November 17, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

November 17, 1959: Mirror Cover

Poet in the Poky Has Samson Sort of Woes

Paul Coates, in coat and tieJerry Baker, the promising young coffee-house poet, appeared in my office yesterday afternoon, shortly after being released from Lincoln Heights jail.

He sat down, gazed fondly at an open pack of cigarettes on my desk, and informed me, “You smoke my brand.”

I offered him one.  He took it, thanking me.

“I’m here,” he said, “because I’m told you’re a fair man.  You have  a good reputation.  You come very highly recommended.”

Borrowing a match, he lit his cigarette.

“In fact,” he continued, “not one, but two of my cellmates recommended you as the man to see.” Continue reading

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Nov. 17, 1954, Hedda Hopper 

Nov. 17, 1954: "Touch Connors has been signed to play a Confederate soldier — and he'll be mighty handsome in that uniform — in 'Five Guns West' with John Lund and Dorothy Malone."

Eventually “Touch” Conners became known as Mike Connors, star of “Tightrope” and “Mannix.” “Five Guns West” gets 2.9 stars on imdb, slightly less than “Robot Monster” but more than “Eegah.”

Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Plane Crash Kills 42


Nov. 17, 1959, Times Cover

Nov. 17, 1959: Investigators speculate on whether a bomb exploded on a National Airlines DC-7B that crashed in the Gulf of Mexico, killing 42 people. Ultimately, no cause was ever determined. … And  Gene Sherman reports on border drug traffic.

Nov. 17, 1959, Jack Smith 

Jack Smith writes: "It is easy enough to find statistics suggesting that we are soft — mentally, physically and morally. More people are in hospitals. More people are swallowing pills. More people are in jails. More people have tics and syndromes. The New York Yankees are falling apart and the heavyweight champion of the world is a Swede."

Robert R. Kirsch says John Gosling’s “Ghost Squad” is “a must for every true crime buff.”

Nov. 17, 1959, Dotty

”Mother, May I Go Steady?”
 

image

Nov. 17, 1959

Jeane Hoffman had a typically interesting story about all the wannabe teams hovering around Los Angeles.

The Chargers—yes, they started in L.A.—were the closest to reality. Then there were the Stars (baseball) and Jets (basketball), teams that had to overcome several factors to become real franchises.

The Chargers looked like the real deal, heading to the Coliseum in 1960. "We get fourth choice in Coliseum dates but that's enough for seven home games," said Tom Eddy, assistant to Barron Hilton.

The Stars were lined up with names like Branch Rickey as president of the Continental League and Mark Scott, host of TV's "Home Run Derby," as team vice president. But where to play if they really got going?

Hoffman said the Stars were talking to Walter O'Malley about playing in the Dodgers' yet to be built ballpark "but if he doesn't let them in they'll have to go to Orange County—or to court."

As for the Jets, who apparently had Bing Crosby involved, they were confident that an L.A. franchise would come their way. Said Len Corbosiero, "If we can't get a new franchise, we hope to move out an established team."

–Keith Thursby

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Baseball Players May Sue Over Nonpayment of World Series Bonuses

Nov. 17, 1919 
The Chicago players have been waiting for more than a month for their money from the World Series.

Nov. 17, 1919, Pants

Nov. 17, 1919: Pacific Coast League umpires want the league to pay for pressing their pants.

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Father Seizes Daughter in Child Custody Dispute

Nov. 17, 1909, Kidnapped 

Nov. 17, 1909, Kidnapping

Nov. 17, 1909: The courts and the police grapple with a child custody case after a father seizes his 2-year-old daughter and refuses to say where she’s been hidden, based on advice from his attorney. 

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Cooking With the Junior League – The Twin Cities

always_superb 
Yes, the table is made of ice, Mary says.
In her latest installment of Cooking With the Junior League, Mary McCoy looks at the cuisine of Minneapolis-St. Paul.

She writes:

Visit a city like Minneapolis-St. Paul in high September, and you begin to find yourself mentally packing your bags, and imagining a life for you and yours in an idyllic Midwestern wonderland.  The streets are tidy, the people are interesting and kind, and the politics are progressive, and tempered by a kind of Lutheran good sense and practicality.  Local music is good.  Beer and cheese are plentiful.

Things get a little more Darwinian in February.  That’s when you realize that not only are the people interesting and kind, they are of a hardier stock than most.  This is Little House on the Prairie country.  Here, putting food up for the winter is more than a quaint, slightly anachronistic hobby, and ice fishing is considered recreation rather than torture.

Read more>>>

 

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November 16, 1959: Matt Weinstock

November 16, 1959: Comic panel: A man is being beaten up while a guard says "I think I'll read the funnies."

Conditioned Reflexes

Matt WeinstockAfter a business failure several years ago a young man decided to pursue the career he’d always wanted — teaching.  He was aware that it meant a drastic change and involved great sacrifice but he and his wife decided it was worth it.

He went back to school, and, meanwhile, got a part-time job.  His wife also worked.  To keep the house running smoothly, the three young children were assigned regular duties and responsibilities.  After dinner, for instance, they quietly took their own dishes into the kitchen to be washed.

Recently after a long, hard struggle the husband got his credential and his teaching assignment and he and his wife decided to celebrate by dining in a good restaurant, something they’d denied themselves for several years. Continue reading

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Nov. 16, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

November 16, 1959: Mirror cover

Search for Better Brand of Justice

Paul Coates, in coat and tieErle Stanley Gardner, you either like or dislike.

He’s easy to categorize.

If you don’t like him, he’s a troublemaker, a rebel who gets his kicks by destroying the public’s illusions concerning the integrity and intelligence of our district attorneys and police.

As author of more than 100 Perry Mason mystery novels, he’s continually belittling these public servants.  His man Mason always shows them up.

As a private citizen, Gardner founded the now-famous Court of Last Resort, which, in freeing dozens of innocent men from prison, has proved in fact that our system of justice isn’t infallible. Continue reading

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Nov. 16, 1953, Hedda Hopper 
Nov. 16, 1953: Edgar Bergen recalls the time Frank Farrell kidnapped Charlie McCarthy.

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November 16, 1969: Once Around the Radio Dial

One of the true pleasures of contributing to The Daily Mirror is reading old columns by Don Page, The Times’ longtime radio critic.

I regularly check his work, these days for 1959 and ’69. Some things change—by 1969 he no longer wondered whether rock stations will survive or be the end of radio. But there are some constants, such as complaining about too many commercials, too many boring stations and too many stations that sound too similar. Seems to me Page complained a lot and I like that. A reader knew how he felt. Continue reading

Posted in @news, broadcasting, Dodgers, Music, Rock 'n' Roll, Sports | 2 Comments

Family Killed in Kansas Farm Town


 Nov. 16, 1959, In Cold Blood

"The village of Holcomb stands on the high wheat plains of western Kansas, a lonesome area that other Kansans call 'out there.' Some seventy miles east of the Colorado border, the countryside, with its hard blue skies and desert-clear air, has an atmosphere that is rather more Far West than Middle West. The local accent is barbed with a prairie twang, a ranch-hand nasalness, and the men, many of them, wear narrow frontier trousers, Stetsons, and high-heeled boots with pointed toes. The land is flat, and the views are awesomely extensive; horses, herds of cattle, a white cluster of grain elevators rising as gracefully as Greek temples are visible long before a traveler reaches them."

–Truman Capote, “In Cold Blood.”

Nov. 16, 1959, Cover

Nov. 16, 1959: Intentionally avoiding a direct endorsement until the Republican National Convention, Republican leaders show their support for Vice President Richard Nixon in the 1960 presidential race.

Nov. 16, 1959, Toys for Tots

Monte Montana! Ty Hardin! Jerry Mathers!

Nov. 16, 1959, Ferd'nand

Ferd’nand invents the Man Cave.

Nov. 16, 1959, Sports

Back when stock cars were really stock. Elmer Musgrave wins a 100-lap race at Ascot Stadium in a 1958 Pontiac. Rodger Ward is second in a 1958 Ford.
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Orchestras Ban Women Musicians

Nov. 2, 1919, Music War 

Nov. 2, 1919: Orchestra managers want to ban women musicians because an ensemble consisting entirely of men in tuxedos is more pleasing to the eye, The Times says. No, I'm not kidding.

Nov. 16, 1919, Women Musicians

Nov. 16, 1919: Alma Whitaker writes about the attempted ban on women musicians.

Nov. 16, 1919, Ridge Route

Nov. 16, 1919: The Ridge Route opens and the Times publishes a terrific illustration by artist Charles Owens – nearly 20 years before he worked on “Nuestro Pueblo” … And the Auto Club writes a proposed law to make Hill Street, Broadway, Spring Street, Main one-way and to ban delivery trucks from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. in designated congested areas such as downtown.

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Plans for Aviation Meet

image 

Glenn Curtiss takes to the air over Los Angeles, 1910.

Nov. 15, 1909, Aviation Meet 

Plans are underway for an aviation week in early 1910. Glenn Curtiss has already signed a contract to appear.

Nov. 15, 1909, White Slavery

The “woman in black” may be involved in white slavery.

Nov. 15, 1909: "There are more aeroplanes building and in design in Southern California than in any other like section of the world. All these are local products and at least a half dozen new machines are ready to be tried out or about to be tested, while a half score of others are nearing completion and may be ready for aviation week."

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Found on EBay –Lili St. Cyr

Lili St. Cyr Letter  

May 12, 1947, Lili St. Cyr Lili St. Cyr performs at the Follies on Main, May 12, 1947.

At left, this letter from Lili St. Cyr, a legendary striptease artist who performed at the Florentine Gardens and many other nightclubs, has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at a pricey $45.

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Voices – Jules Feiffer

Sept. 12, 1969, Little Murders

Sept. 12, 1969, “Little Murders” runs for more than six months in Los Angeles.

After writing a post about “Little Murders” and the monologues in the play, especially the one by homicide Detective Lt. Miles Practice, I e-mailed playwright and artist Jules Feiffer to ask how he wrote them.

My question: One of the more distinctive elements of "Little Murders" is the extended monologues given to the major characters, like "To the Guy Who Reads My Mail" or "Every Crime Has a Pattern." These are long, thoughtful pieces and I was curious as to when you did them in the process of writing the play. The beginning? Middle? End? I'm also wondering how long it took you to distill your thoughts for these pieces.

He writes: What an interesting question, and one that has never come up before. The wedding speech and the Judge's speech are lifted virtually without change from the novel that LM was meant to be before I gave up on it. Two years later they went into the play. Alfred's monologue, as well as Lt. Practice's, were written for the play, Alfred's in the first draft, Practice's after several revisions that didn't work in the Boston tryout. The Practice speech and its setup prior to the speech were  the last writings I did on the play. Film Forum in NY is screening a new print of the movie in Oct.

JF

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Voices – Evelyn Rudie

Nov. 4, 1959, Mirror Cover  

Above, Evelyn Rudie, 9, who played Eloise on TV, makes the front page of the Mirror with a story about vanishing from home to go see Mamie Eisenhower.

Paul Coates’ Nov. 10, 1959, column (“Evelyn Is a Real Old Hand at Drum Beating”) brought a response from Rudie, who is now co-artistic director at the Santa Monica Playhouse:

Evelyn Rudie here. Wow – what a blast from the past. But you know – Leo was wrong. Although he was a good friend of mine, he was also notorious for getting himself in the midst of exaggerated gossip. I never asked him to be my Valentine. True, I sent lots of Valentine's (and St. Patrick’s Day cards, and Fourth of July, and Thanksgiving and Christmas) – everybody did that in those days. You bought little boxes of holiday notes, passed them out to everyone in your class, teachers, friends, relatives. But when I was six, and seven, and eight, my heart truly belonged to Paul Coates and in 1959 he was the only person I actually asked to be my Valentine. Paul – if you're up there looking down, or down there, looking up, I hope you hear that. :)  And Leo, shame on you for making me out to be a “loose” woman at age 7.

Posted in broadcasting, Paul Coates, Television | 1 Comment

Servicemen Wreck L.A. Union Hall Over Armistice Day Shootings

Nov. 15, 1919, Cover

Nov. 15, 1919, Runover

Nov. 15, 1919:  In response to the Centralia, Wash., shootings, “Twenty-five silent, stalwart men in full uniform of the United States Army and Navy raided the headquarters of the local I.W.W. in the Germain Building while a ‘defense’ meeting of the reds was in progress and utterly wrecked the place shortly after 8 o'clock last night," The Times said.

“They drove the terrified I.W.W. before them as leaves before a cyclone. Some of the reds jumped out of the window to escape the flailing blows of the avengers, armed with table legs and stout pieces of banister broken from the stairway railing as they rushed up. Others flew from room to room, endeavoring to get away, which most of the fifty percent finally did, much the worse for wear.

“When the smoke of battle finally cleared away and the police held the premises, four of the I.W.W. were in the Receiving Hospital and five were under arrest, charged with inciting a riot. They will be charged with criminal syndicalism later, according to the police. No members of the raiding party were injured and none was arrested, as there is absolutely no clew to their identity or where they came from. A handful of citizens arrested them in the attack, but no one knows who they were. “

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November 15, 1909: Finds ‘Husband’ Is Woman

November 15, 1909: Dr. Alice Bush of Oakland sues for divorce, charging that her husband, R.K. Morgan, failed to disclose something rather important.

The lynchings in Cairo, Ill., are endorsed from the pulpit and in the press.  Saying that lawlessness was common in the area where a woman was killed, the Rev. George M. Babcock of Church of the Redeemer, Episcopalian, says: “This defiance of law and order made the lynchings necessary to secure justice.” F.A. Thielecke, editor of the Cairo Bulletin, says: “Cairo’s disgrace is not the mob, but the conditions that made the mob necessary.” Continue reading

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Found on EBay – Pig ’n Whistle

Pig n Whistle Box  

From “Chinatown”:


WALSH: They got into a terrific argument outside the Pig 'n Whistle.

GITTES: What about?

WALSH:   I don't know. The traffic was pretty loud. I only heard one thing – apple core.


image A Pig ‘n Whistle candy box has been listed on EBay. Today, we associate Pig ‘n Whistle with restaurants (and the reference in “Chinatown”) but the company also sold candy, as shown in this ad from 1909, when the store was on Broadway next to City Hall. The box is listed as Buy It Now for $24.99.
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Matt Weinstock, Nov. 14, 1959

 

Nov. 14, 1959, Peanuts     

Today Is Forever

Matt Weinstock     Thirty years ago R. Julian Dashwood, a Britisher, found himself broke and hungry in Sydney, Australia.  Standing in a free food line, he determined never to be dependent again on how others mismanaged the world.
   
When the economic atmosphere cleared, he found his personal paradise, as many pressure-trapped city dwellers yearn to do, on Mauke, in the Cook Islands of the South Pacific.  He married a native girl and supports himself by selling seashells all over the world.

    Readers may recall previous mention here of Dashwood's psychological bout with the natives.  When they refused to collect shells he got a movie projector and showed some old films, free at first, to the enchanted natives.  Then he told them it would cost a penny to see them.  They had no money, so he paid them to collect shells and they used the pennies as admission to the movies.

::

Nov. 14, 1959, Reagan     THROUGH A mutual interest in shells, Dashwood and Bennett Foster, L.A. adman, have maintained a wonderful correspondence.  Perhaps Dashwood's latest letter will inspire or disenchant those who still hope some day to take off for the South Seas.  The man's a poet as well as a philosopher.

    He begins, "I smile to myself sardonically, thinking of you sitting in that ghastly office, imagining the delights of a tropical paradise.  At this moment the paradise is a slatey gray with sheets of rain driving in off the sea.  The fishing has gone sour for months, a situation for which I blame the Dulles-Macmillan bomb-testing firm.  My battery-driven radio has gone phut and it will be months before I can get it fixed.  You have no monopoly on grievances, only a variety of same.  But whereas mine will probably culminate in a magnificent semi-public row with my Polynesian wife, thus disposing of a lot of already cracked crockery and a marvelous discharge of libido, yours will probably find a final outlet in a stomach ulcer.

::

    

"BUT SERIOUSLY, I think most people work out a compromise of sorts with life only over the grave of several dreams.  Some, like myself, attempt to preserve parts of the dream in reality — a difficult tight-rope performance.  But of this I am certain: One always gets what one wants provided one wants it badly enough to sacrifice everything to the achievement thereof.  And even then the laugh is with the Fates and Furies because although man unquestionably consciously creates the situation, the final result is seldom quite in keeping with his original intentions.

::

    "IN MAUKE nothing ever happens.  This is why time passes with almost terrifying rapidity.  There are no permanent values;  nothing lasts;  one is here today, gone tomorrow and forgotten the day after.  Even the tombstones are made of soft coral and soon crumble away."

    Expressing thanks for books Foster sent him, Dashwood continues: "I enjoyed them immensely, particularly 'The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit,' Vance Packard's ominously fascinating 'The Hidden Persuaders' and 'Lolita,' for me the clinching argument in my contention that the American way of life is shot to pieces on the moral front.  What a beautiful pool of iridescent slime."

::

Nov. 14, 1959, Abby

    DASHWOOD continues:  "I have only one complaint.  Time.  I have lived in the islands for 30 years and I cannot recall as many individual events.  In an environment where age carries no great penalties or burdens, one is lulled into a false sense of extended youth.  There is forever 'today,' tomorrow is somebody else's affair.  If the world came to a standstill we would slide off with complete absence of fuss.  Our preparations for the future are confined to making the best of the present.  We have a fine home, acres of unused land, three pleasant children, and no savings, no insurance, no superannuation schemes.  And nobody cares.

::


    "TOTAL ESCAPE?
  Maybe.  Probably as nearly as humanly possible.  Escape from people who could certainly bore me;  escape from the rat race and financial worries;  escape from practically everything except myself, and the best answer to that is to be so fond of oneself that the idea of separation is intolerable.  You probably couldn't take it anymore than I could Los Angeles." 

   

 

   
   

 

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