Man Dies in Treatment for Freckles

 Dec. 11, 1919, Oviatt's

Knox hats and caps at Alexander and Oviatt.

Dec. 11, 1919, Freckle Lotion

Dec. 14, 1919, Blaha

Dec. 14, 1919: George Blaha was given a fatal dose of chloroform by his mother-in-law?

Dec. 17, 1919, George Blaha

Dec. 17, 1919: An unusually large amount of chloroform and carbolic acid was found in Blaha’s brain and kidneys, the coroner says.

Dec. 18, 1919, Dr. Gertrude Steele 
Gertrude Steele

Dec. 18, 1919, George Blaha
 
Dec. 18, 1919: Gertrude Steele is charged with manslaughter in the death of her son-in-law, George Blaha.

Oct. 7, 1924, Dr. Gertrude Steele

Oct. 7, 1924: Steele is charged in the death of another patient.

Oct. 7, 1924, Dr. Gertrude Steele

Dec. 11, 1919: Here’s an especially curious tale – the saga of George A. Blaha who died trying to get rid of his freckles in a procedure performed by his mother-in-law, Gertrude Steele, a naturopath.  Murder charges against Steele were dropped in Blaha’s death because it was unclear what procedures she was allowed to perform as a naturopath. Steele left Los Angeles in 1924, shortly after another patient, Christina Leslie, died when the incisions from her cosmetic surgery became infected. A 1925 story says Steele was reportedly in Germany.

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Hanukkah, 1909

 Synagogue B'nai B'rith
Los Angeles Times file photo

Temple B’nai B’rith, Hope and 9th streets

Dec. 11, 1909, Hanukkah 

 

Dec. 11, 1909: “The Hanukkah teaches us to be true to our colors as a religious entity; to shield, protect and safeguard our spiritual heritage for ourselves and for our children, and not to be blinded by the false light of a pseudo-civilization that seeks its chief glory in unbelief; in doubt and denial; in irreverence and superciliousness. It admonishes us to be interested in and devoted to the improvement of society, civic purity and efficiency,” Rabbi S. Hecht says.

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Matt Weinstock, Dec. 10, 1959

Dec. 10, 1959, Peanuts
Dec. 10, 1959, Peanuts

Christmas Story


Matt Weinstock It's about that time again so, as the saying goes, let's see if we can jerk a few tears.

    A couple with four children have been in serious financial difficulty since the father was injured recently and unable to work.  The worst hardship has been getting through the waiting period required for his unemployment insurance and compensation to go in effect.

    Learning of the family's plight, teachers at the elementary school some of the children attend have taken action to provide them with temporary free lunches and milk.

    As is customary, the case was referred to Child Welfare and Attendance and the other day Monty Minock, CWA worker, called on the mother.

Dec. 10, 1959, Krishna Venta    "I think things will be all right now," she said.  "My husband has a temporary job as a Santa Claus in a department store."

::

       MOSTLY THE LETTERS

complaining about smog are merely caustic or indignant or irrelevant.  Now and then a real chiller comes along.  Such as one woman's comment about Rule 62, which restricted the use of fuel oil by industry until it became inactive Sept. 30.  A gas company official stated recently that restoration of rule 62, which some people advocate, would require considerable expansion of natural gas supplies which, he said, "would be unsound and very expensive."
   
"Tell them for me," the woman wrote, "that lying in a hospital bed under an oxygen tent is also very expensive — and so are funerals."

::

        AVANT GARDE
Here's to Venice, Cal., the
    haunt of the haunted,
Where positive thinkers are
    frankly not wanted.
        GLADYS FOREMAN



::

    IT'S THE FIRST real
Christmas for Douglas Mestad, 2, and his folks have been briefing him
on the glorious occasion, particularly through the song on the radio,
"Santa Claus Is Coming to Town."

    His grandmother asked him
the other day, "Douglas, who's coming to town on Christmas?"  He seemed
puzzled so she reminded, "You know, you heard it on the radio?"

    "Mack the Knife!" he said triumphantly.

::

    MT. SAN JACINTO,
second-highest peak in Southern California, stands only 10,786 feet,
according to a new U.S. Geological Survey map — not the elevation
claimed, 10,831 feet, and a logical question is, "Where did that 45
feet go?"

    Did disgusted deer hunters blast it off one bullet
at a time?  Did Boy Scouts whittle it away with arrows?  Did a mighty
abominable snowman slice it off with a machete in a  fit of pique?
Flying saucers?

 
    Of course not.  Ernie Maxwell of
the Idyllwild Town Crier reports the 45 feet apparently disappeared due
to refinement of survey methods.  In other words, it was never there in
the first place.

image 
   Ernie was told by Ranger John Gilman, "We're curious who made the survey.  We know that 45 feet of granite hasn't just eroded from the top since the last check 12 years ago."

    There's no telling if anything has happened to our highest peak, San Gorgonio, 11,485 feet, but it looks rugged from a distance.

::


Dec. 10, 1959, Puccini     YOUNGSTERS
visiting the Invitation to Play exhibit at the State Museum of Science and Industry in Exposition Park are climbing up on a large galvanized steel elephant and sliding down its back, as intended, but they almost didn't have the chance.

    While the toyland exhibit was being put together it was discovered that six feet of Ellie's body was missing.  In the nick of time a man named Eugene Jackson phoned and said a piece of elephant was parked on the Harbor Freeway.  Apparently it had fallen off the truck.

::


    MISCELLANY —
To other famous last words, Joe Hecht says, we can now add, "Please, no help from the audience!" . . . Two thoughtless boys at a West Side high school hoisted a Japanese flag on the school flagpole Dec. 7.  The report is that they've been expelled . . . Actor George Lee said it.  "I love all blonds — regardless what color their hair is!"
   

 

 

 

   
   

 

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 10, 1959

 Dec. 10, 1959, Mirror

Creative Writing as Created in Flackdom

Paul Coates    Tributes have been made to outstanding individuals in just about every field of endeavor, but nobody has ever come out to honor the hard working press agent.
   
That's why I'm here today.

    I'm announcing my first annual "Mortie" award, to acknowledge excellence among the little-known plodding men who work behind the scenes to give America its idols. 

    The "Mortie" award isn't for the razzle-dazzle type of press agent, like the one who put the hole in Stevenson's shoe or the one who draped a cloth coat over the shoulders of Mrs. Nixon.

    I want to salute the little man of the industry — the press agent whose fertile mind barely keeps his clients from plunging into oblivion, and who, more often than not, has the ability to take a nobody and turn him into a somebody.

    Like, for example, Phyllis Standish!  Who ever heard of her before Levin, Cohen & Fletcher got their hooks into her?

Dec. 10, 1959, Whalen     Now, she's right up on top with the rest of the big names like Lester B. Dill and Mary La Roche.

    This year's "Mortie" statuette is a very modernistic plaster of  Paris copy of the Thinker — but decently dressed, of course, in a set ofSy Devore threads.

    You're wondering, I suppose, why I chose to call it the "Mortie."  I don't know.  It just seems to have a ring to it.  Besides, it's every bit as clever as "Oscar" or "Emmy."

    But on to this year's candidates.  Since I thought up the idea, it's only reasonable that I get to pick the candidates, too.

    I offer first the above mentioned team whose technique is to put clever words into their clients' mouth.  Or mouths.  No, I guess it's just mouth.

    Every week I get a press release from them with a new gem of humor attributed to Phyllis.

    One week, it will be, "Phyllis Standish claims that a tree is an object that will stand in one place for years, and then jump in front of a lady driver."  The following  week: "Actress Phyllis Standish opines that egotism is usually just a case of mistaken nonentity."

    What they did, they took this pleasant, inconspicuous, attractive little girl and, with dynamic perseverance, molded her into a cross between Kay Thompson and Just Plain Bill.

    Another "Mortie" candidate, Aleon Bennett, uses a different technique.  His clients become involved in totally unlikely situations.

    For example, he had actor Don Porter invite an old lady who was tottering on the curb to cross the street with him.  When they reached the other side, arm in arm, the old lady turned to Don and — according to Bennett's release said:

    " 'There you are, my dear boy.  You are quite safe now.  But never be afraid to ask anyone to help you across.' "
   
Bennett had another client, actress Mary La Roche, meet a bachelor who kept a French poodle to run around in circles every time the phone rang so the poor, cooped-up animal would get exercised.  Then he would call his apartment periodically during the day.

    So one afternoon, Bennett had Mary break into the bachelor's apartment, pick up the phone after it rang for about a minute, pant into it and hang up.

    For such ingenuity, Bennett certainly deserves to be a candidate.
   
Then there's Sy Preston, whose favorite client is Lester B. Dill, owner of Meramac Caverns, Stanton, Mo.  Preston has come up with a bagful of jazzy stunts to promote Mr. Dill's cave — but the one which makes him a  leading "Mortie" contender is his free "honeymoon" offer.

    He had Dill volunteer to pick up the honeymoon tab for any couple willing to be married in the cave, dressed only in leopard skins.
   

Fraught With Emotion
    I don't know how it came out.  I was not invited to the ceremony.  And I wouldn't have gone, anyway.  Weddings always make me cry.

Dec. 10, 1959, Abby

     At any rate, those are my selections.  I haven't decided on a date for the awards dinner yet.

    In fact, I probably won't even have an awards dinner.  Those things are always so damn depressing.  You know what I mean.  All those losers who get all dressed up expecting to win.

    What I'll probably do, I'll have a quiet dinner alone at Lucey's and mull the whole thing over.

     
   

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 10, 1947, Hedda Hopper 
 
Nov. 8, 1947, Talk o' the Town Dec. 10, 1947: Peggy Cleary's restaurant, Talk O’ the Town, gets plenty of talk, especially on Wednesday nights when she shows old pictures. Last week "The Covered Wagon" was shown there and had the crowds roaring. The screen reflected the stamp of a rugged individualist, Jim Cruze, who directed the picture.

And C.S. Forester is here conferring with Bette Davis about "The African Queen!"

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Grand Jury Hears Testimony in Whalen Killing

Dec. 10, 1959, Mickey Cohen

Mickey Cohen says: "I'm a lover, not a fighter."

Dec. 10, 1959, Mickey Cohen

Sandy Hashagen says going steady with Mickey Cohen for 14 days gave her a police record and cost her a job as a dancer in Las Vegas..

Dec. 10, 1959, Christmas Trees

Adjusted for inflation, these trees start at $13.81, USD 2008.

Dec. 10, 1959, Stravinsky

Igor Stravinsky gives his manuscript for “The Rake’s Progress” to USC.

Dec. 10, 1959, Corning Ware

For Christmas, Melmac and Corning Ware! I haven’t seen one of those Corning coffee pots in years, but nearly everyone used to have one.

Dec. 10, 1959, Solomon and SHeba 

Solomon and Sheba” is coming!

Dec. 10, 1959, Jeane Hoffman

Jeane Hoffman on open tennis.

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Cost of Living at a Historic High


 
Dec. 10, 1919, Briggs 

“Oh, Man – and Woman!” by Clare Briggs

Dec. 10, 1919, Cost of Living

April 3, 1920, Economy

April 3, 1920: Former bank executive Frank A. Vanderlip says the American economy is unsound. "Unrestrained extravagance is our national keynote, and the capital of the smaller capitalists, when it isn't dried up by tax, is being squandered in the purchase of unproductive things," he says.

 

Dec. 10, 1919: The cost of living rises 1.3% in a month and is 131% of what it was before World War I. Adjusted for inflation, an item that cost $1 in 1919 would be $12.34 in 2008.

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Rain Floods Downtown Streets

 Dec. 10, 1909, Flooded Street
A young woman gets carried across a flooded street at Jefferson and Grand.

Dec. 10, 1909, Flooded Streets

 

Dec. 10, 1909: “There are few sights funnier than a large crowd on the streets during a heavy downpour. Such was the case yesterday. During the early morning a patrolman had been stationed at Temple and Broadway to assist women across the waters. But the whole police force could not have given the needed assistance to the throngs that tried wading across Broadway and 2nd, Main and 4th, 7th and Broadway and other besieged watering places.”

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December 9, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Dialing Chessman

Matt WeinstockFrancois de Montfort, correspondent for Ici Paris, is in Hollywood having a look at the movie making.  As he arrived on the set of “Strangers When We Meet” to interview Kim Novak the other day, he told publicist Paul Price he’d received a message from his paper suggesting he interview Caryl Chessman, who has become a international cause celebre.  He wondered how to go about it.

It was suggested that he get clearance in Sacramento and he called the state Capitol.  There he was instructed to call San Quentin direct.

He got Asst. Warden Achuff on the line, identified himself and said he’d like to interview Chessman. Continue reading

Posted in #courts, 1959, art and artists, broadcasting, Caryl Chessman, Columnists, Comics, Matt Weinstock, Television | Comments Off on December 9, 1959: Matt Weinstock

December 9, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

December 9, 1959: Mirror Cover

Wacky Tony’s Story: ‘I Killed Jack Whalen’

Paul Coates, in coat and tieI take stories as they come.  And yesterday’s came by phone.

“My name is Tony,” the caller told me.  “I’m going to give you a story and you’re going to give me protection.”

“What kind of protection?” I asked.
“Not for me,” he snapped.  “I’m big enough to take care of myself.  It’s for my family.  I don’t want anything to happen to them.

“Anyway, when I finish spilling to you I’m dead,” he added.

Then, to the accompaniment of a blaring juke box in the background, Tony whispered hoarsely into the mouthpiece that he was the man who shot Jack Whalen in Rondelli’s last week.

Continue reading

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 9, 1946, Hedda Hopper 
Dec. 9, 1946: “The Edgar Bergens poured last night after christening their daughter, Candy. They not only served cocktails, but also dinner. The Bergens don't give many parties, but when they do, they're good.”

ps. Macdonald Carey is “hubba-hubba with preview crowds” in “Suddenly It’s Spring.” 

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President’s Pilot Worries About Trip to Afghanistan

Dec. 9, 1959, Traffic Safety

“Remember, leave your blood at the Red Cross, not on the highway,” says Capt. Dan Mathews of "Highway Patrol."

Dec. 9, 1959, Cover

Air pollution is linked to lung ailments.

Dec. 9, 1959, Take a Giant Step

Take a Giant Step” opens. And I’ve added to my Netflix queue.

Dec. 9, 1959, Sports

Dec. 9, 1959: If there's a constant to The Times' coverage of Dodger Stadium's construction, it's the feeling of optimism even at the expense of common sense.

Walter O'Malley told The Times' Frank Finch that not only would the Dodgers "definitely" open the 1961 season at their yet to be built ballpark in Chavez Ravine, there was a "quite remote" chance that they would play a few games there in 1960.

Just a few days earlier, Finch wrote about the Dodgers trying to trade for Washington Senators slugger Roy Sievers. "The husky right-hand hitter could make a lot of hay in the Coliseum," Finch wrote.

But why all the fuss if the Dodgers weren't even going to last the 1960 season in the Coliseum? On second thought, maybe that's why the trade talks for Sievers went nowhere.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in #courts, Dodgers, Downtown, Politics, Transportation | 3 Comments

Nuestro Pueblo

 
Sept. 14, 1938, Nuestro Pueblo


Broadway between 1st and Temple, looking toward Hill Street.

Oct. 20, 1943, Court Flight

Oct. 20, 1943: A fire destroys Court Flight.
 

Sept. 14, 1938: Joe Seewerker and Charles Owens visit Court Flight, another long-vanished downtown landmark. Today, the Hall of Records is also gone, as is the "slope across Broadway," where Court Flight once operated. 

Note: The original run of Nuestro Pueblo concluded in 1939. I’m going back and picking up the entries that I missed the first time.

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Judge Clears Way for Deportation of Revolutionaries

Dec. 9, 1919, Emma Goldman 

Dec. 9, 1919: A judge dismisses writs of habeas corpus for Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman, clearing the way for them to be deported to the Soviet Union as undesirable revolutionaries. The judge grants a temporary delay so that Goldman and Berkman can appeal to the Supreme Court.

Berkman, Goldman and other deportees arrived at the Soviet border Jan. 19, 1920. Goldman called it, “The greatest moment of my life.” She added: “"After 35 years of absence I am returning to Russia with a feeling of awe. I am glad to leave America but I love the American people and expect to return some day.”

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Mules for Sale

Dec. 9, 1909, Mules 

Dec. 9, 1909: Mules are for sale at 1782 E. Main Street, autos at 747-749 S. Spring. Los Angeles traffic in this era consisted of streetcars, horse-drawn vehicles, automobiles, motorcycles, bicycles and pedestrians. It was an interesting time. My suspicion is that what we now call North Main Street was once considered “East Main Street” because it runs east-west at that point.

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Matt Weinstock, Dec. 8, 1959

 

    Dec. 8, 1959, Abby

Crankcase Breather

Matt Weinstock     As you may have read, the Automobile Manufacturers Assn. a few days ago announces the development of a device which would eliminate "substantial" amounts of smog-causing auto exhaust.

    The fumes, it stated, would be fed back to the engine through a tube and re-burned.

    Furthermore, the AMA boys stated, the device would be offered on 1961 cars as an accessory or as optional equipment.  No estimate was given as to its cost but they said it would be inexpensive compared with previously announced exhaust control mechanisms, such as after-burners, still unperfected.

    Reporter Les Wagner, this paper's smog specialist, read it too and something went "ping" in his memory.  After considerable research, he turned up an interesting bit of lore- in a 1954 Sears Roebuck catalogue.
image
    UNDER THE
heading "Oil jars and cans," which included several types of fuel containers and flexible pouring spouts, there is listing P, as follows:  "Crankcase Breathers.  Carry away oil fumes.  Shipping weight 14 ounces.  69 cents."  Another listing states, "Same as above except it transfers fumes to air cleaner, 69 cents."

    Floyd Clymer, automotive historian, recalled that returning crankcase vapors to the intake manifold, the air cleaner or the carburetor, had been done for years.

    Smith Griswold, smog director, discounted the effectiveness of such a device. 

    "We are still counting on something that will eliminate 80% of the unburned hydrocarbons and 60% of the carbon monoxide," he said, "not 2%, as this one would."

    By the way, the experts say that anyone who thinks he's going to get off with an exhaust gadget that costs less than $25 or $50, when one is perfected, is just a dreamer.

::


    A WOMAN
in The Harem, Robertson Blvd. beauty shop, was uncertain how she wanted her hair done so hairdresser Vera Roberts suggested, "Let me do it darker — you'll look 10 years younger."

    The woman said despairingly, "Who wants to look 62?"

::


    LA PAYOLA
, a lady named Carol whispers, doesn't flourish only in the entertainment business.

    She phoned an outfit about reconditioning her furniture. Two men showed up and went through the house making an estimate.  As one of them finished the first page he said, "That's $144 so far."

    "Don't bother turning the page," Carol said, "that's too much — I can't afford it."
  
"Wait a minute," he said, "I haven't put down everything.  We can have  a private arrangement.  That way the company makes a profit, you get a good deal, I make something and nobody gets hurt."

    Carol was suddenly positive she couldn't afford it and ushered them out.

::


    SINCE THE
rubout of Jack Whalen, people are asking how come suddenly there is evidence of large-scale bookmaking.  Hasn't our great leader repeatedly assured us the town is clean? Oh, maybe a little fun and frivolity here and there but nothing as bad as J. Edgar hinted recently.  And never mind those snickers from horse players who never seem to have trouble getting a bet down away from the track.  

    Perhaps the grand jury will find the answer to this aggravating riddle.

Dec. 8. 1959, Killing     Meanwhile, it is well to keep in mind the statement once made by writer Courtney Riley Cooper.  It went something like this: Whenever you see rackets flourishing openly in your community you can be sure that someone in law enforcement responsible for their suppression is permitting them to operate.

::

    ONLY IN L.A. — Neatly stenciled in black letters on a rock on Beverly Glen Blvd. near Mulholland Dr. is the message, "Help Stamp Out Reality."  Joe Weston figures some UCLA philosophy student is responsible.

::


    MISCELLANY —
The return envelopes L.V. McCardle, city treasurer, enclosed with bills reminding people their sewer assessments are due have "Thank you" printed on the flap.  The ones from H.L. Byram, county tax collector, don't . . . And a lot of people who used to do their Christmas shopping early now merely do their credit union shopping early.

 

   
   

 

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 8, 1959

 
Dec. 8, 1959, Mirror

A Civic Confessional on Sin and Stupidity

Paul Coates    A few miles north of Charleston, South Carolina, on Highway 52, there's a brand new billboard welcoming travelers to the gracious, growing Dixie city.
 
  It reads:

The Association of
South Carolina Klans
Knights of the
KU KLUX KLAN
Welcome You to
CHARLESTON

 
  It's a lousy sign.  From a grammarian's point of view, it is.

    You don't go around saying, "The association . . . welcome you."  You say, if you've got any class at all, "The association . . . welcomes you."

    At least I do, and I don't even belong.

    But a mistake in English grammar can be forgiven, even if it's on a billboard eight feet high.  After all, in the South, some of the schools have been closed lately.

    What should be weighed with care, however, is the social significance of the sign.  The thought behind it. 

    A printed highway greeting by the Ku Klux Klan is a strange expression of sociability, even in the murky regions of the Deep South.
Dec. 8, 1959, Banned Books

    The Klan has always been — in varying degrees according to the temper of the times — a mark of Southern shame.  But in the past, at least, a small effort was made to keep the white-sheeted skeleton in the closet.
   
Now, apparently, they're showing it off in front of company.

    This startling business of a town's advertising its least desirable trail may be the beginning of a new trend in Chamber of Commerce thinking.

    Friendly signs of greeting posted on the outskirts of every city and hamlet have been a part of the peculiar geography of our country since long before Henry Ford invented the wheel.

    The weary traveling salesman was always reassured that he was welcome by the Rotary Club and that it met on Tuesdays and Fridays at Ida's Hideaway Cafe. 

    Now, with the KKK usurping the service clubs' traditional right, a minor revolution in the business of community advertising could be in the making.

    Our quiet locale of Sun Valley, for example, might do well to forget the health benefits of its climate.  In view of recent news events, it has a perfect right to represent itself as "Sun Valley — Home of the Biggest Bank Embezzlement Scandal in the History of California."
  
image And I'm sure that between them, the San Fernando Valley Chamber of Commerce and the Mafia could raise enough funds to erect a rather attractive neon sign at the outer reaches of the Cahuenga Pass, with the message: "Welcome to San Fernando Valley — the Little Sicily of Southern California."

    The possibilities, as you can see, are endless.  Toss out the tiered lines about "America's vacationland," and "playground in the sun," and "the film capital of the world," and turn your imagination loose.

    Dig out your community's dirty secrets.  Play up your faults.

    In its tourist brochures, Beverly Hills might tantalize the farmers from Iowa by offering them a first-hand view of "a city with more intrigue than your old copies of Confidential magazine."

    "Residents of Beverly Hills," it could state with candor, "actually supplied 50% of the dramas which you read in the magazine."

What's With Houses?

    Hollywood real estate promoters certainly could invest in a billboard stating, "Brenda Allen Built Her House Here — Why Don't You?"
   
Last, but not to be overlooked, is the Los Angeles Coliseum, which currently represents itself as "Home of the Word Champion Dodgers."

    I mean, they've got other tenants, too.  If they're looking for  a way to play up their weaknesses, how about a pennant across the entranceway:

    "Home of the Celebrated Last-Place Rams."

    Frankly, the whole thing doesn't zing me.  But maybe it's inevitable.  Maybe it's all part of the great master plan that's going around these days, for us to search our souls and bare the worst of ourselves.

   
   

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 8, 1945, Hedda Hopper

Dec. 8, 1945: Larry Storch, 22,  gets a lucky break.

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Boy Kills Mother, Wounds Stepfather in ‘Dream’

Dec. 8, 1959, Times Cover

Dec. 8, 1959: A teenager kills his mother and wounds his stepfather during what he calls a bad dream.

Dec. 9, 1959, Victims  

Edna Fisher, 38, was killed and Donald Fisher, 28, was injured.

Dec. 9, 1959, Killing

Dec. 9, 1959: Edgar Lee Cox was suspended from school for ditching, so his parents made him sit in his room and do homework.

Dec. 8, 1959, Whalen 

About 300 people attend the funeral of Jack “the Enforcer” Whalen. "There is no cause for bitterness. No place for hopelessness. We should ask God in his eternal power for forgiveness. We cannot ask why things are," says the Rev. Alex K. Campbell of St. David's Episcopal Church in North Hollywood.

… and tooth decay may be contagious. 

Dec. 8, 1959, Stompanato

Mickey Cohen is shocked … SHOCKED that the late Johnny Stompanato carried a gun.

Dec. 8, 1959, Middle East

"If the Arab refugee problem can be solved, most of the tension between Israel and the Arab world will dissolve…."

Dec. 8, 1959, TVs

There was a time when TV sets weren’t huge, black plastic cubes but masqueraded as other pieces of furniture. As if Betsy Ross had a Colonial GE television set – with remote.

  

Dec. 8, 1959, 4D Man

4D Man” with Robert Lansing, Lee Meriwether … and a pre-“Miracle Worker” Patty Duke.

Dec. 8, 1959, Comics 

It’s for you ….

Dec. 8, 1959, Sports

A riot by drunk fans at Yankee Stadium stops a game between the Giants and the Browns for 20 minutes … And who will be the Dodgers’ starting pitcher?

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The Complicated Geometry of the Eternal Triangle

Dec. 8, 1919, Briggs

“When a Feller Needs a Friend” by Clare Briggs

Dec. 8, 1919, Wedding

Dec. 8, 1919: To help raise money for Liberty Loans during World War I, a fundraising campaign was begun in which an engaged couple would win furniture, linens and other items they would need in their life together, including a flight in an airplane. The winning submission apparently came from Milton C. Walters and Ophelia Butler, who said their Liberty Loan work had brought them together. And perhaps it did …

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