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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Feb. 8, 1960
Posted in #courts, Caryl Chessman, Columnists, Front Pages, Homicide
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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist
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| Feb. 8, 1946: Hedda Hopper writes, "Twentieth is readying 'The Ghost and Mrs. Muir' for Rex Harrison's next." |
UCLA’s Larry Brown
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Los Angeles Speedway to Open
Posted in Architecture, Sports, Transportation
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Skeletal Remains Partially Identified
David Dougherty and Frances Young are arrested in Bloomington, Ill, on charges of defying the orders of a Nebraska court by living as man and wife, even though they are uncle and niece.
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| Feb. 8, 1910: A skeleton found on Mt. Tamalpais may be a young woman known as “Dutch” who had been a student in a hair salon. |
Jim Murray on the Olympics
Posted in #Jim Murray, Columnists, Sports
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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist
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| Feb. 7, 1945: Hedda Hopper says John Wayne is replacing Robert Taylor in “They Were Expendable,” based on a book by W.L. White. |
Through the Lens – Finch Trial
| Photograph by John Malmin / Los Angeles Times March 5, 1960: Court Clerk Mel La Valley shows items from the so-called murder kit in the Finch trial. I wonder if John Malmin put a light in the briefcase to get what news photographers of the 1940s and ’50s sometimes called “criminal light.”
I haven’t been able to find any photos of murder victim Barbara Jean Finch. The Times evidently didn’t publish any images of her. I enlarged this detail from Malmin’s photo. She certainly lived in terror before she was killed.
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| Feb. 7, 1960: Gene Blake summarizes Dr. R. Bernard Finch’s testimony and sets the stage for next week’s proceedings. |
Posted in #courts, Homicide, Photography
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The Complicated Geometry of the Eternal Triangle
| “That Guiltiest Feeling,” by Clare Briggs.
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| Feb. 7, 1920: Talk about complicated. Schoolteacher Frieda C. Boehncke was in love with Phillip Eicholz but discovered he was married. Eicholz's wife sued Boehncke for $2,500 that her husband evidently gave her. The judge ruled the money was a gift. Boehncke did repay a $200, however. |
Rancher Killed Outside Old Mission Winery
| The 1910 auto show is coming Feb. 19! |
| Feb. 7, 1910: The story about the shooting of William Moss outside the Old Mission Winery could have come out of the Old West, for it refers to a horse and wagon, ranching and a blacksmith shop. It’s a striking contrast with the recent coverage of airplanes at the Aviation Meet and even the upcoming auto show. The early 20th century is an acquired taste, but I find it a fascinating period.
William Manriguez was eventually charged with killing Moss, but The Times never reported the outcome of the trial. He was described as an even-tempered laborer who blamed the slaying on being drunk. “Booze did it. I wish there was not a drop on earth,” he said. |
Posted in #courts, Homicide, Transportation
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Matt Weinstock, Feb. 6, 1960
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Call of Wilds Fades
Six months ago there were five, a month ago three. Yesterday there was the shrill, mournful cry of the quail again. Soon one bird flew down. Ah, I thought, the scout. But he sat alone on the ground for half an hour, then took off. He'd been calling to his mates, but apparently they're no longer around. He looked very sad and lonely. Meanwhile, the bulldozers continue to rip away the brush in the nearby hills. ::
Explanation for the tie-up is that the Central traffic division takes over policing of sports events with full staff only when attendance reaches 25,000. Otherwise University division, with an inadequate force, handles it. Attendance Monday was 10,202. ::
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TV SPECTER ::
AT REGULAR intervals a suburban country club holds family night, a feature of which is a $100 cash prize drawing. Members' names are placed in a hat, someone pulls one out, and the winner is announced. At a recent drawing the emcee looked at the first name pulled and said, "We'll have to draw another." This was done. Afterward, to those who were curious, he explained that the first name drawn had been that of an absent member, Dr. R. Bernard Finch. ::
IT WAS TOLD to Stu Galbraith as having happened in a Hollywood saloon during the mid-afternoon lull. A stranger came in and asked the bartender what was good for hiccups. The bartender said nothing, then whirled and slapped the fellow in the face with the bar rag. The fellow bellowed, mayhem in his attitude. But the bartender, soothed, "See, your hiccups are gone." "Not me!" the stranger screamed, "my wife, out in the car!" ::
Monday's child is glum and blue, Why not? He has no burlyque. ::
During the intermission between pictures, while a Bugs Bunny cartoon was shown, the manager appeared in the lobby where Lewis and others were having a smoke, and said, "Better get back inside, folks, it's the only laugh you'll get all night." ::
To put it another way, have you etoain shrdlued lately? |
Posted in Columnists, Politics, Richard Nixon
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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Feb. 6, 1960
Posted in #courts, Columnists, Front Pages, Homicide, JFK, Politics, Religion
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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist
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| Feb. 6, 1944: Hedda Hopper profiles Louis Mayer, who was marking 20 years at MGM. Notice that she mentions Selig’s studio on Mission. And she says she was in Mayer's first picture, “Virtuous Wives.” |
Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood
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Stuntman Dies in Fall From Plane
“The Days of Real Sport,” by Clare Briggs.
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Feb. 6, 1920: A ghastly story. Stuntman Earle (or Earl) Burgess dies after performing stunts on the wing of a plane. He was clinging to the left landing skid when he became exhausted and let go. His body struck two high-tension wires, causing a short-circuit, and landed in a plowed field. Burgess has one credit on imdb, “Sky Eye,” but it’s not clear if this is the film in which he was killed. |
Posted in Comics, Film, Hollywood, Obituaries
1 Comment
Through the Lens – Aviation Meet
| Los Angeles Times file photo |
| Dec. 25, 1910: These photos were actually taken at the second Aviation Meet, held at the end of 1910. The aircraft in the foreground is the Bleriot monoplane of James Radley. The aircraft in the upper right is a Wright plane flown by Archie Hoxsey. The plane in the upper left is an Antoinette flown by Hubert Latham. And yes, someone glued several photos together to make this composite – and drew the blurred propeller. |
Posted in Photography, Transportation
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Matt Weinstock, Feb. 5, 1960
| Kindly Artist
"Of course," he said. He went into the next room where he had another batch of finished paintings, returned and said, "Here's one for $7." She was pleased with it and bought it. One of his students who had observed the transaction asked why he did it — $7 was less than the cost of the canvas. "Just because she didn't have any money," Franks said quietly, "didn't mean she wouldn't appreciate it." ::
IF IT'S timeless you're looking for, we've got it today. An audience-opinion card was received at MGM studio the other day from E.H.C. of Burbank — 33 years late. It was for showing of a movie "Slide Kelly Slide," starring Sally O'Neil, William Haines , Harry Carey and Karl Dane and, according to the date stamp on the card, was previewed Feb. 19, 1927. E.H.C.'s comment: "Just found the card. As I recall, the picture was OK." ::
NO TRUTH to the rumor that Our Leader plans to lead a posse to investigate and assemble a dossier on "the wild tribes of the inner mountains of Mexico." Meanwhile, much more seriously, an arrogant, gratuitous insult to half a million people hangs heavy in the air. ::
IT NEVER FAILS ::
In 1938, fleeing from Franco after her husband's death, she walked across the Pyrenees carrying her infant son Peter. Now 25, he survives her. She made her way to Vienna, where she appealed to U.S. Ambassador George Messersmith for a quota number to come to this country. When he asked why she wished to enter the United States, she recited the Bill of Rights, taught her by American volunteers in the Spanish Civil War. Years later, when Messersmith was ambassador to Mexico, she called on him and asked why he had expedited her entry. "I felt you would be a good citizen," he said. Oddly enough, Messersmith died Jan. 29, in Houston, at 76. Mrs. Wentworth was taught to fly by Earnst Udet, a famous German aviator, and accompanied her husband on distant trips. One time their plane went into a spin when her husband blacked out at 17,000 ft. over the Andes. She righted the plane with one hand and clapped an oxygen mask on him with the other. A woman of great force and character, Boesen recalls. ::
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AROUND TOWN — Goodie Knight has been giving the race results on KCOP, filling in for an ailing sports announcer. A connoisseur in this matter reports he does fine . . . Oops, Mrs. Carmen Perez, an officer of the Bell Gardens High School PTA, received a notice announcing a meeting of the "broad members" . . . Some customers thought the headline "Finch to Tell How Wife Cooled" was a bit macabre, inadvertently, of course . . . And did you notice that William Clauson will sing Saturday night at the Friday Morning Club playhouse?
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Posted in Caryl Chessman, Columnists, Matt Weinstock
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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Feb. 5, 1960
A Jailhouse Pen Pal Is Heard From Again
The return address was 306 N Broadway. The County Jail. Jet, you will remember, is the man who ferociously dedicates his life to the proposition that a woman's place is in the home. Or, more specifically, in the kitchen. And barefoot. His intensity has landed him into headlines, psychiatric wards and, currently, the County Jail where he is awaiting trial for sending death threats to a handful of Superior Court justices. Jet and I met a year ago, after he had sent me a rather startling printed appeal. It read, in part: "To divorced men, all the men and womanly wise females. "Do you believe we should and must have: "2- Laws that will give a GOOD man the legal power to securely hold and protect his home and family against the whimsy and unbridled emotions of his dreamy, unrealistic, over-romantic mate? "It is man's fault! We let our guard down. If we have any guts left we can restore men and women to their respective domains as nature intended. "I'm ready to give the remainder of my life to restoration of male-female identity in America. "I'm not a woman hater — I love 'female' women. "ARE YOU READY TO FIGHT?" Personally, I wasn't quite ready, I'm a little too timid to fight. But I did print his warning in the column. And we became friendly as a result. When I finally met him he told me, as I had pretty actively suspected, that he was the victim of a divorce in which his three children had been taken from him. Subsequently, Jet appeared on a TV interview with me and argued, quite lucidly, I might add, that our whole social structure was collapsing because women were so rapidly "defeminizing."
He charged that women themselves didn't really like this reversal of their natural role. They would prefer being the coy, dainty things they were intended to be. But today's unmasculine male won't let them. The result of this interview was astounding. I was bombarded with mail saying that Simrell was absolutely right. And almost all the letters were from women. But then, in his desperate struggle to put our houses back in order, Jet did a grotesque thing to bring attention to his cause. He called the police one night and told them he had just killed a mother and her three kids. He gave them his home address and hung up. The police arrived and found that he had actually slaughtered a nanny-goat and her brood. He was hustled off for psychiatric observation. He wasn't heard from again until headlines revealed his threats against the L.A. judges. I wrote about it at the time it happened. And today, a couple of months later, I finally got a letter from him bitterly accusing me of desertion.
My Integrity's Okay
Of course, I have to say it again. The antics of my friend, Jet, were berserk. But I haven't deserted the cause. I'll tell you something. Put aside his bizarre behavior for a moment,and consider just his message. There's more than a germ of truth in his argument that what ails us is the emancipated woman. I'll tell you. But, look! Don't you tell my wife.
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Posted in #courts, Columnists, Front Pages, Homicide, Paul Coates
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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist
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| Feb. 5, 1943: As usual, the World War II papers are hard to read. Hedda Hopper says Erich von Stroheim and Zasu Pitts, who worked together in “Greed,” saw each other for the first time in years. |
Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood
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A year ago, at infrequent intervals, seven quail used to fly into my yard and stride about in their chesty manner, scratch around like chickens and after awhile take off. One would come first to scout the area to insure their safety, then the others would follow. They were a delight to watch.