wednesday and ordered a cup of coffee.  As he sipped it he asked the waitress if she had a paper sack.  She said no, so he went out and got one from the newsboy at the corner.  He returned, had another cup of coffee, then went into the back of the place.  He handed Jim, the cook, a note stating, "This is a stickup" and marched him up front and instructed him to put the money from the cash register in the paper bag.  Apparently he had a gun concealed in his pocket.  He escaped with $120.

::

   HOE DOWN
Seed catalogues excite me!
Such bursts of gorgeous
    color!
Gardens of my friends
    delight me;
Digging mine is duller.
        MARGARET MAHAN


::


    A POSSIBLE
explanation of the collapse of the L.A. Rams last season comes from Charles W. Lomas of UCLA's English department.  It is contained in an article in the university bulletin stating that two veterinary scientists at Davis have been given a $60,500 grant to make a three-year study of epididymitis, a disease of rams.  The article goes on, "California rams are already hard hit.  Of 10,000 rams examined, 25% were infected."

    So that's what it was, epididymitis — not fumbleitis.

::


    THE OTHER DAY
just before rehearsal for Bob Hope's Feb. 23 TV show, Onnie Whizin Morrow got on an elevator at NBC in Burbank with a load of scripts for the participants.  A dignified, gray-haired man, the only other passenger, offered to help her, and she gratefully handed them to him.  As they got out and marched along the corridor several persons exchanged greetings with him.

    "You seem well acquainted here," she said.  "Whom do I have to thank for helping me?"

    "Just thank your ex-governor," the ubiquitous Goodie Knight said.

::  


    FOOTNOTES —
A special showing of "The Snow Queen" will be held Monday morning at the Fox Wilshire Theater and studio people are hoping for sunshine — so they can have a load of snow on hand for the youngsters.  It will be the synthetic kind, made by the machine that makes the fluffy stuff out of ice.  But rain would spoil everything . . . Evan Thomas nominates as the best of the saloon signs that one over Hussong's cantina in Ensenada: "If you drink to forget, please pay before drinking" . . . Harmon J. Purvin nominates as the jerk of the month whoever stole two containers from the Junior Bootery in Lynwood, one containing money for the March of Dimes, the other for the City of Hope.
   
Feb. 20, 1960, Abby

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Feb. 20, 1960

 

Feb. 20, 1960, Mirror

Legal Revenge Not Dead Yet

Paul Coates    I read Gov. Brown's reasons for giving Caryl Chessman a 60-day reprieve yesterday, but I'm not sure that I believe them.

    He indicated that he felt  the climate in California had changed on the issue of capital punishment and said that the people should have another chance to express themselves on it.  And he added that a telegram from the State Department stating that Chessman's execution could stir hostile demonstrations in Uruguay when President Eisenhower visits there next month also played a part in his decision.

    Neither of his reasons impresses me.

    I don't think Californians have changed their minds about capital punishment.   I'd like to believe that they have because, personally, I think it accomplishes nothing other than to prove that we — as a society — can be as ruthless and as vicious as some of the criminals we remove from our midst.

    Under our laws, it would be very easy to put a man behind bars permanently to protect ourselves from any criminal mind, but there are too many emotional arguments in favor of society's getting revenge.

image     Some day, I confidently hope, capital punishment will be as outmoded a form of "justice" as the flogging post or the iron maiden.

    But from where I sit, I don't think the time has arrived.  Convincing people that legal violence, legal revenge, is any more moral than illegal violence or revenge isn't as simple as it might appear on paper.

    Maybe Gov. Brown, who's also an opponent of capital punishment, is watching from a better vantage point than I am.  But on this particular issue, I don't think that he is.

    I hope I'm wrong, but I get the feeling that he's five or 10 years premature in his hopes.

Only Temporary Relief

    His second point — that international repercussions could be avoided — is strictly one of temporary relief.  Every day, U.S. government officials are taking off for foreign countries.

    If Brown's action did anything, it intensified foreign interest in the Chessman case.  With each succeeding brush with Death Row, Chessman has won thousands of new followers in foreign countries.

    By granting the convict-author a 60- now 59-day reprieve, he's built himself a monster.  Days go by fast.  In April, Chessman will be back in the headlines again.

    The hysteria — both pro and con — will be worse than ever.

    If he lets Chessman die then, he'll be accused of betraying his own moral convictions of contributing to the "cruel and unusual punishment" which has turned Chessman into an international celebrity.

    If he's rebuffed by the Legislature and the people (which seems likely), but grants another reprieve, anyway, then he will have just about destroyed himself as a politician.

    I'm sure that Brown was aware of the consequences when — less than 10 hours short of the execution hour — he made his decision yesterday.

    No question about it — it was a reckless move.

    He left himself wide open as a target for certain elements to charge him with everything short of treason.

    Dep. Dist. Atty. J. Miller Leavy, who I feel sure had his whole day ruined, made the startling statement:

    "It is a sorry day when Communists in South America and throughout the world  can shape the administration of justice in these United States and California in particular."

Feb. 20, 1960, Abortions     A cohort of his, John W. Dickey, made an even more ridiculous observation:

    "It is very touching that a Democrat like Gov. Brown should be so solicitous of the welfare of a Republican like Eisenhower . . . that he should stop the execution."

Is Our Perspective Distorted?

    It makes you wonder what Chessman has done to our perspective when a responsible public official can snidely suggest that a Democratic governor isn't concerned about the physical welfare of the President of the United States because he happens to be a Republican.

    There were even wilder charges than these, and there'll be more of them in the days and weeks to come.

    I feel sorry for Pat Brown.  But I admire him.

    At 12:10 a.m. yesterday, he ceased being a politician.  He jeopardized his career by doing what he felt he had to do.

    Public servants are usually more cautious of their own welfare.
   

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Carter Calls on Iran to Free Hostages

Feb. 20, 1980, Hostages 

Feb. 20, 1980, Floods

image

Feb. 20, 1980:  Storms kill 22 people across the Southland, including 13 in Los Angeles County. President Carter demands that Iran release 53 American hostages, then in their 108th day of captivity,  and the Fed raises interest rates to 13%. Welcome to the ‘80s.

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

image 

Feb. 20, 1958: Hedda Hopper says, “[Michael] Todd and Liz flying all over Europe in their own plane. No, he's not at the controls.”

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Voices — Alexander Haig, 1924 – 2010

March 31, 1981, Alexander Haig

"As of now, I am in control here in the White House pending return of the vice president and (I am) in close touch with him."

— Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.,
on the transfer of power after the
attempted assassination of President Reagan in March 1981

CALIFORNIA PROSPECT / By Tom Plate

An Old Soldier With A Lot on His Mind


Al Haig worries about the China situation.

 

August 20, 1996

By Tom Plate, Times columnist Tom Plate also teaches at UCLA.

There are some men and women in public life whose judgment seems more grounded after they depart the limelight than when they were still doused in it. Perhaps it was this sentiment that promoted my call last week in San Diego on Alexander M. Haig Jr., President Reagan's first secretary of state. For, in all candor, this former Army officer and public servant is probably most remembered for his unnerving initial public reaction to the 1981 assassination attempt on his boss, the president: "I am in charge," was what he blurted out to the TV camera and so to the entire universe. Coming from a career military man, that did not pack quite the calming effect on America that this patriot undoubtedly intended.

Haig resigned in 1982 but stays active today as an international business consultant. Last week at the Republican National Convention, he was unceremoniously billeted at a hotel far enough from the downtown action–such as it was–that the retired, oft-decorated general must have considered the need for airlift capability at least once. But if few of those running the convention wanted to hear what this Vietnam War hero, supreme allied commander in Europe and veteran diplomat had to say, I did.

Most of all, the general is deeply concerned about America's relationship with China, where he believes the Clinton people have been stumbling badly. A year ago, he insists, we were far closer to war with the Chinese over Taiwan than people realize. He tells the story of a little-publicized meeting in the Oval Office last summer, when he and Henry Kissinger, another former secretary of state, and others, just back from China, where they had gotten an earful, met with the president and aides to make just that point. Says Haig today: "I don't think his own people had adequately suggested to him that we were really headed on a collision course that neither side wanted. Neither side!"

Haig believes that the great destroyers of a potentially more mature relationship were the vicious Chinese overreaction to the Tiananmen Square uprising in 1989 and the kneejerk U.S. overreaction to their overreaction. Insists the man who, though somewhat infamous for making mincemeat of entire phrases, is rarely one to mince words: "The United States has been too slow in normalizing."

But haven't the Chinese done a heck of a lot themselves to engender distrust? Why, just look at the much-documented military buildup of recent years. This recipient of the Purple Heart and many other military recognitions said he is unfazed: "Deng Xiaoping's 1979 reforms dramatically reduced the size of the military. What the Chinese military is facing today is a huge wall of obsolescence. They had hoped that the wall could be breached primarily with the cooperation of the United States. That got off track at Tiananmen Square." Haig became pensive, almost sad, but then the old lion started roaring once again: "That doesn't mean the Chinese are guiltless! They're difficult, prickly people. But that also makes them very reliable people. When they give you their word, they keep it!"

Like the departing Dwight David Eisenhower, who in his famous 1961 address warned the American people of the dangers of an unbridled "military-industrial complex," Haig says that not everyone on our side of the fence is rooting for peaceful relations. "Here's another thing to remember about the American attitude toward China. When the Soviet Union collapsed, a lot of people–some of them in the armed services–started to worry: If you don't have an enemy, you've got a problem. You don't get the money!"

Haig reminds us that while the United States has never been invaded or occupied by a foreign army, China has, more than once. "My own friends in the Pentagon really don't see the Chinese military buildup as a problem. It's very important for us to be talking to the Chinese military so that they know we're not threatening them, not trying to contain them like some jackass legislators say. Hey, until recently, the Chinese military has been the strongest proponent of a good relationship with us."

Haig believes that any American president's job is to become personally engaged with China: "Well, his nose has been pushed into it now. Clinton came in with the stated objective that he was going to forget foreign policy and tend to the long untended problems of American society. Well, he learned that this is not acceptable. Just as Ronald Reagan learned it."

Abruptly, the old general rose to offer a goodbye. At this point, I'm not sure whether I'm imagining "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" in the background or some echo of that wonderful line about military men in their autumns: "Old soldiers never die, they just fade away."

But this soldier wasn't fading out quite yet: "You can't succeed at home if you fail abroad any more than you can succeed abroad if you fail at home. Bush learned the latter, Clinton has learned the former."

I left the hotel room reminded of the Asian emphasis on respecting the wisdom of our elders. I think they may be onto something with that.

Posted in Obituaries, Politics | 2 Comments

1910 Auto Show

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

Feb. 20, 1910: The Auto Show at Fiesta Park featured nearly 200 cars. An enormous tent was built at the park and redwood limbs were used to disguise the uprights so that the entire show resembled a forest. There are statistics on speed and horsepower, but nothing about gas consumption. Using previous stories, it's been possible to calculate miles per gallon on the old horseless carriages and it was fairly poor, at least by today's standards. 

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

The men who put the Auto Show together.

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

I suppose someone had to build the world’s largest speedometer.

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

The Westcott 40 is powerful, obedient and faithful, and is a car with "good character." 

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show 

An observer at the show notices that automakers are abandoning the chain drive in favor of the drive shaft. Virtually all manufacturers (except a certain fellow in Detroit making Model Ts by the millions) have given up  the planetary transmission.

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

A woman who knows about cars – what a shock!

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

Notice the reference to the once-famous Pasadena to Altadena hill climb. The race began at Orange Grove Boulevard and went up Los Robles.

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show 

Harry C. Carr takes a light look at women and autos: "The girl of yesterday professed a skittish horror of anything resembling machinery. She said machinery was horrid; she was rather proud of the fact that she couldn't understand.

"The girl of today toys with an engineer's oil can and talks like an automobile handbook."

image

One of the electric cars featured at the show. These early electrics were especially marketed to women.

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

The Times takes a look at local car dealers.

Feb. 2, 1910, Auto Show

“Intermediate” is what we know as second gear in a three-speed transmission.

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

W.H. Leonard, writing for The Times, says: “The railroads, trolley lines and steamship companies suffer as a consequence of the development of the automobile, but a new line of pleasure is evolved which is bound to become more popular each year.

“People are no longer content to drive about the city streets in their machines; they must go from town to town, county to county and state to state. It is a tendency which requires good roads, excellent service at hotels and inns and the best manufacture in the automobile line. It brings people closer together and puts the rural districts in touch with life of the great trade centers.”

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

An interesting detail – the demands of making automobiles have required
better components in the way of screws, nuts, washers and all the other
little pieces that we now take for granted. One of the main reasons
earlier cars were so rickety was the relatively poor quality of the
nuts and bolts that held them together, The Times says.


Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

Touring “Tejunga Canyon” in a motorcar.

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show 

“When automobiles are practically useless as pleasure vehicles in the snowbound East, we of Southern California are spinning over the open mesas, climbing into the foothill canyons or skirting along the ocean shore, where the breakers of the Pacific roll in a leisurely manner up the sands of the beach or dash in spray against the rocks,” The Times says.

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show 

I had no idea Studebaker ever made an electric. This one cost $$54,792.33 USD 2008.

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

The Times gives a breakdown of local government agencies and their cars. The water department leads with 10 autos. And the Los Angeles City Fire Department has purchased a Seagraves fire engine. 

Feb. 20, 1910, Auto Show

And  the members of the Los Angeles Athletic Club are training for a 17-mile “marathon” from Venice to downtown Los Angeles. The runners are allowed to have a coach accompany them, either on a bicycle or a horse.

Posted in Front Pages, Sports, Transportation | Comments Off on 1910 Auto Show

Artist’s Notebook: Grand Central Market

2010_0215_grand_central_market1
“Grand Central Market” by Marion Eisenmann

Marion Eisenmann and I made an art excursion to Grand Central Market on Broadway last year so she could try out a new Tradio pen on some sketch paper, but she wasn’t happy with the results, although I liked it quite a bit. Last week, we roamed downtown looking for subjects and went back to Grand Central. The market was fairly busy with shoppers, even though it was Super Bowl Sunday, and all the TVs were turned to soccer games instead of football. Afterward, Marion returned to her drawing and did what I think is a lovely job with it.

marion_eisenmann_2009_0710 Larry Harnisch / L.A. Times Here’s Marion with two children who were in Grand Central Market when she was making the drawing. People always like to watch her work.

Marion reminds me that the kids were sweet but maybe a little distracting.

Note: In case you just tuned in, Marion and I are visiting local landmarks in a project inspired by what Charles Owens and Joe Seewerker did in Nuestro Pueblo. Be sure to check back for another page from Marion's notebook.

By the way, Daily Mirror readers have asked about buying copies of Marion's artwork. Naturally, this is gratifying because I think Marion's work is terrific, and one of my great pleasures is sharing it with readers every week. We have decided that the project is a journey about discovering Los Angeles rather than creating things to sell. Marion is busy with other projects and says she isn't set up to mass-produce prints but would entertain inquiries about specific pieces. For further information, contact Marion directly.

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Found on EBay — Broadway and 6th

broadway_6th_ebay_crop This postcard view looking north on Broadway from 6th Street, showing the Los Angeles Examiner Building and the Pantages Theater, has been listed on EBay. The vendor guesses that the photograph was taken in the 1930s, but I suspect it’s much earlier. Construction for the last Examiner Building began in 1913. The Pantages Theatre moved to another building in 1919.

Notice the traffic semaphore and the UM 1906-style streetlights.

Bidding starts at $4.50.

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Matt Weinstock, Feb. 19, 1960

Feb. 19, 1960, Peanuts
Feb. 19, 1960, Peanuts
Prison Sounds

 
Matt Weinstock     As this was written, Caryl Chessman's date with death was still undecided. But as time was running out for him yesterday a man who was once No. 69883 in San Quentin reminiscently recalled the case of Gas House Eddy.
 
    No. 69883, now living in L.A., used to be editor of the San Quentin News. Each week a letter signed G. H. E., for Gas House Eddy, a young man on Death Row, came to the editor's mailbox. Most of them were printed. This letter was received on a Thursday, the day before he died:
 
    "DEAR EDITOR: It looks like this is the last observation I'll make so will do it on Sounds.
 
    "Sounds in prison are different from those outside. Instead of alarm clocks we have bells that can be heard all over the prison. A guard up on the gun rail over the mess hall blows a short blast on a whistle. Instantly 5000 men stop eating and turn their eyes on the guard to see what is wrong. Most ominous sound is the siren. Man missing! It shrieks, with ear splitting decibels.
 
    "After lights out, snores, moans, grinding of teeth, and on occasions, a nightmarish shriek will break the sleepy silence.
 
    "Pre-dawn ushers in chirping of hundreds of sparrows, who make this block their home. Unlock, and a thousand doors swing open to boom closed a second later. Then the tramping of feet, as 5000 men converge on the mess hall.
 
    "To work, then — no streetcars, no automobiles, no women's voices. Just sounds of walking and talking.
 
    "For the majority, some day, the best sound of all — the dull boom of the heavy front gate when the account has been settled.
 
    "For myself — soon the last sound I will hear on this earth. The light splash of the cyanide egg as it hits the acid.
 
    "Society — take a bow."
 
::
 
    A MAN NAMED John called on his income tax man the other day and as he waited in the outer office he remarked to the receptionist that going in to see him was like visiting a dentist.
Feb. 19, 1960, Chessman 
    He didn't notice that the partitions didn't go up to the ceiling until he heard a voice from the other room say, "Send in the patient!"
 
::
 
    SMALL FAVOR
He speaks and dresses
    like a hood.
In business he's a
    perfect end.
He has no manners,
    which is good–
For if he did they would
    be bad.
    WALTER SPATZ
 
::
 
    AUTHORITIES warn that the fast-buck boys, pretending to be census takers, are prying into people's personal and household affairs, particularly their financial status — object, to sell them things they don't want or need. The official census will start April 1 and authentic enumerators will have proper identification.
 
::
 
    A HOLLYWOOD woman has been undergoing long, expensive treatments for a serious skin eruption on her face. Recently, when it got no better, her doctor advised her to consult a dermatology specialist. She went to see one, he prescribed a certain medicine, and as if certain medicine, and as if by magic, her skin cleared.
 
    Her husband phoned the dermatologist the other day to express his wife's and his own gratitude. As he waited for the doctor to come on the line his son Russ, 5, said solemnly, "Dad, tell him now I can kiss my mommy."
 
::
 
    ONLY IN MALIBU — Bob Mollison, who drives a newspaper truck, was dropping off some bundles at 4 a.m. on Pacific Coast Highway when he saw lights moving in a motel parking lot nearby. He got them in focus and saw it was an old car going around in reverse in a wide circle. After about 15 revolutions it stopped and kept circling the same route forward.
 
    Bob figures it was probably some frustrated TV producer trying to unwind.
 
::
 
    AT RANDOM — Some waggish member of the UCLA band, probably a tuba player, has written on the band bus, "It's such a comfort to take a bus (t) and leave the driving to us". . . A small, unimpressive pizza spa in Sunland is called Aida's Palace . . . Everything's going to be all right. Lady named Mary Louise, who has been worried about the absence of kites, which represent normalcy to her, finally saw one the other day at 37th and Vermont.

Feb. 19, 1960, Abby  
   

 
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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Feb. 19, 1960

 
Feb. 19, 1960, Mirror

Mash Notes and Comment

 
Paul Coates    (Press Release) "More and more cities are using police dogs — for police duty, natch.
 
    "Pittsburgh, Houston, St. Louis and Minneapolis are among the cities which have found that a good, tough dog is an active deterrent to crime.
 
    "The dogs aren't trained to kill, like the famous K-9 Corps of World War II, but they go through a 14-week course designed to teach them to seek suspects, hold them at bay and be calm, even under gunfire.
 
    "In some ways the animals are more efficient than men at patrolling dark streets, parks and such places. Result: some types of crimes are said to be on the decrease.
 
    "Could your city use dogs on its police force?" (signed) Hy Steirman, New York City.
 
    -Not my city. But Beverly Hills has an opening.
 
::
 
Feb. 19, 1960, Caryl Chessman     (Press Release) "'There's no business like Jo business,' reads the letterhead of Jo Morrow, a young movie actress with a pretty face, beautiful figure and apparently worlds of self-confidence.
 
    " 'I'm an up-and-coming new face,' says Jo in this week's Look magazine. 'Columbia signed me to a contract because of my personality — they call me a virginal girl ready to explode . . .' " (signed) Look magazine.
 
    –Quick, everybody. Take cover.
 
::
 
    (Press Release) "For the first time, shoe-shining is now a part of a school curriculum.
 
    "Each of the classrooms at New York's John Barry Junior High School has a 'Shoe Shine Corner' with shine boxes, brushes, cloths, daubers and a wide assortment of polishes, and the 300 boy pupils are required to shine each other's shoes every morning.
 
     "The equipment is the donation of Irving J. Bottner, ex-shoe shine boy, now president of Esquire shoe polish. He kicked off the unprecedented program by giving a shoe-shining demonstration in the school auditorium, shining the shoes of 12 of the amazed youngsters.
 
    "One of them flipped, 'He's the best dressed shoe-shine boy I ever saw.'
 
    "Another said, 'My father will never believe my shoes were shined by a big company president.'
 
Feb. 19, 1960, Caryl Chessman     "Miss Hazel R. Mittelman, school principal, conceived the idea of shoe-shining in the classroom because she has observed that shoe-polishing is more neglected than other components of good grooming.
 
    "'While polished manners maketh the man, polished shoes maketh the gentleman,' said Miss Mittelman." (signed) Carl Erbe Associates, Public Relations, New York City.
 
    –This Mittleman? Does she always talk like that?
 
::
 
    (Press Release) "America's male vocalists, the exclusive hero-types for 18 million teen-agers, belong to an adultified, commercialized generation with nothing to say, according to an article in the March issue of Esquire magazine.
 
    "Elvis Presley, Frankie Avalon, Ricky Nelson, Kookie Byrnes, Fabian, Bobby Darin, Pat Boone and Dick Clark are among the idols whose public images are analyzed in the article. 'Teen-Age Heroes: Mirrors of Muddled Youth.'
 
    "Here, an attempt is made to discover something of a more lasting value than is currently evidenced in the likes of Elvis, Ricky, Kookie, Fabian et al.
 
    "With safety-first the cry and insecurity the spur. America's present-day teen-agers have lifted to the heights of godliness, these singers who vocalize the sentiments of the generation-finding salvation in the safety valves of conformity, mediocrity and sincerity." (signed) Esquire magazine, New York City.
 
    –You know something? I liked Esquire better when it was dirty.
 
 
Posted in #courts, Caryl Chessman, Columnists, Front Pages, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Feb. 19, 1960

The Old Woman of the Freeway

 Feb. 19, 1980, Mural Feb. 19, 1980, Mural 
Feb. 19, 1980, Murals

Feb. 19, 1980: I had forgotten about this wonderful mural until I came across Suzanne Muchnic’s feature about Kent Twitchell. “The Old Woman of the Freeway” on the Prince Hotel in Echo Park was painted over in 1986 and vandalized while being restored in 2000.

Feb. 19, 1980, Mural

Feb. 19, 1980, Mural

Feb. 19, 1980, Mural
Feb. 19, 1980, Mural 
 

 

Kent Twitchell, Muralist
Photograph by Ann Johansson / For The Times

March 29, 2009: Muralist Kent Twitchell with a panel of “The Old Woman of the Freeway” at the LOOK gallery.

Once, there were murals

 The man who gave L.A. its Freeway Lady gets an indoor show.

April 02, 2009

By Diane Haithman,

Some of Kent Twitchell's murals are best known because they no longer exist.

His "The Old Lady of the Freeway" greeted travelers along the Hollywood Freeway from 1974 until it was painted out by a billboard company in 1986.

More recently, "Ed Ruscha Monument," a six-story portrait of artist Ruscha on the side of a government-owned building in downtown L.A., was painted over, in June 2006.

True, you can still see Twitchell's influence on the cityscape on the 110 Freeway past 8th Street, where his 1991 work "Harbor Freeway Overture," portraits of Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra musicians, looms on the parking structure at Citicorp Plaza.

But the vulnerability of Twitchell's medium is one reason you'll find the 66-year-old, self-described "outdoor painter" hard at work indoors.

It also explains the title of his new exhibition: "Thriller: The King of Pop Meets the King of Cool: Exploring the Lost Works of Kent Twitchell," which has its opening reception this evening and continues through April 27 by appointment only at the new LOOK Gallery in downtown's L.A. Mart Design Center.

The exhibition will include sketches, photos and drawings for "lost" murals, as well as one that was completed but never installed or shown to the public: A 100-foot-tall, 60-foot-wide portrait of Michael Jackson, created in the early 1990s for the side of the former Barker Bros. building in Hollywood, now the El Capitan Theatre.

"It's the most exquisite color I've ever done," the artist said in a recent conversation at his downtown studio, as he stepped around panels of the mural — Jackson's dark eyes and chiseled nose beneath a wide hat brim — on the floor.

Pop king Jackson will be joined by "cool" king Steve McQueen, with a full-scale re-creation of Twitchell's first public work, a portrait of his favorite actor originally painted on a house in Hollywood.

The Jackson project was launched under the auspices of the Hollywood Arts Council. Council President Nyla Arslanian said that the council was interested in a Kent Twitchell mural first; Jackson was selected later as the subject. Arslanian said that payment was to be arranged between Jackson and Twitchell.

Twitchell said preparatory work had already been done on the building when the project was put on hold in 1993. "I was never told why," the artist says. "It was three years of my life, and no one ever saw it."

That was the year that Jackson was investigated for allegations that he had molested a 13-year-old boy. Twitchell refused to speculate on the role the investigation and accompanying publicity may have played in scuttling the project, and Jackson did not respond to a request for comment. Twitchell did say it became difficult to reach Jackson because attorneys formed a protective circle around the pop star.

Arslanian said that Jackson's legal problems had nothing to do with the project's cancellation. She attributed it to concerns about the safety of the required adhesive materials on a historic structure.

Whatever the cause of the project's abrupt shutdown, Twitchell believes there is a new interest in the pop star, who was never charged after the 1993 allegations and was acquitted of a different set of child molestation charges in 2005. He cites Jackson's quickly sold-out series of concerts in London, which begin in July, as evidence that the he is experiencing a career renaissance.

"He's surfacing out of that now, getting some good notice," Twitchell said. "We've all had our problems, we've all done things wrong or been accused of things we didn't do. It's not for me to judge."

The Jackson mural is too big to display in full at the LOOK Gallery. Instead, the artist plans to mount part of it on a 20-foot wall, then roll out an additional 20 to 30 feet of it on the floor. The 150 sheets that make up the mural are painted on a synthetic, nonwoven material.

For the mural, Twitchell shot more than 100 photos of Jackson dressed in the pastel suit from the video for "Smooth Criminal," a song from his 1987 album "Bad."

"Originally when I talked to him, he wanted black leather, but I said I really thought the 'Smooth Criminal' outfit would be better because it really reminds you of Hollywood in the '30s, with the Fred Astaires and the Cary Grants, and he just loved that," Twitchell said.

Twitchell said he worked on the preliminary concepts at Jackson's Neverland Ranch near Santa Barbara, then brought Jackson to a soundstage in Hollywood for more
photos.

"I wanted him to swing out so his coattails would be flying, I just wanted to get that one perfect shot — I could always bring in a head from there, or a hand from there," said Twitchell, whose work allows the luxury of reassembling body parts from multiple photos.

"Twitch," as Jackson called him, made "five or six" visits to Neverland, where the two played with Jackson's animals and discussed art and music. Jackson made him promise to make the mural "the best thing you've ever done."

In the case of "Ed Ruscha Monument," Twitchell settled his lawsuit against the U.S. government and 11 other defendants in 2008, for $1.1 million, believed to be the largest amount ever awarded under the federal Visual Artists Rights Act or the California Art Preservation Act. Both laws prohibit desecration, alteration or destruction of certain works of public art without giving the artist 90 days to allow for the option of removing it.

"I would have been a monster to let it go; the precedent that it would have set for public art would have been terrible — we had to fight it," Twitchell said. He has until June to decide whether to remove the mural or try to restore it in its current location.

Negotiations have begun to re-create "Ed Ruscha" on a side of the L.A. Mart. He also has plans to breathe new life into his Freeway Lady mural.

Since 2004, plans have been in the works to re-create the mural on the side of the Valley Institute of Visual Art in Sherman Oaks, but the gallery's board president, Susan Kuss, said fears of vandalism led gallery officials to suggest re-creating it on an interior wall.

Twitchell is amenable to the idea — but also plans to make an outdoor statement by painting the Freeway Lady's afghan flowing out through high windows in the building.

"And inside, we'll put the Freeway Lady in such a way that if we become more, I hate the word, more civilized, she can always be taken down and put up outdoors."

Posted in Architecture, art and artists | Comments Off on The Old Woman of the Freeway

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist


 Feb. 19, 1957, Hedda hopper

Feb. 19, 1957: Hedda Hopper says, “Dick Widmark, back from England after locationing for 'Saint Joan,' in which he played the Dauphin, says, 'We had bad weather throughout the entire stay. I took a flat when I first went there but moved into the Hotel Connaught after two weeks — it was too dreary being alone.' Dick says Jean Seberg, newcomer who plays Saint Joan, is amazing. 'She has composure, poise and confidence. Otto Preminger surrounded her with top actors and she worked with them like a veteran." 

Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Movie Star Mystery Photo


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

Update: As many people guessed, this is Anna Sten, above, in a 1932 publicity photo.

 
 

Anna Sten; Actress Imported by Goldwyn


Tuesday November 16, 1993

By MYRNA OLIVER,
TIMES STAFF WRITER

2010_0219_mystery_photo_02 Anna Sten, the exotic and beautiful Russian actress brought to Hollywood by Samuel Goldwyn as a second Garbo but eventually tagged "Goldwyn's folly," has died. She was believed to be 84.

Miss Sten, who had lived in Beverly Hills for many years after her acting career sputtered out, died Friday in her Manhattan home of cardiac arrest.

The American producer brought her to Hollywood in the early 1930s and waged an extensive publicity campaign, determined to create another Garbo or Dietrich aura around the sultry beauty.

In 1934, Miss Sten starred in Goldwyn's "Nana" and "We Live Again," and a year later in his "The Wedding Night" with Gary Cooper, Ralph Bellamy and Walter Brennan.

Critic Leonard Maltin, commenting in his 1993 Movie and Video Guide, assailed the first film as "producer Samuel Goldwyn's first attempt to make a new Garbo out of exotic but wooden Sten." He dismissed the last as "producer Samuel Goldwyn's third and final attempt to make Anna Sten a new Garbo."

American audiences never warmed up to Miss Sten. Faced with poor box office response, Goldwyn conceded that he had made one of the few mistakes in his career–a costly one that led to Miss Sten's sobriquet in the industry as Goldwyn's folly. He terminated her contract.

Historians have variously recorded the actress's date of birth as 1907, 1908 or 1910, but generally accept that she was born Dec. 3, 1908, in Kiev, Ukraine. Named Annel (Anjuschka) Stenskaja Sudakevich, she was the daughter of a Russian ballet master and a Swedish mother.

After working as a waitress, she began her acting career with the Moscow Art Theatre and made her screen debut in the 1927 Russian film "The Girl With the Hat Box." With a few more Russian films on her resume, she went to Germany where her work in "The Murderer Dimitri Karamazov" caught Goldwyn's attention.

After Goldwyn dumped her, Miss Sten went to England, where she made "A Woman Alone" and "Two Who Dared" in 1936. She returned to the United States and made a few more films, some for her second husband, independent producer Eugene Frenke.

Her work included "Exile Express" in 1939, "The Man I Married" in 1940, "So Ends Our Night" in 1941, "Chetniks" and "They Came to Blow Up America" in 1943, "Three Russian Girls" in 1944, "Let's Live a Little" in 1948, "Soldier of Fortune" in 1955, "Runaway Girls" in 1956 and "The Nun and the Sergeant" in 1962.

In 1960, Miss Sten appeared briefly on Broadway as Jenny in "The Threepenny Opera" and toured with the play.

But she devoted most of her later life to semiprofessional painting.

Widowed at her death, Miss Sten had been married to Russian film director Fedor Ozep before her marriage to Frenke.

 
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. 

The answer to last week's mystery star: Louise Beavers!

2010_0216_mystery_photo

Los Angeles Times file photo
Update: Anna Sten in “Nana.”

Here’s another picture of our mystery woman.

Feb. 17, 2010, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo
Update: Anna Sten and Robert Barrat in “School for Sabotage,” retitled “They Came to Blow Up America.”

Here’s another photo of our mystery guest with a mystery companion. Please congratulate Anne Papineau, Eve Golden, Dewey Webb, Nick Santa Maria, Pamela Porter, Jenny M, Kylie and Rick Scott for identifying her.

Feb. 18, 2010, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo
Update: Anna Sten and Fredric March in a photo dated Aug. 6, 1934.

And here’s a photo of our mystery guest with a (not even slightly) mysterious companion. Please congratulate Mike Hawks and Mary Mallory for identifying her.

Feb. 19, 2010, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

An elegant picture of our mystery lady, Anna Sten, in a 1956 publicity photo for “Runaway Daughters.”   Please congratulate JPS, Carmen, Periwinkle, rdare, James Curtis, Agnieszka, William, Angus, Megan, Joan Y. Compagno, Dru Duniway and Krauma for identifying her.
Posted in Mystery Photo, Photography | 54 Comments

Governor Halts Chessman Execution

 
Feb. 19, 1960, Times Cover  

Caryl Chessman is prepared for the gas chamber, but gets a last-minute reprieve – for now. 

Feb. 19, 1960, Caryl Chessman
Feb. 19, 1960, Caryl Chessman
Feb. 19, 1960, Nixon at Olympics

Vice President Richard Nixon visits the winter Olympics at Squaw Valley.

Feb. 19, 1960, Nixon at Olympics

Feb. 19, 1960, Compost

An experiment in composting, “one of the disposal systems of the future.”
 

Feb. 19, 1960: Vice President Richard Nixon says, "My theory is this — play the game fairly but play it hard. I quarrel with the thought that we shouldn't mind losing. I feel that the loser should be bitterly disappointed, but that he should take his disappointment out on himself, not on his opponent. And this applies to politics, economics and to education as well as sports."

Posted in #courts, Environment, Front Pages, Richard Nixon, Sports | Comments Off on Governor Halts Chessman Execution