September 18, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 18, 1959: “The only trouble with a woman who ‘wants a man’ is that everybody knows it,” Dear Abby says.
Paul Coates writes of Richard Swanson’s death: “At SC, for example, there are 32 fraternities. I’m told, on excellent authority, that at least 90% make hazing an annual practice. There’s a university regulation forbidding it. Now, there’s even a state law against it. Yet the students make no secret of their ceremonies. I’m not so naive as to believe that the school administrators didn’t know what was going on. They did know. But, in spite of a growing list of pointless deaths which result from the practice, they did nothing to stop it.”

Continue reading

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on September 18, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

Sex Killer Harvey Glatman Executed

Sept. 18, 1959, Mirror
Sept. 18, 1959: Attorney Jerry Giesler (d. 1962) has a heart attack.

Sept. 18, 1959, Glatman
Harvey M. Glatman is executed in the sex killings of Judy Ann Dull, Ruth Mercado and Shirley Ann Bridgeford. The Mirror said that 45 minutes before the execution, Glatman told an associate warden that "he wanted nothing done to save him."

Posted in #courts, Front Pages, Homicide | Comments Off on Sex Killer Harvey Glatman Executed

Movie Star Mystery Photo

Sept. 14, 2009, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Our mystery guest is Esther Ralston, above, in 1923.

Esther Ralston; Silent Era ‘American Venus’

 January 21, 1994

By MYRNA OLIVER, TIMES STAFF WRITER

Esther Ralston, the beautiful blonde “American Venus” of silent films, has died at the age of 91.

Miss Ralston, who appeared in about 150 films, died last Friday in her Ventura home after a short illness, her brother, Carleton Ralston of Los Angeles, announced Wednesday.

One of Miss Ralston’s last public appearances was in September at the Silent Movie Theater in
Hollywood for a showing of “Old Ironsides,” a patriotic film set in the early 1800s that she made in 1926.

She had been designated to receive a lifetime achievement award from the Southern California
Motion Picture Council on April 8, her brother said.

A native of Bar Harbor, Me., Miss Ralston began performing at the age of 2 with
prominent billing in the family theatrical troupe, the Ralston Family
Metropolitan Entertainers With Baby Esther, America’s Youngest Juliet.

She made her screen debut in 1916 in “Phantom Fortunes” and took several
small roles until she was picked to play Mrs. Darling in the 1925
version of “Peter Pan.”

Miss Ralston soon became one of the highest-paid actresses in silent films. She was publicized as the “American Venus,” the title of a film she made in 1926. She also earned
the appellation of “Paramount Clotheshorse,” known for her extravagant
lifestyle, which included riding about in a Rolls-Royce with a
chauffeur uniformed in whatever color matched her dress.

Her credits included “Huckleberry Finn,” “Oliver Twist,” “Beggar on
Horseback,” “A Kiss for Cinderella” and “Children of Divorce.”

Miss Ralston played the Palace twice, headlining in the top vaudevillian venue as the “Golden Girl of the Silver Screen.”

Unlike many silent actresses, Miss Ralston moved easily into “talkies” and continued her film career until the early 1940s.

Later, she acted occasionally in radio soap operas. But after three failed
marriages and the loss of her film fortune, she also supported herself
working in a department store, a talent agency and an Upstate New York
utility company.

Miss Ralston married and divorced George Webb,  a publicist and agent; Will Morgan, who was with Fred Waring’s Pennsylvanians, and newspaper columnist Ted Loyd.

In addition to her brother, she is survived by three children, Mary, Judy and Ted,
five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.


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: Lance Fuller!

Sept. 15, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Esther Ralston in “The Best People,” 1925.

Here’s another photo of our mystery guest. I have snipped out something to keep the playing field level.

Sept. 16, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Esther Ralston in “Mister Dynamite,” 1935.

Here’s another picture of our mystery guest. Please congratulate Eve Golden, Suzy Q and Mary Mallory for identifying her! Tilting a portrait to turn it into a one-column mug shot was standard procedure at The Times for decades.

Sept. 17, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Esther Ralston in an undated photo, modeling a hat she designed.

Here’s another photo of our mystery guest. Please congratulate Mike Hawks for identifying her!

Sept. 18, 2009, Mystery Photo Photograph by the Los Angeles Times

Esther Ralston in 1979.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Obituaries | 26 Comments

Coming Attractions — Marion Eisenmann

July 10, 2009, The Huntington The Huntington Gardens, Marion Eisenmann, July 10, 2009

Marion Eisenmann, who contributes artwork to the Daily Mirror, is giving classes on Plein Air watercolor painting on the next two Saturdays from 9 a.m. to noon at the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens. Further information is available at (626) 405-2128.

Posted in art and artists, Coming Attractions, Marion Eisenmann | Comments Off on Coming Attractions — Marion Eisenmann

Groundbreaking for Dodger Stadium

Sept. 18, 1959, Chavez Ravine
Photograph by Harry Chase / Los Angeles Times

Ground-breaking for Dodger Stadium at Chavez Ravine.

Sept. 18, 1959, Cover

President Eisenhower quietly told the world today he is just as confident of the verdict of history as Soviet Chairman Khrushchev. "He is always saying … history is going to decide between us," the president said. "I believe history, in the long run, is going to decide in favor of the free system."
1959_0918_runover_thumb
A rally protesting Khrushchev's visit is planned for the Rose Bowl.
Sept. 18, 1959, Khrushchev
Los Angeles prepares for Khrushchev's visit.

Sept. 18, 1959, Madison Avenue

Capitalism and advertising can't exist without each other, Madison Avenue says.

1959_0918_cartoon
Bruce Russell on Khrushchev's visit to the Lincoln Memorial.

Sept. 18, 1959, Comics

"I'll Bet I Make a Terrific President Some Day … of the School Mothers' Club!"

Sept. 18, 1959, Metro
The Dodgers provide boxes so guests can take souvenir dirt from the groundbreaking at Chavez Ravine.

 

Sept. 18, 1959, Sports

The Dodgers beat the Reds, 4-3, making them tied for second with Milwaukee and two games behind the first-place Giants. The three teams have eight remaining games. 

 
Sept. 18, 1959, Hazing
Kappa Sigma was in difficulty in the fall of 1955 when a stripteaser complained that the "boys got out of hand" during a stag party, The Times says.

"Prohibition of hazing is a cardinal principal of our fraternity," says Kappa Sigma national President James E. Ivins. "The national officers extend heartfelt sympathy and deepest feelings of remorse to the bereaved."

Posted in Architecture, art and artists, City Hall, Comics, Dodgers, Downtown, Education, Front Pages, LAPD, Politics, Richard Nixon | Comments Off on Groundbreaking for Dodger Stadium

Cooking With the Junior League — Rochester, N.Y.

Applehood and Motherpie

This week in Cooking With the Junior League, Mary McCoy takes a look at recipes from Rochester, N.Y. (1981).

Mary writes: With the change in the weather, I find myself craving ginger
cookies, beef stews that simmer all afternoon, and apples.  Apple
cider, apple crisp, apples with pork chops, Macintosh, Gala, and
Northern Spy – basically apples in any form.
And so this week, I turn to the first edition of the Junior League of Rochester’s Applehood and Motherpie:  Handpicked Recipes from Upstate New York (1981).

Read more>>>

Posted in Food and Drink | Comments Off on Cooking With the Junior League — Rochester, N.Y.

Found on EBay — Vintage Bongo Drums

Bongos EBay  

Bongo Drums Label
These vintage Valje bongo drums have been listed on EBay. Perfect for re-creating the mood of the Beats of Venice West. Listed as Buy It Now for $375.
Posted in books, Music, Stage, Venice Division | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Vintage Bongo Drums

September 17, 1959: Matt Weinstock

September 17, 1959: A man with a moving and storage company has thoughts about the ratio of families who are moving into Los Angeles with those who are moving out. The city has reached the saturation point, he tells Matt Weinstock.

Posted in Columnists, Dodgers, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on September 17, 1959: Matt Weinstock

September 17, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 17, 1959: Paul Coates looks at the case of Caryl Chessman, scheduled to be executed in the gas chamber. A letter writer asks Dear Abby if it's appropriate to ask restaurants for leftovers in a doggy bag.

Posted in #courts, Caryl Chessman, Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on September 17, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

USC Fraternity Pledge Chokes to Death During Hazing


Sept. 17, 1959: The X-15 makes its first powered flight. Continue reading
Posted in Education | 2 Comments

USC Fraternity Pledge Dies During Hazing; Dodgers Lose

Sept. 17, 1959, Astronauts

Sept. 17, 1959: Buried on an inside page are some names that will soon be famous –  Scott Carpenter, Gordon Cooper, John Glenn, Gus Grissom, Alan Shepard and Wally Schirra. Deke Slayton is the only one missing of the Mercury 7 astronauts. 

Sept. 17, 1959, Cover

Richard Swanson, a 21-year-old dental student at USC, chokes to death on a piece of raw liver during pledge hazing at the Kappa Sigma house on Fraternity Row. Some members were expelled and the fraternity was closed, but beyond that very little was done except some soul-searching and accusations that an official was blocking an inquiry because he was a USC graduate. Unless you count a riot that began when fraternity members hanged  USC President Norman Topping in effigy because he tried to impose rules that required the Greeks to get average grades.

Sept. 17, 1959, Khrushchev
"The ice of the cold war … has started to crumble" as a result of his visit to America, Khrushchev says..
Sept. 17, 1959, Interview
"I think one of the facts which characterize the position of the Jewish people in our country is the fact that among the persons who took foremost part in the launching of the rocket to the moon the representatives of the Jewish people hold a place of honor…. The question of a man's religion is not asked in our country. It is a matter for the conscience of the person concerned. We look upon a person as a person," Khrushchev says.

 
Sept. 17, 1959, Pictures

Sept. 17, 1959, Speech
"The Soviet Union stands for the development of relations between states on the basis of the principles of peaceful coexistence. These principles were bequeathed to us by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, the great founder of the Soviet state. And we are true to these principles."

Sept. 17, 1959, Nixon
This story has nothing to do with Nixon and the Bible, an item that appears on the cover rather than the runover, but it's a grabber headline.

Sept. 17, 1959, Cartoon
Bruce Russell on the Constitution vs. Marxism.

Sept. 17, 1959, Translate
What Khrushchev said: ""We have plenty of dead cats we could fling at you."

Sept. 17, 1959, Translate
Translation: "If there is a desire that our discussion here take that turn, of course, we for our part could think of quite a few questions of a similar character."


Sept. 17, 1959, Gene Sherman
Gene Sherman writes about a molestation victim and sex offenders.

Sept. 17, 1959, Sports Good news, bad news for the Dodgers. They reached 2 million in home
attendance for the first time in franchise history but lost to the
Reds, 7-4.

The Dodgers slipped into third place, two games behind the Giants.
Charlie Neal hit two home runs and Wally Moon added another shot but it
wasn't enough.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Dodgers, Education, Politics, Religion, Richard Nixon, Sports | Comments Off on USC Fraternity Pledge Dies During Hazing; Dodgers Lose

Voices — Mary Travers, 1936 – 2009

Peter, Paul & Mary Keep the Faith


Folk music: Trio's public TV special airing on KOCE Channel 50, new
family album and video feature familiar ethnic and traditional songs
that define group
.

 March 13, 1993

Jan. 12, 1966, Mary Travers By LYNNE HEFFLEY, TIMES STAFF WRITER

It wasn't all free
love and hallucinogens in the '60s. Hundreds of thousands marched for
civil rights and peace, and folk music was the galvanizing voice of
freedom and change.

Peter, Paul and Mary, the legendary trio who
helped promulgate that spirit of activism, could be considered relics
of a decade of chaos and transmutation, but for the fact that they've
kept the faith for more than 30 years.

Together and separately,
Peter Yarrow, Noel (Paul) Stookey and Mary Travers have raised their
voices for peace, for a nuclear-free America, to support the homeless
and to protest apartheid in South Africa and human rights abuses in El
Salvador, the Middle East and the then-Soviet Union.

In January,
they performed in the Reunion on the Mall inaugural event, in the
capital where they once marched with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
"It's so nice to be on the friends list for a change," Travers said.

This
month, the trio has released "Peter, Paul & Mommy, Too"–25 years
after their first family album, "Peter, Paul & Mommy"–along with a
companion concert video and PBS special.

If that
sounds a bit trendy–isn't everyone doing children's music these
days?–it should be noted that this celebratory album, with its
familiar ethnic and traditional folk songs and some timely new works,
singularly defines the group and its years together.

"Part of
what folk music is about is a sense of continued legacy," Yarrow said.
"At this point in our lives, we are keenly aware that we are the
carriers of a legacy that we inherited and want very much to hand down."

And,
with direct appeal for adults as well as children, the concert also
marks a new cause for the group: the affirmation of the family in both
the personal and national sense.

"Sometimes we have to sort of
re-examine classical values," Travers said. "Caring about one another,
helping each other, wanting a better, safer world–those are values
that haven't changed for thousands of years."

Recorded in
October at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Majestic Theatre in New
York, the concert progresses from the whimsy of "Puff (the Magic
Dragon)" and "I Know an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly" to Woody
Guthrie's haunting "Pastures of Plenty" and Yarrow's prayerful
rendition of "We Shall Overcome."

In the video version, old and
young are seen singing along to what Yarrow calls "everybody songs" as
opposed to children's songs.

"It is not a children's album, but
it's not not a children's album, either," Yarrow said. "It does not
talk down to them or infantilize them. It engages them in the
partnership of the generations."

Underscoring that partnership
is a segment in which Travers croons a lullaby to her granddaughter,
while her daughter, seated in the audience, fights tears.

"I was
trying to mix this song," Yarrow said, "and had to keep stopping
because I was so moved by the humanity, warmth and intelligence that
this strong woman is bringing to two beloved generations following her."

Another
connection made between young and old, Yarrow said, is Stookey's
ability to "enter into a child's world of delight and get totally
crazy-silly, and wondrously so."

"A new cultural view of
ourselves" is essential, Yarrow said. "We need songs, films, poems,
theater pieces and paintings that will help people to personally,
emotionally, internally affirm that we do care about each other."

That
the three singers care about each other is obvious in their seemingly
effortless harmonies and shared warmth. The activism that is an
integral part of their lives is in evidence as well. Guthrie's anthem
for migrant farm workers is briefly put in modern context, and there is
a musical reminder that no race is truly "pure."

"I have a sort
of sampler in my head," Travers said, "that–paraphrasing the
rabbinical scholar–says, 'It's not your duty to finish the task, it is
your duty not to neglect it.' If war and hunger and racism were easy
things to get rid of, I would assume we would have gotten rid of them
already."

About the audience's emotional reaction to Yarrow's
singing of "We Shall Overcome," Travers said, "Sometimes it's important
to re-listen to things. He sings it so sweetly that he resurrects its
beauty and the cliche falls away.

"The nice thing about folk
music is that if you don't get it today, it'll wait for you. The music
has power; that's why it survives. It just has to be passed on."

Posted in Music | 5 Comments

Found on EBay — Earl Carroll’s Nightclub

Earl_carroll_menu_ebay_crop

This menu from Earl Carroll's nightclub in Hollywood (now the Nickelodeon building at 6230 Sunset Blvd.) has been listed on EBay. The vendor suggests the menu is from about 1946. Bidding starts at $9.99.
Posted in Architecture, Hollywood, Music, Nightclubs | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Earl Carroll’s Nightclub

Khrushchev Explains ‘We Will Bury You’

Sept. 16, 1959, Mirror Cover

How to justify a screamer headline: "Khrushchev admitted he used the expression 'We will bury you,' with regard to western capitalism. 'I believe,' he said, 'I did use that expression once, and I will try to explain what it means. The expression I used was distorted, and on purpose.' "


Sept. 16, 1959, Paul Coates

Paul Coates on Gamblers Anonymous … and Tuesday Weld.

Sept. 16, 1959, Matt Weinstock

Curiosities of the cigarette pack, by Matt Weinstock.

Posted in Columnists, Front Pages, Matt Weinstock, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Khrushchev Explains ‘We Will Bury You’

Architectural Rambling — Pasadena

585 Bellefontaine
Photograph courtesy Ted Clark and Partners
The Underhill-Miley House, designed in 1912 by Frederick C. Grable and Clarence A. Austin, at 585 Bellefontaine has been listed at $3,295,000. The home was once owned by Emile Kellogg Boisot, former president of First Trust & Savings Bank of Chicago, who died there in 1941. A history of the home is here.

Posted in Architecture | Comments Off on Architectural Rambling — Pasadena

Khrushchev in U.S.!; Dodgers Beat Braves

Sept. 16, 1959, Khrushchev

Sept. 16, 1959: Khrushchev leaves for the U.S., accompanied by a menacing Mr. Atomic Bomb. He's carrying a briefcase marked "Threats" just in case you don't get it that atomic weapons are dangerous. 

Sept. 16, 1959, Times Cover
Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev is greeted by "a strangely unsmiling President Eisenhower and a coolly courteous crowd of about 200,000 undemonstrative Americans."

Sept. 16, 1959, Khrushchev

A protester observing Khrushchev's motorcade is fined for showing a skull and crossbones flag.

Sept. 16, 1959, Pictures

The disliked (to put it mildly) leader of a dreaded foreign country rides through the streets in an open car.

Sept. 16, 1959, Khrushchev's Plane

Here's an example of one of the many things that are wrong with Wikipedia. As of this moment (and that could change in the next minute/hour/day for all anyone knows), the entry on the TU-114 claims: "The Tu-114 was the aircraft that ferried Nikita Khrushchev to the United States on his first visit in 1959. The plane was so tall upon landing in the United States, it was realized that no staircase was high enough to reach the door. Embarrassingly, Khrushchev had to climb down on a ladder in front of the U.S. press." This is attributed to the world-famous authority "Fursenko, 334," which is not otherwise identified. Above is the actual account of what happened. And no, American officials didn't see Khrushchev's plane and say: "Oh, wow, the ramp is too low! D'oh!"
Sept. 16, 1959, Khrushchev
Khrushchev is sometimes "somber and dignified as a funeral director" and at other times, he's impish.
Sept. 16, 1959, Khrushchev
"The crowd was certainly integrated, as the route chosen passed through a predominantly Negro section of southeast Washington, where some of the city's worst slums are being replaced with modern housing developments. No segregation could have been detected by the sharpest critic's eye, either, in the military detachments assigned to the ceremony or on guard along the route."
 Sept. 16, 1959, Khrushchev Speech

"War does not promise anyone good; peace is advantageous to all the nations."

–Nikita Khrushchev
 Sept. 16, 1959, Editorial Cartoon

Here's another of Bruce Russell's editorial cartoons that seems to be a jumble of thoughts and symbols.

Sept. 16, 1959, Khrushchev Trip

 

Sept. 16, 1959, Bombing

A crazed man goes to a Houston school and detonates a suitcase full of explosives, killing himself, his son and four others. 
Sept. 16, 1959, Movies "Heaven, Hell or Hoboken" — are you serious? Sept. 16, 1959, Mickey Cohen

Mickey Cohen demands a jury trial over charges that he refused to testify before a state Assembly subcommittee on racketeering.

Sept. 16, 1959, Sports The Dodgers edged the Braves, 8-7, in 10 innings to tighten the already close National League race.

Milwaukee and Los Angeles were tied in second, two games behind San Francisco. Each team had 10 games left.

The Times' Frank Finch said fans at the Coliseum were in "a state of hysteria" when Ron Fairly's bases-loaded walk forced in the winning run. Seems a bit of hysterical sportswriting to me, since there were only 17,347 in the mammoth Coliseum.

Fairly was only in the ballgame because he replaced Duke Snider, who had been thrown out in the third inning. Finch didn't provide any details about Snider's offense.

There were close calls on both sides. Maury Wills, who had a triple and four singles, was thrown out at the plate in the eighth inning trying to score from second on an infield hit.

And the Braves' Joe Adcock lost a potential home run when his drive that hit a tower supporting the short left field screen was ruled a double. Milwaukee Manager Fred Haney played the game under protest. The best part of his argument might have been The Times' headline on a sidebar: "The Thing Sets Off Rhubarb."  Didn't Steve McQueen star in that?

"The ball hit the girder over and behind the screen and should be a home run," Haney said. "When it shook down [by fans] it fell out of the park."

The Dodgers' Walter Alston thought it was a great call. "When we refer to the screen we call it The Thing. It's all considered one thing–towers, cable and screen. If the ball sticks it's just a double, that's all."

Maybe they should rename it The Thing That Ate the Braves' Pennant.

–Keith Thursby

Here's a look at the weird Coliseum dimensions from the 1959 World Series. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MMpvvcQP-Ss&feature=related

Posted in art and artists, broadcasting, Dodgers, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Politics, Transportation | 1 Comment

Found on EBay — Elysian Park

Elysian Park EBay

This postcard of Elysian Park, stamped 1904, has been listed on EBay. The writer says: "This is one of the most beautiful of all of Los Angeles' many pretty parks." The road in the center is apparently North Broadway and to the right are the railroad yards. Bidding starts at $5.99.
Posted in Architecture, art and artists, Parks and Recreation | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Elysian Park

Chilly Reception for Khrushchev

Sept. 15, 1959, Cover
Sept. 15, 1959: Mrs. K. doesn't wear lipstick!
Sept. 15, 1959, Runover

The two most powerful leaders in the world shake hands.

Sept. 15, 1959, Khrushchev's bedroom

Khrushchev's suite at the Ambassador Hotel, including the Soviet leader's bed! 

Sept. 15, 1959, Weeks

"Our hands were not trembling when we were compelled to remove from their posts people with whom we had worked together many years. There were some black sheep in the fold. We took the black sheep by the tails and threw them out." –Nikita Khrushchev

Sept. 15, 1959, Paul Coates

Paul Coates on the story of a noble experiment with disappointing results.

Sept. 15, 1959, Matt Weinstock

Matt Weinstock is looking forward to college football.

Posted in Front Pages, Matt Weinstock, Paul Coates, Politics, Richard Nixon | Comments Off on Chilly Reception for Khrushchev

Coming Attractions — John Buntin

John Buntin, L.A. Noir

John Buntin, author of "L.A. Noir," which has been getting good reviews (I'm still working my way through the book) will be making a personal appearance tonight at 7 at Vroman's in Pasadena. Buntin has spent quite a bit of time researching this book, which takes a long, hard look at Police Chief William H. Parker and mobster Mickey Cohen. One item used by Buntin interests me particularly: The unpublished biography of Cohen written with author Ben Hecht back in 1957 (you may recall I wrote a post about it here). Buntin tells me Cohen does far less bragging than in his later published memoirs, "In My Own Words." 

In case you can't make it tonight, here's Buntin's entire schedule.

Posted in books, LAPD, Mickey Cohen | Comments Off on Coming Attractions — John Buntin

Khrushchev Heads for U.S.; Movie Star Morris Dead at 45

Sept. 15, 1959, Khrushchev Visit

The Soviet flag planted on the moon — a fearsome sight in the 1950s.

Sept. 15, 1959, Cover

Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev is scheduled to land at Andrews Air Force Base because the runway at National Airport (now Reagan National Airport) couldn't accommodate his TU-114.

The plane is carrying about 100 people, The Times says, including Khruschev's family and "educators, medical men, writers and other cultural personages — underscoring the Russian theme of peace for Khrushchev's 12-day visit."


 Sept. 15, 1959, Moon
Author and rocket scientist Willy Ley (d. 1969)  says the Soviets might attempt another space breakthrough during Khrushchev's visit, such as putting a man in orbit or launching a satellite in geosynchronous orbit.
 Sept. 15, 1959, Page 6
It would be "incredibly naive" to think that by treating Khrushchev well, we will make "the differences between us eventually melt away," Vice President Richard Nixon says.

And he won't be going to Disneyland!

Sept. 15, 1959, Editorial

 Sept. 15, 1959, Khrushchev
"It's an absolutely fantastic affair. Nothing like it has ever happened before. Not even the president of the United States gets this sort of coverage," Bill Henry says.
 Sept. 15, 1959, Page 7

In Miami, a man hoisted a sign reading "Nikita Khrushchev will be welcome here" at a small model graveyard maintained by the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

Setp. 15, 1959, Gene Sherman

"No, I have not forgotten slaughter by the Russians. No, I have not forgotten the ideological impasse of communism and capitalism. No, I do not wish peace at any price. But I wish it–fervently, for my children," Gene Sherman says.


Sept. 15, 1959, Comics
"Cooking!"

Sept. 15, 1959, Wayne Morris
Wayne Morris dies aboard the Navy's Bonhomme Richard while observing air maneuvers off Monterey.
Sept. 15, 1959, Hedda Hopper
Shirley MacLaine reads!

Sept. 15, 1959, Sports

What? The third-place Dodgers are accepting mail orders for World Series tickets!

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Khrushchev Heads for U.S.; Movie Star Morris Dead at 45