Random Shot – Amelia Earhart, 1936

May 27, 1937, Amelia Earhart 
Los Angeles Times file photo
I recently went through The Times’ photographs from Amelia Earhart’s 1937 flight; the one on which she disappeared. I think this is one of my favorites. She’s posing with the airplane as it’s being built in Burbank in a photo dated May 27, 1936.

Posted in Obituaries, Transportation | Comments Off on Random Shot – Amelia Earhart, 1936

It Happens in the Best-Regulated Families

 Dec. 24, 1919, Briggs “It Happens in the Best-Regulated Families” by Clare Briggs

Dec. 24, 1919, Snow-Flake Sodas 
 

Dec. 24, 1919: Then there was the day Snow Flake Sodas decided to rethink its logo.

Posted in Comics, Food and Drink | Comments Off on It Happens in the Best-Regulated Families

The Times Takes a Dim View of Interracial Marriage

 Dec. 24, 1909, Marriage
Dec. 24, 1909, Marriage  

March 11, 1909, Aoki-Emery

March 11, 1909: Helen Gladys Emery and Gunjiro Aoki announce their engagement. The Times notes that a marriage between them would be illegal in California.

March 27, 1909, Aoki-Emery

March 27, 1909: Emery and Aoki travel to Seattle in their attempt to get married.

April 11, 1909, Aoki-Emery

April 11, 1909: The Times reports the Aoki-Emery marriage in Seattle, but notes that they are buying a home through an intermediary.

June 22, 1910, Aoki-Emery

June 22, 1910: The Aoki family comes to Los Angeles in an attempt to escape publicity, renting a house at 226 E. 28th St.

Nov. 11, 1933, Aoki-Emery

Nov. 11, 1933: Helen Gladys Oakie seeks the restoration of her American citizenship, which she lost by marrying Aoki. According to California death records, a woman named Helen Gladys Eddy, with the maiden name Emery, died in 1947. 

Dec. 24, 1909: As I have noted before, I rarely republish The Times’ editorials because they are frequently embarrassing and this piece on the marital problems of Gladys Helen Emery and Gunjiro Aoki is a prime example.  An anonymous scribe hurled some vicious barbs at the couple, tut-tutting like an elderly uncle at the folly of a white woman marrying a man who was only part human.

Posted in Eurasians, Religion | 3 Comments

Matt Weinstock, Dec. 23, 1959

  Dec. 23, 1959, Peanuts

Dec. 23, 1959, Peanuts

Erring Blacklisters Sorry

Matt Weinstock     A week after it was disclosed, the strange case of Louis Pollock is still the big talk among Hollywood writers.

    Pollock has written a dozen screenplays and 30 television plays in the past five years.  He sold only one.  But he kept banging away at his typewriter, hoping, as all writers hope, that he'd hit.  It never occurred to him that anything was wrong.

    A few weeks ago an executive in the entertainment business asked him about his background.  Pollock, puzzled, wondered why he was asking the questions.  The executive told him a Louis Pollack — with an a — was "on the list" and his work was not acceptable. 

Dec. 23, 1959, Drinking    POLLOCK CHECKED
the House-Un-American Activities Committee and received a letter apologizing for any embarrassment caused him.  It was a case of mistaken identity.  A San Diego businessman named Louis Pollack was called as a witness but refused to testify before the committee there in April, 1934.

     Louis Pollock's five-year writing blight is presumably over but the case has a sensitive subject — a blacklist.  Writers have long suspected there is one.  Film and TV brass have steadfastly denied it.
 
   Now writers are talking about an investigation of the self-appointed blacklisters.

::


    WHEN
Sidi Mohammed Morocco applied for citizenship in 1929 he spoke virtually no English and through the ministrations of a busy and unsympathetic clerk he was naturalized as Moe Barada.

    A few days ago he appeared in Burbank Superior Court with a petition to have his true name restored, which Judge V. P. Lucas granted.  So he isn't Moe anymore.

::


    HIDING PLACE
Our Christmas gifts
We keep on deposit
For weeks in a room
Called our Santa Clauset.
  Dec. 23, 1959, LoCigno  –RICHARD ARMOUR

::


     AS REPORTED HERE,
photog Emil Ouhel had difficulty unearthing the Eskimo phrase for Merry Christmas to put on a greeting card.  Best guess was Chreeseema Ek Pin.  Further research revealed the Eskimos had no Christmas as such until the Christians introduced it, so there is no actual Eskimo word for it.  However, Emil learned that the word Gha -Mai means greetings on a festive occasion and that's what's on his card.  Incidentally, when he inquired of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce about it, he was informed that Eskimos speak English now. Gha-Mai, everyone.

::


    WHENEVER A
suspicious-sized package arrives in most offices the procedure is usually to shake it to determine if it gurgles.  Well, a new, no-nonsense printed tab has appeared on packages this year stating "Rattle OK" . . . Mattel's Yuletide gift triumph is a two-stage missile propelled skyward by air and water pressure.  It is two-feet high and has a warhead with a concealed cap, which explodes on landing.

::

    A MAN IN A downtown saloon:  "I say let the amateurs have Christmas.  They're the ones who create all the trouble and get the cops down on us professional drinkers!" . . . For Christmas a Laguna  Beach gal named imageEster always gives friends angels sculpted out of soap.  One recipient remarked, "Gosh, even the angels are only 99.44% pure this season!"

::


    AROUND TOWN —
Edna Singer, a dressmaker, drew license plates with the letters SEW . . . P.B. Ayers reports this sign in  a Huntington Park pet shop:  "Not responsible for livestock left here by act of God" . . . A bus stop bench on Florence Ave. advertises, "Around the corner — rooms for men with refrigeration" . . . The spectacular 100 member Polish Ballet at the Philharmonic Auditorium is part of the cultural exchange program with that country, approved by the State Department and didn't require Nikita's OK.

   

 

 

 

   
   

 

Posted in Columnists, Comics, LAPD, Matt Weinstock, Mickey Cohen | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock, Dec. 23, 1959

Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 23, 1959

 Dec. 23, 1959, Mirror Cover

A Refugee From Terrible Infamy

Paul Coates    I talked to a man-come-out-of-hiding last night, a man who's been living precarious inches out of notorious headlines.

    He's 33 years old now, but since the age of 7 he's been living under an assumed name. 

    He's had to.  Because, in spite of the fact that he's a peace-loving, church-going man whose only brush with the law in his life was a single traffic violation years ago, he's got a name that he, his children, and possibly even his grandchildren will never live down.

    The name he was born with is Touhy.  Tom Touhy.

    His father, whose violent, gangland-style murder made headlines last week, was Roger (The Terrible) Touhy.

    We met through a mutual friend.  And his willingness to talk to me, or any newspaperman, came primarily out of his concern over a printed report that he was "out to avenge his father's death."

    "I certainly wish you could straighten that out," he said, in a disarmingly boyish voice.  "I don't want to get mixed up in anything like that."

Dec. 23, 1959, Tom Touhy     Then, his point made, Tom Touhy wasn't unwilling to discuss any part of his life as a refugee from infamy.

    "I remember when I just started in grammar school," he said.  "The other kids used to tease me and say my father was a jailbird.  I used to ask my mother about it and she'd say, 'Don't believe them.'

    "Naturally, I went by what my mother said.  But when I was 7, we moved out of Chicago, to Florida, and changed our name.  She raised us there — my brother and me — and I never knew until I was 16 years old who my father really was.

    "She always told us that our father had some trouble about taxes and was living in the Canary Islands.

    "She's a wonderful woman," Tom Touhy added.  "All her life, she carried that burden.  I've got to respect her for keeping it from us."

    "How did you find out who your father was?"  I asked him.

    "In 1942 he escaped from prison.  That made headlines.  That's how I found out."

    A year later, on his 17th birthday, Tom Touhy joined the Seabees.  It wasn't until he was honorably discharged that he met the man whom his vague childhood memories established as his father.

Dec. 23, 1959, Furs     "I was 21," he said.  "That long corridor in the prison — I remember that. I walked down it — it seemed like forever.  Then we shook hands, but what we talked about, that's kind of blacked out.  I just remember that he'd excuse himself now and then and say he had something to do and step out of the room.  I knew he was going out to cry and then coming back."

    After that meeting, the visits were frequent.  "But we never talked about much except trying to get him out of jail.  My mother believed that he was innocent and so did I.  He didn't kidnap anybody, I still believe that.

    "But I never really got to know him."  he added, "until he finally was released from jail last month.  I saw him just about every day.  The day before he was killed we sat down and talked for hours about the future.

    "He wanted to go to Florida and go into the fishing equipment business.  I work in construction now. I make $152 a week.  I've got my daughter, who's 11.  But I was willing to make the move and go into it with him.  The only reason why I stayed in Chicago was so I could visit him in prison.

    "We talked about fishing lures and plastics and dies," Tom Touhy continued.  "He picked up a lot of information about them in prison.  He just wanted to live out the rest of his life peacefully, honestly."

An Old Man, but a Big Name

    "Then what, do you think," I asked "was behind his murder?"

    The slight young man paused before answering.  Then he said, "There's still a mob in Chicago.  I just have the feeling that it was somebody small in the mob who was trying to impress somebody big.  Roger Touhy may be an old man who wouldn't hurt anybody, but he's still a big name.

    "That's who I think it was," he said. 

Dec. 23, 1959, Abby     Tom Touhy and I talked for quite a while.  In answer to my questions, he said that only a few of his closest friends knew his real name, his real identity.  He's strong in the PTA, he said, chairman of its entertainment committee last year.  And he's very active in his church.

    But still he's the son of Roger the Terrible.

    And that, in our society, is a sin that one man is too small to live down in a lifetime.

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 23, 1960, Hedda Hopper 

Dec. 23, 1960: “Mary Martin invited the sons and daughters of radio and TV writers to a rehearsal of ‘Peter Pan.’ They were assembled on stage and she flew down to greet them. ‘Why, you're a girl!’ said one smart little lad. She explained Peter has always been played by a girl, invited them all to a matinee of ‘Sound of Music.’ ”

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San Marino Pelted With Furs From Mystery Airplane


Dec. 23, 1959, Cover

Dec. 23, 1959: "Thousands of dollars worth of fur pelts were mysteriously jettisoned from a low-flying airplane over San Marino and San Gabriel yesterday. One large gunny sack of the valuable pelts crashes through a patio roof at 1070 Kendall Drive, San Gabriel, missing the owner, Mrs. L.B. Young by a few inches. The lanai was almost demolished."

Dec. 23, 1959, Gilda Gray
Dec. 23, 1959, Gilda Gray

Look at the length of this obit on Gilda Gray, compared to the six paragraphs given to Raymond Chandler.

 

Dec. 23, 1959, Films

The National Board of Review calls “The Nun’s Story” the best film of 1959. The other films in board's top 10 are "Ben-Hur," "Anatomy of a Murder," "The Diary of Anne Frank," "Middle of the Night," "The Man Who Understood Women," "Some Like It Hot," "Suddenly, Last Summer," "On the Beach" and "North by Northwest."

Dec. 23, 1959, Sports

Pete Elliott leaves Cal to become football coach at Illinois, where he will be the rival of his brother Chalmers "Bump" Elliott of Michigan.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Obituaries, Sports | 3 Comments

Man Accused of Killing Girlfriend Says He Was Insane

image

A tip on decorating the Christmas tree, but don’t use candles.

Dec. 23, 1919, Rattlesnake

Harry S. New Jr. and his pet rattlesnake.

Dec. 23, 1919, Harry S. New

Dec. 23, 1919, Harry S. New

I realize this is unreadable, but the headline is wonderful.

July 6, 1919, Freda Lesser

Dec. 23, 1919: Harry S. New Jr., known as “Nutty New,” the “reputed” son of a U.S. senator from Indiana, was charged with killing Freda Lesser over the mistaken belief that she was pregnant. [The Times described him as a “reputed” son because part of New’s defense  was that he was insane over concerns that he was illegitimate].

New said: "I thought that Freda was going to become a mother and she told me that she didn't want the child and refused to become a mother, so I shot her to keep her from what she meant to do, and now you tell me it was all a lie. I did what at the time I thought was right. I wanted to save her from what I thought she was going to do. I am ready to pay the price for my act."  

In January 1920, New was convicted and sentenced to 10 years to life in prison.

June 19, 1931, New Paroled 

June 19, 1931: Harry S. New Jr. is paroled. He apparently died June 15, 1950, according to state records. 

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Young Woman Plays a Somber Reverie, Then Kills Herself

Dec. 23, 1909, Suicides 

Dec. 23, 1909 — Here’s a little more proof that the past wasn’t really a kinder, simpler time; there’s death in almost every line. Esther Bauer, 22, of San Francisco plays sad music at the piano before hanging herself … Edward Kinney of Bay City, Mich., tries to write a farewell note in blood after shooting himself … French authorities determine that the widow of a prominent bank official was murdered and thrown from a train.

And this item from Philadelphia: “Rather than face her six children Christmas morning without any presents or the money to buy them, Mrs. Sarah Ennis of this city last night went into her kitchen, turned on the gas and ended her life.”

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Matt Weinstock, Dec. 22, 1959

 

Dec. 22, 1959, Pogo

World Refugee Year

Matt Weinstock     As she sorted out her memories on her return from a pleasure trip around the world many months ago, actress Marsha Hunt found herself deeply troubled by recollection of endless hordes of refugees in Hong Kong, Calcutta, the Gaza Strip — almost everywhere against the Western Hemisphere.

    She'd seen diseased, maimed, ragged and hungry people sleep in alleys and doorways, being punished for crimes they didn't commit. 
    Last summer, when she accompanied her husband, writer Robert Presnell, to Europe, where he did a movie script, she first heard about World Refugee Year.  It began last July.  Now it is half over and most Americans don't know about it.  It hasn't received the press International Geophysical Year did.  The fact remains that 15 million people in the world are homeless and destitute, living in limbo.
Dec. 22, 1959, Dodgers     WRY WAS set up by the UN to call attention to the refugees' desperate plight but the money allotted is only a fraction of what is needed.  WRY was proposed by England and co-sponsored by the United States but of the 63 nations which signed many are not participating actively.  The ball is being carried mostly by church groups- the American Friends Service, Maryknoll, particularly the World Council of Churches and, of course, CARE.
    "The closer a person gets to the problem," Marsha Hunt said, "the more he is likely to despair.  It's a global headache and isn't likely to be solved in our lifetimes.  The best we can do with present funds is to keep these people alive.  It takes 8 cents a day to do this but 17 cents a day would take them off the world dole and make many of them self supporting."
  
OBSESSED WITH
the critical need, she has been temporarily declining film roles to put together an hour TV program designed to call attention to World Refugee Year.  It will include scenes from camps, and film notables, including Bing Crosby, Irene Dunne and Louis Jourdan, will appear.  The program will be shown on Channel 13 on Jan. 20 at 8 p.m. and later, by tape, all over the nation.
    "People were moved by the Hungarian Crisis a few years ago and opened their purses and the doors to their homes," she said.  "We hope we can make them aware of a greater problem, if less dramatic."

    She doesn't say so but beautiful Marsha doubtless hopes her efforts — she is working without funds, without even an office — may be her Christmas contribution to humanity.
 
::
 
    LAST THURSDAY, after the Christmas party at Art Center School on W 3rd St., the 5-foot tree, magnificently decorated by the talented and imaginative students, was picked up by arrangement and taken to Unitarian church, 2936 W 8th St.  After serving for two Christmas parties there it will be taken to the Indian Center, 2920 Beverly Blvd., for two more parties, one for 600 Indian children.  Total, five parties, making it easily the tree with the most mileage in town.
 
::
 
Dec. 22, 1959, Banned Book     A REPORTER on the paper La Sicilia in the town of Siracusa, Sicily, recently interviewed Van Heflin, there with a film unit making "Under 10 Flags."  Van, a football fan, mentioned that the team from Syracuse, N.Y., was No. 1 in the United States.  When the story was printed the town suddenly found a great bond with its namesake city and, Van writes, has gone football crazy.  It has arranged for wire coverage of Syracuse's Cotton Bowl game with Texas and, although he has never seen a football game, the mayor is sending a wire to his team, wishing it well on New Year's Day. Siracusa, that is.
 
::
 
    ENCLOSED IN lithograph tycoon Henry Davis' Christmas card, a nativity scene, is this printed message:  "Several years ago I loaned someone a copy of 'Honey in the Horn,' by H. L. Davis. Please go to your book shelf and find my book.  Don't be ashamed to let me know you are the guilty one.  I don't care about that.  I just want my book back" . . . Publicist George West's cards bear the post office cancellation, "George West, Tex."  Yes, there is such a town.

::

    A HURRYING motorist on Ventura Blvd. kept sounding his horn at a slower moving car and when he finally passed it he yelled, "You ought to be driving a hearse!"  To which the law abider retorted, "You ought to be riding in one!" . . . Howard Williams reports this sign in a Studio City store window:  "Payola checks cashed here."
 

 
   
   

 

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 22, 1959

Dec. 22, 1959, Cover

Payola Suspected in Fourth Grade

Paul Coates    NEWS ITEM:  WESTBURY, N.Y., Dec. 21 — Teachers here have been warned against students who try to curry favor with "Christmas payola."

    Supt. of Schools Cecil I. Rice sent teachers a memorandum indicating they may only accept gifts which "represent love and respect."

    The whole ugly mess first came to light one day last week.  Nothing might ever have been known about it if a disgruntled fourth-grader who lost in a spelling bee hadn't sent an anonymous note to the principal.

    "Ask Miss Fahrenheit," it challenged, "who brings her an apple every time there's going to be a spelldown.  Aren't his initials N. F.?  And doesn't that stand for Newton Figg?"

    The principal read the note with deep shock.  Then he laid it gingerly on his desk as though it might explode.  The implication in it was terrifying.  Miss Fahrenheit was a fourth-grade teacher with 32 years of unblemished service behind her.  And young Figg had become something of a school legend.  He consistently won every fourth-grade spelling bee.  No child could stand up to him.

    This serious charge of fraud, though anonymous, had to be investigated.  The principal immediately called for Miss Fahrenheit.  And, after being confronted with the note, she tearfully and somewhat nervously denied that she had ever supplied Newton Figg with the correct spelling in advance.

    As she left the office, dabbing at her eyes with a hanky, the Figg boy was waiting to enter.  He studied her closely for a moment.  "You say anything?"  he hissed.

    "Nothing," she hissed back.  The lad nodded, and walked in full of self-assurance.

Dec. 22, 1959, Gilda Gray

    "First off," he said, before the principal could say a word, "I would like to go on record that this entire procedure was uncalled for.

    "Procedure," he added, "p-r-o-c-e-d-u-r-e.  Procedure.  That's the word I won with a week ago last Friday."

    "Fine," the principal replied.  "But I'm afraid I must ask you a few questions.  Have you ever been given the correct spelling in advance of the spelldowns?"

    "I decline to answer on the ground that the question is an insult to the reputation I have built up in this school," Newton said indignantly.  "Everybody knows I can out-spell everybody.  Decline.  D-e-c-l-i-n-e.  Decline."

    "But it's true that you have been giving apples to Miss Fahrenheit, isn't it?"

    Newton hesitated for just a moment.  Then he replied: "Yes, it's true."

    The principal sighed unhappily.

    "But what's the big deal?" young Figg continued.  "That sort of thing has been going on for years.  Suddenly everybody makes a big tzimis out of it.

    "Tzimis," he added, "t-z-i- . . . "

    "Yes, yes," the principal interrupted, "But you can see how it looks.  You win every spelling bee.  And on the day of every spelling bee you bring the teacher an apple."

Without Strings

    "I bring her an apple," Figg said, barely disguising a sneer, "because it represents love and respect.  No strings attached."

    "You brought her an apple again this morning?"

    Newton nodded.

    "And you won again this morning?"

    "I win them all," the lad said cockily.  "You know that."

    "Would you," the principal asked weekly, "spell the word you won on?"

    "Sure," Figg snapped.  "The next to the last guy went under on ulterior.  U-l-t-e-r-i-o-r.  Ulterior.  Then the last guy couldn't handle motive.  M-o-t-i-v-e.  Motive."

Dec. 22, 1959, Abby

    The principal sighed with relief.  Putting his arm around the boy, he said warmly, "I should have known better, Newton.  You're just one of those unique children with a  positive genius for spelling.  Now, if you'll just give me a written statement to the effect that you were not bribing Mrs.  Fahrenheit, the matter will be closed."

    Figg reached for a pen and paper.  With his tongue sticking out of the corner of his mouth, he laboriously wrote:

    "I, Newton Figg, do not decline to state that there was no ulterior motive in the procedure where I gave an appel to the teacher."
   
   

   
   

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 22, 1959, Hedda Hopper 
Dec. 22, 1959: “Frank Sinatra went to see the Pat Wymore show in Vegas and immediately signed her for ‘Oceans 11.’ ”

Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

A Mystery Photo That Is Not Arnold Stang

anthony_brancato_mystery_photo Los Angeles Times file photo I have been told that this mystery photo from 2007 has been circulating on the Internet as Arnold Stang. Notice that when I originally posted the photo I said “Hint:  He’s not Arnold Stang.”

This fellow is Anthony Brancato, one of the victims in the August 6, 1951, “Two Tonys” murder.

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Firefighters Set Blazes to Draw Attention to Old Equipment

Dec. 22, 1959, Shah 

NEW QUEEN — The shah of Iran and bride Farah pose after their marriage in a Muslim ritual at his palace in Tehran. She is third wife of the shah, who divorced others after they failed to bear an heir.

Dec. 22, 1959, Shah

Dec. 22, 1959: Only a few months ago, 21-year-old Farah was studying architecture in Paris when she was first introduced to the shah. Today, in diamond tiara and bluish-gray gown by Dior, she began Queen Farah with the exchange of plain gold rings with Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.

Dec. 22, 1959, Shah

Dec. 22, 1959, Arson
image

Palos Verdes Estates volunteer firefighters say they were setting blazes to call attention to the city’s antiquated firefighting equipment.

Dec. 22, 1959, Story on Page One

The Story on Page One,” is opening Dec. 30.


Dec. 22, 1959, Sports

Sports editor Paul Zimmerman takes a look at Santa Anita, 25 years after it began experimenting with pari-mutuel wagering.
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51 Held in Gambling Raids


Dec. 22, 1919, Briggs 

“Oh, Man” by Clare Briggs.

Dec. 22, 1919, Vice Raid

Dec. 22, 1919: Detectives with the help of the “purity squad” raid several fan tan games and arrest 51 people. Notice the detectives’ names, especially that of McAfee, who is the infamous Guy McAfee. 

Feb. 21, 1960

The Times reports the death of Guy McAfee, Feb. 21, 1960. 

And yes, one of the other detectives in the gambling raids is Harry Raymond

Oct. 25, 1919, Gambling Raid

Oct. 25, 1919: Detectives Harry Raymond and Guy McAfee conduct a raid on gambling being conducted in the basement of the Del Monte bar.

The idea that two important figures – on opposite sides of the law – once worked together on the LAPD is one of the remarkable facets of Los Angeles history.

Posted in #courts, art and artists, City Hall, Comics, LAPD, Obituaries | 1 Comment

Pastor Accused of Stealing Church Funds, Eloping With Choir Member

Dec. 22, 1909, Cover

Dec. 22, 1909: I had a difficult time picking a story this morning because the entire page is fascinating. First there’s the pastor from a small town in Indiana who is accused of stealing money from his church and eloping with a member of the choir … Then there’s the boy who was bitten by a rabid dog … The young girl who died after being run over by a truck (The Times blamed the parents, who didn’t take her to a hospital out of “racial distrust” — they’re Italian, you see) … and a powerful “stray” electrical current that paralyzes a man working on the pipes beneath the firehouse of Engine Co. 7 and several firefighters who come to his aid.

Posted in Front Pages, health, LAPD, Religion | 1 Comment

Matt Weinstock, Dec. 21, 1959

  
image

Death in December

Matt Weinstock     The National Safety Council has focused its apprehension this Christmas on the office party.  Before me as I write this is its Drinking and Driving Fact Sheet, a sobering document.
 
  It begins, "During 11 months of the year, drinking is a factor in approximately 30% of all fatal accidents.  In December the figure jumps to 55%."

    Another punch line, "It takes at least three hours to oxidize (eliminate) one ounce of pure alcohol (about two cocktails)."

    And then this one, "Coffee or other stimulants will not offset the effects of alcohol."

    NOW JUST A MOMENT, NSC.  Are you telling us that drinking black coffee won't bring someone out of his alcoholic lassitude?  Are you stating that we've been wrong about its well known medicinal values?

image

Dec. 21, 1959, 1950s      You know, gentlemen, this could be heresy.  Don't you realize that black coffee is the traditional prop on which tottering humanity has depended for generations?  Why, it's as basic as the movie scene in which the unfrocked doctor, prevailed upon to perform a delicate operation or deliver a baby in a wilderness cabin, shouts hoarsely, "Boil water!  Boil all the water you can!"

    Come to think of it, the safety people may have the problem upside down.  Why not simply urge people to drink coffee instead of liquor at office parties?

::


    NOT LONG AGO
reporter Don Dwiggins wrote about an L.A. inventor.

    The other day he received a handsome Christmas card from him with this personal message:  "Thanks for the nice article about me.  My next item will be  a button radio operated by the sun.  No larger than a dime.  You will write about me again in about 8 years.  What I want to make will be a ray that will destroy anything within a mile.  Merry Christmas."

::


    DREAMER
Now that disc jocks can
    no longer beguile,
Perhaps music will come
    back in style.
        –OSCAR TUCKER

::


    A WEST L.A.
householder wishes to add his complaint to those recorded recently by telephone users before the state public utilities commission.
   
His phone bill last month was unreasonable and on his indignant inquiry he was told there was a $40 charge for a call to Covina.  He'd made the call, he said, but not $40 worth.  Someone checked and found there'd been a tabulating machine mistake — it should have been 40 cents — and he would be credited for the amount.

Dec. 21, 1959, 1950s     But when he got this month's bill the $40 charge was still on it.  Screaming like a wounded eagle, he said he wouldn't pay it and wanted to know why such a mistake couldn't be corrected in a month. 

    "Well, after all," he was told, "these things take time!"

::


    MOST FRUSTRATED
parents in town are the Ed Hardings.  He's a child welfare and attendance worker.  They took their 4 1/2-year-old daughter to see Santa Claus and afterward her mother asked, "What did you tell Santa you wanted for Christmas?"

    "You'll see!" was the mysterious response.

::


     AN
enterprising radio reporter decided to broadcast "Merry Christmas and Happy New Year" in 12 foreign languages and was going along fine, with the co-operation of UCLA foreign language departments and consulates, until he came to Thailand. 

Dec. 21, 1959, Abby
    "I'm sorry we have no such greeting," a man at the Thailand consulate said.  "We're Buddhists, you know."

::


    AT RANDOM —
Lady on the phone asks a typographical posy for Robert Burke, driver of  a 42 bus.  A woman passenger left her briefcase on the seat when she got off at Clinton St.  The driver found it when the bus reached Melrose and he stopped, ran the block and gave it to her and ran back.  His explanation:  "It looked important" . . . There's a gripe about the parking meters springing up all over town.  Some people think the fees — 1 cent for 6 minutes, 5 cents for 30 and a dime for an hour — are exorbitant . . . Mike Molony overheard an actor type fellow in a Beverly Hills bat cave say to his companion, "So this joker is bucking for Hamlet like always!"

 

Posted in Columnists, Film, Matt Weinstock, Richard Nixon, Rock 'n' Roll | 1 Comment

Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 21, 1959

 Dec. 21, 1959, Mirror Cover

Tokyo Rose Story Stirs Up Little Ire

Paul Coates    If you're a newspaperman, it's nice to stay in the good graces of your readers.  But it's not essential.

    There's no hard-and-fast rule in journalism that the customer is always right.

    I, for example, have a little more leeway than a small businessman.  I deal in views and opinions in their multitude of shades and degrees, and therefore, I'm permitted the luxury of offending a certain number of paid-up subscribers.

    It's a justified luxury, I like to think, because when your product is opinion, you're bound to make enemies. 

    It doesn't take many years in the profession, either, to know exactly what to avoid writing if you don't want your editor to be overwhelmed with letters demanding your resignation.
   
Take the rabies vaccination law.  Or the abolition of capital punishment.  Or psychiatric care — rather than jail terms — for the criminally insane.
   
Dec. 21, 1959, Shah Wedding

No newspaperman would come out in favor of any of these if his judgment were dictated by apparent reader reaction to his views.

    There are certain opinions, and facts, which  automatically stir large groups in our society to pick up their pencils in violent protest.

    Two weeks ago, I was sure I'd found another tender spot in reader reaction.  I printed an interview with Iva Toguri d'Aquino, known to the world as Tokyo Rose.  It was the first interview which she has ever granted.

    In it, much of her side of the story came out.  She told of her attempts to get out of Japan, both before and during World War II.  She stated that there was nothing that she considered treasonous in her Radio Tokyo broadcasts to U.S. troops, and pointed out that she was actually selected for the "disc jockey" job by Allied prisoners of war, none of whom where punished for their participation in the same broadcasts.

    And although her statements were supported by documented proof, I expected a flood of angry letters.  Through legend, the name "Tokyo Rose" became synonymous with the treachery of the enemy in the Pacific.

    But for some reason, the letters failed to come.  There were a few.  But they were actually outnumbered by correspondence from individuals who were just plain interested in hearing Mrs. d'Aquino's account of what happened.

    One of the most interesting came from a man who is currently employed as an electrical engineer at a local aircraft plant.

    For two years, he listened to the broadcasts of Mrs. d'Aquino (who, I should point out, never used the name Tokyo Rose — she called herself Orphan Ann.)

    "As a radio operator with the 1st Marine Division," he wrote, "I had the opportunity to tune in to any broadcast that could be received in the South Pacific.
image   
"The three main broadcasts of interest were the Australian, the Armed Forces Radio and Radio Tokyo. The Australian broadcasts were not too good, as they were directed toward the Aussie humor and musical tastes.  However, both the Armed Forces Radio and Radio Tokyo had good American music along with their respective versions of the news.

    "I remember 'Orphan Ann'. We called her 'Orphan Annie'.  Her broadcasts were typical of American disc-jockey shows.  I mean they were of professional caliber, prepared to furnish a maximum of listening entertainment . . .

    "The news reports, always given by male announcers, were so colored that they were utterly ridiculous to anyone having average intelligence . . .

Sweet and Smug

    "As to Orphan Annie's attitude during the broadcasts, the impression I recall is that of one having a sweet, sugary voice a little on the smug or haughty side, giving the effect of superiority.

    "Whether this attitude was real or put on for the show, I don't know, but since we were winning the war while she was broadcasting, we felt we had the last laugh. 

    "If there was one question that the troops all had about her broadcasts, it wasn't about her position as a possible traitor.  It wasn't about the biased news, but, rather, it was 'Where in hell does she get all the new late released records?' "

    And that, come to think of it, is one question I forgot to ask her.

 

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

 Dec. 21, 1958, Hedda hopper 

Dec. 21, 1958: Jeffrey Hunter says of making “The Last Hurrah”: “Working with Spencer Tracy was great. Some of the most telling scenes between me and my wife, played by Diane Foster, had to be cut out in editing the overall picture, which is essentially the story of a character. My role is chiefly that of an observer. In the original script there was a well-defined subplot about Diane and me, but now she has only two scenes or so left in."

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Christmas 1608


 
Dec. 21, 1959 Christmas 1608

"The General Historie of Virginia, New England and the Summer Islands," on display at the Huntington Library.

Dec. 21, 1959, Christmas 1608

"Sleeping in his boat, accidentallie one fired his powder bag, which tore the flesh from his body and thighes, nine or ten inches square in a most pitiful manner, but to quench the tormenting fire, frying him in his cloaths, he leaped overboard into the deepe river where ere they could recover him he was neere drowned."
 Dec. 21, 1959, Christmas Past
And another version of an old Christmas.
Dec. 21, 1959, Race Relations

“A Negro Doctor” writes to The Times.

image

The shah says he is marrying Farah Diba because he wants a son to succeed him.

Dec. 21, 1959, Hemingway 

Ernest Hemingway’s favorite TV show is “Col. Flack” and he also is a fan of “The Real McCoys.” 

Posted in books, broadcasting, Television | 1 Comment