October 2, 1959: Paul V. Coates &ndash

October 2, 1959: Paul Coates says of Caryl Chessman: “Justice tripped over her own skirts in her hurry to get rid of him when he asked for his day in court.”

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Dodgers Win Game 2, 4-3

  Oct. 2, 1959, Mirror Cover

Oct. 2, 1959: The Dodgers win Game 2, tying the series.

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

Oct. 2, 1930, Times Bombing

Oct. 2, 1930: Times employees honor workers who were killed in the 1910 bombing.

Oct. 2, 1930, Movies

"The Big Trail" opens in Los Angeles.

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LAPD Honors Motorcycle Officers


motorcycles_1917_crop
Los Angeles Times file photo
Los Angeles Police Department officers with Indian motorcycles, June 1917.

May 20, 1907, Motorcycle Officers  
May 20, 1907: LAPD motorcycle officers arrest speeders. The speed limit downtown is 12 mph and 20 mph elsewhere. The speed limit at certain downtown intersections is 4 mph.
Oct. 11, 1905, Motorcycles  
Oct. 11, 1905: The Police Department wants two motorcycles.

2009_1002_motor_centennial

The Los Angeles Police Department is hosting a two-day celebration of its motorcycle unit today and tomorrow at the Police Academy in Elysian Park.

Friday's events include a motorcycle drill team performance, displays and guest speakers; 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., free.

Saturday's events will feature a motor officer reunion; Noon, admission is $45 in advance, $55 at the door.

Further information is here.

Note, according to Capt. Art Sjoquist’s “History of the Los Angeles Police Department” (1984) and Times clips, the LAPD acquired its first motorcycles in 1905, so I’m not sure how the department arrived at the date of 1909, but I hope everyone has a great time this weekend.   

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Movie Star Mystery Photo

Sept. 28, 2009,
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Richard Quine and first his wife, Susan Paley, 1942.

Richard Quine, 68, Film Director, Dies of

Gunshot Wound

June 13, 1989
By EDWARD J. BOYER, Times Staff Writer

1945_0102_susan_peters Film director Richard Quine, whose string of comedy hits included "My Sister Eileen," "Solid Gold Cadillac" and "Bell, Book and Candle," has died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Los Angeles police said Monday.

Quine, 68, died Saturday at UCLA Medical Center, hospital officials said.

Police said the one-time child actor-turned director had been despondent over poor health.
An actor's son, Quine was born Nov. 12, 1920, in Detroit and made his movie debut at age 12. His acting credits include "Jane Eyre" in 1934 and "Command Decision" in 1948 with Clark Gable.
Quine made the switch to directing shortly after World War II, while he was still a contract player for MGM. He and a friend, William Asher, who also became a successful director, decided to adapt a Saturday Evening Post short story for the screen.

Columbia Pictures head Harry Cohn heard about the adaptation, called Quine in and asked how much the two men wanted for the script. When Quine said they did not want to sell it, but wanted to direct it themselves, Cohn responded: "How the hell do you think you can make a picture?"
Later, another Columbia executive told Quine, "Mr. Cohn tells me you're going to direct a picture."
There was no indication that the adapted story, "Leather Gloves" actually made it to the screen, but Quine did go on to direct more than two dozen movies.

His films included the 1954 remake of "So This Is Paris" starring Tony Curtis and Gloria DeHaven; "The World of Suzie Wong," starring William Holden, in 1960; the 1964 comedy "Sex and the Single Girl," starring Natalie Wood, Lauren Bacall and Henry Fonda; "The Solid Gold Cadillac," starring Judy Holliday and narrated by George Burns, in 1965, and "Hotel" in 1967.

He also directed James Stewart, Kim Novak and Jack Lemmon in "Bell, Book and Candle" in 1958, an adaptation of the successful Broadway play about a New Yorker who falls in love with a neighbor who is a witch.

"Making a movie is a bit like having a baby," he once said. "All you can hope for is that it won't have two heads and that it will be an entity in itself: who cares if it's a girl or a boy?"

There was no immediate indication of funeral arrangements or survivors for Quine, who was married at least three times.

1947_0706_susan_peters01

July 6, 1947: Susan Peters, Quine's second wife, returns to acting after being partially paralyzed in a gun accident.

1947_0706_susan_peters02


Just a reminder on how this works: I post the mystery photo on Monday and reveal the answer on Friday … or on Saturday if I have a hard time picking only five pictures; sometimes it's difficult to choose. To keep the mystery photo from getting lost in the other entries, I move it from Monday to Tuesday to Wednesday, etc., adding a photo every day.

I have to approve all comments, so if your guess is posted immediately, that means you're wrong. (And if a wrong guess has already been submitted by someone else, there's no point in submitting it again).

If you're right, you will have to wait until Friday. There's no need to submit your guess five times. Once is enough. The only prize is bragging rights. 

The answer to last week's mystery star: Hall Bartlett!

Setp. 29, 2009, Mystery Photo Los Angeles Times file photo Sept. 28, 1960: Richard Quine and Kim Novak at the premiere of “A Song Without End.”

Here's our mystery fellow with (not much of a) mystery companion. Please congratulate Carmen, Paul Cardinal, Jenny McCrank, "Laura" fan Waldo Lydecker and Jeff Hanna for identifying him.

Sept. 30, 2009, Mystery Photo Los Angeles Times file photo
April 13, 1965: Richard Quine and his wife, Fran Jeffries, at the Cocoanut Grove.

Here's another picture of our mystery guest — with a mystery companion. Please congratulate Dewey Webb, Sue, Nancy Price, Sandy Reed, Kris, Michael Ryerson, Cinnamon Carter, JM Green, Rosalyn, Zabadu, Pat in Michigan, Christa, Cold in Phx, William, Zapgun, Pocho, Jane Ellen Wayne, Roget-L.A. and Alexa Foreman for identifying him. 

Oct. 1, 2009, Mystery Photo Los Angeles Tim
es file photo

July 18, 1966: Richard Quine on the set of “Hotel.”

Here's another photo of our mystery guest. Please congratulate Pat van Hartesveldt, Elsie, Benito, Mike Hawks and Mary Mallory  for identifying him.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Obituaries | 58 Comments

Dodgers Lose Game 1

Oct. 2, 1959, Cover

Oct. 2, 1959: A carnival mood prevailed throughout the night and early morning as the ticket line — which stretched around the Coliseum — waited patiently for the windows to open. But the holiday spirit changed to dismay and then to dejection as the crowd, watching and listening to the first series game in Chicago on hundreds of portable television and radio sets, heard how the White Sox were slowly mauling their heroes.

Frankly, I'm intrigued by the idea of anybody hauling one of those big, clunky black and white "portable" TVs down to the Coliseum. I wonder where they got the electricity to run them. — lrh. 


Can a team suffer a letdown in the first game of the World Series?

After their dramatic playoff victory over the Braves, the Dodgers
certainly came out flat against the White Sox, losing 11-0. The Times'
Frank Finch said, "The Sox simply batted the Dodgers' brains out."

Ted Kluszewski hit two home runs and Chicago scored seven times in
the third inning. The only Dodger highlight was there would be a Game
2.

"It was just one of those games where you get the hell knocked out
of you," Manager Walt Alston said. "But that kind of defeat doesn't
count any different than one that goes 13 innings and 2-1."

Alston said his relief pitching—including Sandy Koufax—was a bright
spot. "It might be that Sandy will get a start in this series
someplace."

The Times reported that all Coliseum tickets were sold out and L.A.
hotel space was filling up, in part because of an already scheduled
real estate brokers' convention. "Happy fans snapped them up as if they
were passports to paradise," the paper gushed about the ticket sales.
Jeane Hoffman reported that more than 277,000 fans would attend if all
three L.A. games were played and the Dodgers would definitely come out
a winner. They would be able to use the Coliseum technically rent free
for the series and because of the team's lease the Coliseum would
actually owe the team $18,499 for concessions.

–Keith Thursby

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England Calls Men to Armed Forces

Oct. 2, 1939, Cover

Oct. 2, 1939: Hitler plans to abdicate now that his work his done. Or maybe not. Winston Churchill calls Russia's next move "a riddle wrapped in mystery inside an enigma." I wonder if this is the earliest occurrence of that phrase.


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Reds Beat Black Sox 9-1

Oct. 2, 1919, Cartoon

Oct. 2, 1919: Cartoonist Edmund Waller "Ted" Gale on "Base-Ballsheviki." Notice the little baseball bombs.

Oct. 2, 1919, World Series

When an 8-to-5 favorite in a World Series is beaten by a score of 9 to 1 in the first game, it looks as if all the dope has been upset and all the wise experts are cuckoo…


Oct. 2, 1919, Black Sox World Series

… Before the game, the betting was 8 to 5 in favor of the Sox, but the
Reds beat them 9 to 1 just the same. Something was wrong and it looks
as if it was nothing else than overconfidence on the part of the
Chicago team.

Sept. 25, 1920: Black Sox

Sept. 25, 1920: The Chicago grand jury "has received evidence which indicates an attempt by a nationwide ring of gamblers to 'pollute baseball and ruin the great national game, in the same way boxing was killed and horse racing crucified,' Henry H. Brigham, foreman, said."

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Your Horoscope


Oct. 2, 1909, Horoscope

Oct. 2, 1909: Astrology as practiced 100 years ago.

Oct. 2, 1909, Divorce

Seamy details in a divorce case involving the wife of a restaurant operator and the butcher next door.

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Found on EBay — William Manker

William Manker Bowl EBay

Here's an intriguing item: A bowl by William Manker (1911-1989), the professor of ceramics at Scripps College and design coordinator for California Federal Savings. It's dated 1935 and inscribed to E.A Batchelder. Bidding starts at $34.95
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October 1, 1959: Matt Weinstock

October 1, 1959: A caller tries to tap Matt Weinstock for a few dollars. He’s not soft touch.

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October 1, Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

October 1, 1959: Paul Coates conducts a telephone survey about Caryl Chessman and his scheduled execution.  October 1, 1959: And Paul Coates conducts a telephone survey on Caryl Chessman. The results reveal the common misconception that Chessman was a killer.

And Mickey Cohen plans to marry Beverly (Jean) Hills.

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Sox Clobber Dodgers, 11-0

Oct. 1, 1959, Mirror Cover

Oct. 1, 1959: Forget the World Series for a moment. The Mirror sent Dick Bergholz to cover President Eisenhower's golfing vacation in Palm Springs. Ike's foursome included George Allen, Freeman Gosden of "Amos 'n' Andy fame and William Robinson, an executive for a soft drink firm.

Scalpers are selling $10 World Series tickets for $30 (#219.22 USD 2008).


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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

Oct., 1, 1929, Movies

Oct. 1, 1929: "Say It With Songs" will premiere at the Warner Bros. Theatre in Hollywood. "Hard to Get" is a "melange of mirth."

Oct. 1, 1929, Women

Now this came as something of a surprise. I had always assumed that the 1920s were the golden age of women's clubs, an era that continued into the 1950s. But this story by Myra Nye features young women who were pursuing careers instead of joining clubs. For example, Miriam Olden, who graduated from USC with a law degree, was an attorney for many years. She married another lawyer, Harold Fendler, and in 1960 their son Robert was admitted to the bar.

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Bomb Kills 20 Times Employees

1910_1001_latimes_bombing
Photo courtesy of the USC Digital Library

Oct. 1, 1910: The bombing of the Los Angeles Times Building at 1st and Broadway.

Posted in #courts, Downtown | 1 Comment

I’m Shocked — SHOCKED — That Anyone Would Lie in a Hollywood Documentary

A retired Los Angeles County prosecutor, who now says he lied on an
HBO documentary when he said
he advised a judge to sentence Roman
Polanski to prison for having sex with a minor, tried to explain his
actions this way: “Embellishing a story sounded like a good idea."

“I’m known to the world as a liar. It’s mortifying,” David Wells told The Times. “But it’s my duty [now] to tell the truth.”

Read more>>>

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Sox, Dodgers Ready for World Series

Oct. 1, 1959, Cover

Oct. 1, 1959: Dodgers vs. Sox in Chicago.


http://www.archive.org/flow/flowplayer.commercial-3.0.5.swf

It was banner news in the Mirror-News but merited only a couple paragraphs in The Times.

Depending on which newspaper you chose to believe, 1,500 angry Dodger fans stormed the Coliseum in a ticket mixup … or several people "turned unruly and hauled down signs from the windows."

The Mirror-News had the story on Page 1 on Sept. 30, with The Times catching up in a story about the fans preparing for the World Series. You had to read deep into the story to find out about the ticket troubles.

What else was in The Times?

Readers learned the sad tale of a Dodger fan waiting in line for tickets and hoping he'll survive his brain tumor long enough to watch his favorite team.

Hollywood Park delayed its opener until Oct. 7, hoping the series would be over by then.

Sports columnist Braven Dyer was still mad that the playoff games against the Braves had been played during the day: "This town won't go for most afternoon sports except on Sunday but there still are a lot of dumb people who don't realize it."

Roger Craig will start for the Dodgers against Early Wynn for the White Sox.

–Keith Thursby

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Black Sox World Series Begins To-Day

Oct. 1, 1919, Sports Cover

Oct. 1, 1919: The White Sox and the Reds prepare for Game 1 of the World Series.


Sept. 23, 1920, Black Sox

Sept. 23, 1920: The Cook County Grand Jury begins an investigation into whether the 1919 World Series was fixed.

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October 1, 1909: Fatal Land Dispute Near El Monte

October 1, 1909: High winds ground the aeroplanes of the Wright brothers and Glenn Curtiss. A century ago, the Wright brothers hadn't flown as high as the Eiffel Tower.October 1, 1909: A century ago, the Wright brothers hadn’t flown as high as the Eiffel Tower.

A property dispute near El Monte ends in a killing with racial overtones.

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September 30, 1959: Matt Weinstock

September 30, 1959: “The body of a San Bernardino Freeway crash victim was hurled into a tree where it hung unnoticed for five hours today” … W.C. Fields vs. Cecil B. De Mille … and Matt Weinstock on some friendly traffic officers.

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