White Sox vs. Reds in World Series



Sept. 28, 1919, Comics

Sept. 28, 1919: "Buster Brown" takes a look at what causes homelessness.



Sept. 28, 1919, World Series

LAPD Sgt. Frank Harlan talks about the motorcycle unit: "The worst offenders we have to contend with are boys under 20 and new drivers. Many of the latter class have learned just enough to steer the car, step on the foot throttle and blow the horn and have not been driving long enough to realize the danger connected with this combination."
Posted in art and artists, Comics, LAPD, Sports, Transportation | Comments Off on White Sox vs. Reds in World Series

Egghead Prof. Doesn’t Want Babies, Wife Sobs

Sept. 28, 1909, Babies

Sept. 28, 1909: Prof. Zorn doesn't want babies!



Sept. 28, 1909, Irish

The secret life of John Fitzgerald is finally revealed.

Posted in #courts, Obituaries | 1 Comment

Voices — William Safire, 1929 – 2009

1971_1003_nixon_art

 

Oct. 3, 1971, Safire on Nixon


Here are some of the basic characteristics of the Nixon inner style, or method of operation:

–A preference for persuasion rather than coercion.

–An identification with heartland qualities, leaning unabashedly toward the square side.


Oct. 3, 1971, Safire on Nixon

–A frustrating assumption of opposition issues, which could be called responsive government or a preemptive political strike.

–A steady pace, as in troop withdrawals, that does not set the world on fire.

–The occasional bold strike, as in Cambodia … made doubly dramatic against the backdrop of the steadiness of pace.


William Safire: Knocking Them 'When They're Up'

 August 31, 1987

By ELEANOR RANDOLPH, The Washington Post

WASHINGTON
— William Safire, his voice uncommonly soft for a newspaper columnist,
is talking about his former boss, President Richard Nixon. Except that
not once, but twice, he calls him President Lincoln.

It's not
hard to understand. Safire has spent his spare time the last nine years
writing a novel about Lincoln. "Freedom," as the epic is called, is
1,125 pages that deal with Honest Abe during his not altogether honest
first 20 months in the White House.

Still, listening to Safire
in his New York Times office here, one senses that these slips of the
tongue are not the result of some momentary confusion.

History
has defined Lincoln as a wise President with a few understandable
flaws. For Safire, there has always been a question why the President
he wrote speeches for from 1969-73 is being judged as flawed, with a
little accidental wisdom.

At Lincoln's point in time, the
President's men did more than bug reporters' telephones. Lincoln
arrested a war correspondent who, back from the front, gave a report to
the President and then planned to write about how distraught and
unhappy he had found the man in the Oval Office.

Break-in at the
headquarters of the political opposition? About 100 years before
Nixon's men were invading the Watergate, Lincoln suspended habeas
corpus– that hallowed protection against unlawful imprisonment.
Thousands were locked up at one time or another for various degrees of
suspected disloyalty to Lincoln's policies.

"I think that's
criticiz-able," says Safire, an expert on language who would probably
pounce on anybody else for using such a word. "Rarely does anybody
criticize the President–President Lincoln–for his excesses, for
cracking down on dissent and cracking down on the press."

But if
Safire is criticizing him, he also decided somewhere in the long
process of writing this book that Lincoln's unseemly means were more
admirable than Nixon's in Watergate or even Ronald Reagan's in the
Iran- contra scandal. And Lincoln had a purpose aimed at a more
understandable end–the preservation of the Union.

"If he were running today, I'd vote for him," Safire says. "I think he had his priorities straight."

Straight
priorities mean having a core of beliefs that are worth all the
harassment and trouble that come with leadership. It is true for
Presidents, and it has to be true for critics like William Lewis
Safire. A registered Republican who defines himself as a Libertarian
conservative, Safire at 57 has become the most thoughtful conservative
essayist in the country.

His twice-a-week columns are often at
the top of required reading for the politically attuned. Even people
who hate his conclusions still love his column. His Sunday column on
language generates more than 15,000 letters per year.

His
speeches bring him $18,000 apiece. His recent books (this is the ninth)
have hit the jackpot. And most of the people who had nothing but
criticism when he was hired in 1973 as the token conservative on the
Times Op-Ed page have decided that maybe it wasn't such a bad idea
after all.

What has mostly surprised and delighted the
non-believers has been Safire's tendency to take on the powerful,
whether they be political foes or personal friends. His targets have
included former Carter Administration budget director Bert Lance,
Reagan friend Michael Deaver and the most powerful of all, Nancy Reagan.

The
late CIA director William Casey was a longtime ally from the days when
Safire worked for Nixon in 1960 and helped on Casey's unsuccessful
congressional campaign in New York in 1966. And yet Safire had so
angered Casey late last year that the two were barely speaking. When
Casey got word that Safire was asking some tough questions about the
Iran arms scandal, he called Safire three times at home. On a Sunday.

Safire
recalls "pulling my punches" somewhat on Casey in his column the next
day. Still, he wrote: "It struck more than one of his former friends
that power and secrecy had corrupted Big Bill."

It was one of
the few cases when his political friends felt that Safire came closest
to breaking his primary rule for the column: "I believe in knocking
somebody when they're up."

For those who are his friends,
Safire's loyalty is legend. They sometimes cite his support of the late
Roy Cohn, whom he befriended after he wrote a story about Cohn in 1949.

Cohn
had been making enemies, and creating controversy, since the days of
his association with Sen. Joseph McCarthy. What angered Safire was that
Cohn was disbarred in New York shortly before he died of complications
from AIDS.

In his columns he labeled the proceedings a "late
hit" and a "ghoulish pursuit." His outrage brought a torrent of angry
letters from people who believed Safire had distorted the facts to
support a man unworthy of such a defense.

"He never denied their
friendship," says ABC's Barbara Walters, a friend of Safire since she
worked for him at Tex McCrary's broadcasting and public relations
operations in the 1950s. "A lot of people were friendly with Roy and
used Roy who never admitted they knew him."

Says Safire: "I
thought he abused civil liberties (on McCarthy's committee) and I told
him so at the time. . . . But over the years, when he needed me I was
there; when I needed him he was there."

Asked to explain this
arrangement, Safire said: "I would go to a big gathering of his in New
York or something and I would get up and say, 'I'm here because I like
unpopular causes.' And that would get a laugh and a lot of people who
were uncomfortable about it being publicized felt better."

'Sound Judgment'

As
for Cohn's way of reciprocating, "whenever I wanted to run something
past him he would have really sound judgment, like in politics, what
about this guy, what about that guy?"

"I think the great riches
in a man's life are his friends, and you stick by them and they stick
by you," Safire says. "And nobody's perfect. Everybody has the sharp
edges knocked off in the course of life."

Friends and family
members say that Safire's own edges took their first knock at age 4
when his father, a successful thread manufacturer, died of cancer.

Safire's
mother picked up her three boys–Bill, Leonard and the oldest,
Marshall–and moved to California. Her husband had set up a fund before
he died, and there was a monthly check.

"It wasn't poverty
exactly, but it was close to it," Leonard says. "She would sit on the
edge of the chair and wait for the check. If it didn't come, we were
dead."

In the next few years, the family would move back and
forth between New York City and California. Safire, bright and likable,
went to Bronx High School of Science, one of New York's most elite, and
started at Syracuse University in 1947 on a scholarship. There he ran a
radio show, following in the footsteps of brother Leonard, who was also
showing an early interest in journalism.

In the summer of 1949,
Safire went to work for McCrary and Jinx Falkenberg. As a result,
William Safire is not a college graduate; he did not go back to
Syracuse until he gave the commencement address after he won the
Pulitzer Prize in 1978.

Instead, Safire took his lessons in
politics, public relations and journalism from McCrary, who today says
Safire "learned to write for people who follow with their finger and
read with their lips moving. He remembered that the adjective is the
mortal enemy of the noun. He always writes lean and mean."

After
two years in the Army, he returned to Tex and Jinx, ultimately becoming
a vice president for McCrary's firm. It was during this period that he
changed his name from Safir to Safire, because, as he puts it, "I got
tired of people calling saying 'safer,' 'saffer' or 'zephyr.' "

More
important for Safire's future was the way he engineered a little extra
publicity for one of his clients, a home-building firm that had a
display at the American National Exhibition in Moscow.

There,
Safire maneuvered Vice President Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita S.
Khrushchev into the all-American house for their famous "Kitchen
debate." What developed was the beginning of an important friendship
for both Nixon and Safire.

In 1961, after helping Nixon in his
unsuccessful campaign against John Kennedy, Safire started his own P.R.
firm, where his clients ranged from Ex-Lax to such political candidates
as Casey, Sen. Jacob Javits (D-N.Y.) and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller.

Safire's
life took its real swing upward when he went to the New York Times at
age 44. He left the Nixon White House, having created such memorable
phrases as "nattering nabobs of negativism"–a criticism of the media
delivered by Spiro Agnew.

An Ear for Sour Notes

What
has happened to Safire since, in some ways argues against the old code
that only a lifetime journalist can be a good journalist. The years in
public relations and the White House seem to have given him an ear for
sour notes on both sides–among those in power in government and those
in power in the press.

So, readers seem to sense that he has
mostly worked things out for himself. After investigating the story, he
sits down and listens to orders–not from bosses or friends or
political allies–but from somewhere deep inside.

There are echoes of Lincoln there, at least of Safire's Lincoln.

Posted in art and artists, Politics, Richard Nixon | Comments Off on Voices — William Safire, 1929 – 2009

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

Sept. 27, 1945: Cover

Sept. 27, 1945: Lt. Col. James P.S. Devereux, Marine hero of Wake Island, is back home after spending several years in Japanese POW camps.

Sept. 27, 1945, Movies

Deanna Durbin in “Lady on a Train.”

Posted in Film, Front Pages, Hollywood | Comments Off on A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

Polanski Case Revisited


April 16, 1977, Roman Polanski

April 16, 1977: Roman Polanski says he's not guilty of raping an underage girl.


March 13, 1977, Polanski
March 13, 1977: The unidentified victim told police she was given drugs and raped.


March 25, 1977, Polanski Indicted
March 25, 1977: Polanski is indicted on sex charges.


March 25, 1977, Polanski


May 1, 1977, Polanski
May 1, 1977: A profile of Polanski by Lee Grant

May 1, 1977, Polanski

Polanski's Lingering Nightmares

May 1, 1977, Polanski

Aug. 8, 1977, Polanski Convicted

Aug. 8, 1977: Polanski is convicted.

Feb. 1, 1978, Polanski Flees

Feb. 1, 1978: Polanski flees.

Posted in #courts, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Ike, Khrushchev Deadlock on Berlin; Cubs Beat Dodgers

Sept. 27, 1959 Cover

Sept. 27, 1959: Not so fast.

The Cubs routed the Dodgers, 12-2, and the Braves edged the
Phillies, 3-2, creating another tie atop the National League standings.

The Dodgers could have clinched at least a tie for the N.L. title with a victory.

The Giants were still in it, since they beat the Cardinals in the
first game of a doubleheader and were rained out in the second. But
they needed to sweep the next day's doubleheader and hope the Dodgers
and Braves didn't win.

–Keith Thursby

Sept. 27, 1959, Beats

Bob Frampton writes of the Beats: "A
tumble of words about a train in the night.
In the dingy, badly lighted coffee house
with 30 or so young people listening …


Sept. 27, 1959, Beats

… "We've got the beginnings for an American art renaissance here and being let alone to work without a lot of unnecessary rules somebody else made is a big part of it."

Sept. 27, 1959, Sports

The Rams lost their season opener at the Coliseum, 23-21 to the New
York Giants, who were led by a couple of future broadcasters.

Pat Summerall kicked three field goals, including one with 1:58
remaining, to lead the Giants. Frank Gifford scored a touchdown for New
York.

More than 71,000 people were at the Coliseum. Tell me again why L.A.
can't support a pro football team? The town sure did a good job once
upon a time.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in #Jazz, Dodgers, Music, Richard Nixon | Comments Off on Ike, Khrushchev Deadlock on Berlin; Cubs Beat Dodgers

Car Thief in Short Pants Is the ‘Human Eel’

Sept. 27, 1919, Criminal

Sept. 27, 1919: Don Clauser is a car thief in short pants … and the Los Angeles Ostrich Farm seeks to dissolve the corporation.


March 15, 1921, Criminal

March 15, 1921: Don Clauser, the “Human Eel,” escapes from the Whittier school with the superintendent’s car.
Posted in #courts, Transportation | Comments Off on Car Thief in Short Pants Is the ‘Human Eel’

Death in a Small Cafe



Sept. 27, 1909, Killing

Sept. 27, 1909: A tale of murder in a San Fernando Street cafe. And imagine: "A ranch on Adams Street west of the city limits."
Posted in #courts, Homicide | Comments Off on Death in a Small Cafe

September 26, 1959: Matt Weinstock

September 26, 1959: Al Capone’s widow is preparing to sue over the film “Al Capone,” seeking a share of the profits, Matt Weinstock says.

Gene Tierney has been released from the Menninger Clinic, a news story says. Continue reading

Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on September 26, 1959: Matt Weinstock

September 26, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 26, 1959: Paul Coates has a roundup of his most interesting letters and press releases. For instance, William Dudman says he holds the deed on the moon.

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on September 26, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

New Cartoon Show Premieres

Sept. 26, 1959, Quick Draw


Posted in art and artists, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Dodgers Lose! Pennant Race Tied!

Sept. 26, 1959, Cover

Sept. 26, 1959: An 11-year-old girl is in serious condition after being dragged 25 feet when her brother tied her to their father's pickup truck while playing cowboy.

Posted in Dodgers, Front Pages | Comments Off on Dodgers Lose! Pennant Race Tied!

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

Sept. 26, 1944, Cover

California gets 16,000 Nazi POWs as farm workers.

Sept. 26, 1944, Movies

Spencer Tracy in "The Seventh Cross."

Funeral services are planned for Harry Chandler, who died Sept. 23, 1944, at the age of 80. "Until a few days before his death he had been in his office in the Times Building, where for nearly 60 years he had served the newspaper faithfully and brilliantly, first as circulation manager; then as business manager; from 1917 to 1941 as president and general manager; and from 1941 until his death as chairman of the board of directors."

Posted in Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Obituaries | 1 Comment

Dodgers Take 1-Game Lead

Sept. 26, 1959, Cover

How could this pennant race get more exciting?

The Dodgers beat the Cubs in 11 innings, 5-4, with a home run from one of the remaining Boys of Summer, Gil Hodges, giving them a one-game lead over the Braves, who lost to the Phillies. The Giants, still in third, were rained out in St. Louis.

This game almost didn't end, with the umpires discussing what Frank Finch called "the fast-fading light." But rookie reliever Larry Sherry struck out Dale Long with the tying run on second to ensure the victory.

The Chicago games were shown on television back in L.A. which The Times' Don Page suggested might "perhaps encourage you to visit the Coliseum next year and watch at least a few games in person."

Page also visited with Vin Scully, who talked about enjoying the pennant race: "We've tried to give the fans the best and it'll be even better when we get a new ballpark."

Scully said he was floored by the habit of bringing radios to the Coliseum and compared broadcasting in Los Angeles to other cities in the National League.

"Boy they can be mean in Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh too," Scully told Page. "In Philadelphia … there's no beer sold so they bring their own potions, mostly hard liquor. It's legal to do it there. I remember one game that was nearly called off because the people became so surly.

"In Pittsburgh it's not so bad but I've had some scares there. Pirate fans like to throw rock candy at Jerry and me when their team is losing. Don't ask me why rock candy."

Scully said he received much more positive response in letters from New York fans after the telecast of the second all-star game, which was played in L.A. "I could have cried, " he said. "They were wonderful letters of remembrance."

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Dodgers, Front Pages, Politics | Comments Off on Dodgers Take 1-Game Lead

‘Cut Wife Into Little Pieces!’

1919_0926_barbadillo_photo

All was not well in the De Barbadillo household.

Sept. 26, 1919 De Barbadillo

1919_0926_barbadillo02

Sept. 26, 1919: Rabbi Isidore Myers leads the People’s Synagogue in celebrating the new year.

Posted in #courts, Religion | Comments Off on ‘Cut Wife Into Little Pieces!’

School Segregation

Sept. 26, 1909, Schools

Sept. 26, 1909: African American parents in Marshfield, Ore., don’t want their children to go to the separate school set up for blacks and Asians.

Posted in Education | Comments Off on School Segregation

Artist’s Notebook — Huntington Gardens

2009_0909_huntington_01

The Huntington Gardens by Marion Eisenmann

2009_0909_huntington_02

The Huntington Gardens by Marion Eisenmann

2009_0909_Huntington_003

The Huntington Gardens by Marion Eisenmann

Marion Eisenmann and I were going over some of her recent work and this caught my eye: A page of value studies she did earlier this month at the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens to prepare for classes she is giving. These are three of the six studies that were on one page.

I always enjoy the time I spend roaming the grounds at the Huntington. My favorite place to watch people is on one of the benches beneath the wisteria on the hill overlooking the Japanese gardens. There are several koi ponds there and I think I have heard people say "Look at those huge fish!" in every language known to mankind.

Marion says: I did these value studies instead of preliminary pencil sketches to capture the light of the multiple layers of plants before working in color. I used a brush versus a pencil in order to not get so much into the detail of the scenario in front of me, but focus more on the light situation, contrast and composition. I like the silhouetted and layered feel of these studies, they remind me of little miniature theater stages.

Note: In case you just tuned in, Marion and I are visiting local landmarks in a project inspired by what Charles Owens and Joe Seewerker did in Nuestro Pueblo. Check back next week for another page from Marion's notebook.

By the way, Daily Mirror readers have asked about buying copies of Marion's artwork. Naturally, this is gratifying because I think Marion's work is terrific, and one of my great pleasures is sharing it with readers every week. We have decided that the project is a journey about discovering Los Angeles rather than creating things to sell. Marion is busy with other projects and says she isn't set up to mass-produce prints but would entertain inquiries about specific pieces. For further information, contact Marion directly.

Posted in art and artists, Marion Eisenmann, Nuestro Pueblo, Parks and Recreation | Comments Off on Artist’s Notebook — Huntington Gardens

George ‘Evil Genius’ Hodel Rides Again III


Above, Page 79, “Most Evil,” by Steve Hodel


So far, the majority of votes are against dissecting the problems in “Most Evil,” which is fine with me because it would be almost as much work as debunking John Gilmore’s “Severed,” which is 25% mistakes and 50% fiction.

This page sums up the types of problems encountered in the claims by Steve Hodel. Continue reading

Posted in #courts, books, Homicide, LAPD | 8 Comments

Voices — Alicia de Larrocha, 1923 – 2009

April 22, 1980, Alicia de Larrocha

April 22, 1980: The late Daniel Cariaga profiles pianist Alicia de Larrocha. The New York Times has reported that Larrocha died in Barcelona at the age of 86. The Times plans an obituary in upcoming editions.

April 22, 1980, Alicia de Larrocha

Posted in classical music, Obituaries | Comments Off on Voices — Alicia de Larrocha, 1923 – 2009

Found on EBay — Earl Carroll’s Nightclub

Earl Carroll's Nightclub, Bike This photograph of a man, possibly a fellow named Harrison Randall, with a bicycle outside Earl Carroll's nightclub has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $5.35.
Posted in Hollywood, Nightclubs | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Earl Carroll’s Nightclub