September 4, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 4, 1959: Paul Coates has the story of Lily Goldberg, who refused to believe that her son Gerald was guilty of writing bad checks, despite witnesses' identification and testimony by a handwriting expert.

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

Sept. 4, 1922, Movies   

Sept. 4, 1922:
Cecil B. De Mille's "Manslaughter" is at Grauman's Rialto, and Gloria Swanson stars in "Her Gilded Cage" at Grauman's Million-Dollar Theatre.
 

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

Movie Star Mystery Photo

Aug. 31, 2009, Mystery Photo
 Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Renzo Cesana in a publicity photo for "The Continental" radio show, Feb. 5, 1951.

1970_1111_cesana Update: Don't be afraid, darling. It's only Renzo Cesana!

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: LeRoy Prinz!

 

Sept. 1, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update, Renzo Cesana, Jan. 28, 1952.

Here's another picture of our elegant mystery guest. Please congratulate Mike Hawks, Herb Nichols, Laura fan Waldo Lydecker (who even quoted some dialogue!) and Richard Heft for identifying him!

Sept. 2, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Renzo Cesana with Ingrid Bergman in Roberto Rossellini's "Stromboli." Cesana was hired as a writer for the film, then pressed into service as a dialogue coach and finally was cast as a priest.

Here's our mystery guest with a (not very) mysterious companion. Please congratulate Flo Myers and Dewey Webb for identifying him! 

Sept. 3, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Renzo Cesana, March 20, 1952.

Here's another photo of our mystery guest, with the background painted out by The Times' art department. That's some outfit, eh?

Please congratulate Megan, Earl Boebert, "Dr. Fudd,"  Diane Ely, D Celle, Nick Santa Maria, Allison Berntsen, Rogét-L.A. and Mary Mallory for identifying him!  

Sept. 4, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Renzo Cesana, Sept. 21, 1961. Please congratulate Barry O'Brien for identifying him!

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | 35 Comments

4 Children Hurt in Runaway by Frightened Horse

 Sept. 4, 1919, Comics

Sept. 4, 1919: "Somebody Is Always Taking the Joy Out of Life" by Clare Briggs (1875-1930). I would imagine the anti-union message resonated with The Times' editorial policy.

Sept. 4, 1919, Horse
 

 

Turner Hall at 321 S. Main St. becomes the Los Angeles Men's Club, a "dry saloon" mainly for servicemen returning from World War I … A horse frightened by a piece of paper runs away with a wagon that is "smashed to splinters" at Alameda Street and Florence Avenue, injuring four young passengers.
Posted in 1919, Animals, Architecture, art and artists, Downtown, Food and Drink | Comments Off on 4 Children Hurt in Runaway by Frightened Horse

Officer Finds Interesting ‘Pet’

Sept. 4, 1909, J.P. Burns

Sept. 4, 1909: Times artist Edmund Waller "Ted" Gale draws J.P. Burns. Note Miss Los Angeles. In later cartoons, Gale drew her like this:

March 19, 1933, Miss Los Angeles

March 19, 1933: "Fair and Hot Under the Collar."

Sept. 4, 1909, Gila Monster

A police officer finds an interesting animal on his beat at 5th and Los Angeles streets and sells it to an Asian doctor, not realizing that it was poisonous … Speaking of found objects, the police would like to hear from the owner of a splendid artificial leg. Evidently, the man used his peg leg during the week and kept his "cork leg" for Sundays.
Posted in Animals, art and artists, Downtown, Fashion, health, LAPD | Comments Off on Officer Finds Interesting ‘Pet’

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Bullock's Wilshire Tea Room

A very classy menu from the Tea Room at Bullock's Wilshire, dated Oct. 24, 1946, has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $6.99.
Posted in art and artists, Fashion, Food and Drink | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Matt Weinstock, Sept. 3, 1959

Matt Weinstock is on vacation.
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September 3, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 3, 1959: Former Gov. Goodwin Knight is reinventing himself as a TV commentator, Paul Coates says. A letter writer tells Dear Abby that their trash can is loaded with empty beer cans every morning because of a neighbor who knocks back a case every night and doesn't want the garbage man to know.

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | 1 Comment

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your President’s Recreation

Sept. 3, 1921, Golf Balls  

Sept. 3, 1921: President Harding's golf balls were marked with 13 stars and his initials, and they were collectible even in 1921.

 

Posted in #games, Politics, Sports | Comments Off on A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your President’s Recreation

Freed U.S. Troops Describe Enemy Torture; Dodgers Lose to Mets

Sept. 3, 1969, Cover

Sept. 3, 1969: Ho Chi Minh is gravely ill — in fact, he's dead … the Massachusetts Supreme Court postpones an inquest in the death of Mary Jo Kopechne … searchers in the Holy Land find the wallet and passport of Dr. James A. Pike, former Episcopal bishop of California … and a nondupe by Noel Greenwood!
Sept. 3, 1969, Torture

A Navy pilot and a Navy postal clerk freed by the North Vietnamese describe being tortured. The men told about "prisoners kept in cages, of men hung in straps, of others whose fingernails were removed. They described solitary confinement and poor medical treatment."

"Are broken bones and solitary confinement humane? Navy Lt. Robert F. Frishman of Long Beach asked. "Is sitting on a hot stool in a hot room with no sleep with mosquitoes biting you until you make a lousy statement humane? I know what it's like. In two days your feet swell up and then it moves up your legs until they are numb. Weather and your physical condition are the determining factors on how long you can last. Some can go on for 150 hours. Others pass out from heat exhaustion in 48."

Sept. 3, 1969, The Italian Job
"The Italian Job" starts today!

Sept. 3, 1969, Women
Ranch hand Beverly Chandler "is cute as all get-out and as strong as a heifer." By a woman writer!
Sept. 3, 1969, Ranch Woman
"Marriage doesn't hold much for me yet, because I don't lack for excitement around here. But mom says I'll be married to a rancher someday and I suppose I will," Chandler says.

Sept. 3, 1969, Dennis the Menace

One panel that will never appear in the legacy version of "Dennis the Menace."

Sept. 3, 1969, Sports Willie Davis hit his way into the Dodger record book, batting safely in 30 consecutive games.

That broke the Dodger record set in 1916 by Zach Wheat, who was 81
in 1969 and had sent Davis a good-luck telegram. It also was one game
closer to the National League record of 37 games by Tommy Holmes of the
Braves in 1945. The Times didn't even mention Joe DiMaggio's 56-game
streak.

Davis didn't get a hit with the game on the line and the Dodgers
lost to the Mets, 5-4. "I got my hit at the wrong time," he said. The
Dodgers' center fielder came up in 1960 and was with the team through
1973. He went to Montreal in a trade for reliever Mike Marshall, then
bounced to Texas, St. Louis and finally the Angels.

As for Wheat, he told the Dodgers' Red Patterson that his streak
should have reached 41 games but he "was robbed of a hit by the
first-base umpire. I still remember it."

Being on the Dodgers meant there was more than baseball–you could
be on TV! Here's a '60s classic with Willie Davis watching Mr. Ed's
tryout at Dodger Stadium
.


::

During his playing days, O.J. Simpson also received star treatment in the papers.

The Buffalo Bills' rookie was heading back to L.A. to play the Rams
and said all the right things during an interview with Mal Florence.

" 'I'm really looking forward to it,' said Simpson, making no effort
to conceal his enthusiasm. 'In fact everyone on the Buffalo team is
looking forward to it. War Memorial Stadium is OK, but there's nothing
like the Coliseum. It's synonymous with football. I know I won't have
much time there but I still hope to see my friends and get over to USC
and visit with the team."

It's hard to find profiles of Simpson from this era that don't include his comments about his plans after football.

"Someday when I retire, I want to come back to L.A. and be just
another USC alum–taking in those football games at the Coliseum on
Saturday afternoons."

–Keith Thursby

Posted in #gays and lesbians, art and artists, Comics, Dodgers, Fashion, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Religion, Sports | 1 Comment

Alexander & Oviatt Opens Store

Sept. 3, 1919, Alexander and Oviatt

Sept. 3, 1919: Alexander and Oviatt opens at Hill and 6th streets. By this era, some of The Times' display advertising had become quite stylish.

Sept. 3, 1919, Valley of the Giants

Wallace Reid in "The Valley of the Giants."

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

Black Man Fined for ‘Indecent Proposal’ to White Woman

Sept. 3, 1909, C.J. Wade

Sept. 3, 1909: Edmund Waller "Ted" Gale draws C.J. Wade.

Sept. 3, 1909, Indecent Proposal

Henry Weaver, an African American, is fined $50 ($1,183.74 USD 2008) for asking a white woman to go out.

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Found on EBay — Nixon’s Restaurants

Nixon's for Finer Foods
An ashtray from Nixon's Family Restaurants (run by Richard Nixon's brother, Donald) has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $9.99.
Oct. 31, 1954, Nixon's

Posted in Food and Drink, Richard Nixon | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Nixon’s Restaurants

Matt Weinstock, Sept. 2, 1959

Matt Weinstock is on vacation.
Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock, Sept. 2, 1959

September 2, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 2, 1959: E.A. Gillmann provides song to the forlorn mob of Pershing Square, hauling a piano and Gospel songbooks in a 1941 Chrysler and, with help, wheeling the piano into the square, Paul Coates says.

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Health

Sept. 2, 1920, Bubonic Plague  

Sept. 2, 1920: An African American man becomes the eighth bubonic plague victim in Galveston, Texas.

 

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‘Holy Barbarians’ Revisited

Coastlines, Spring-Summer 1958

Coastlines magazine, Spring-Summer 1958, with a cover story on LSD.

Note: In late June and early July, I wrote about Lawrence Lipton's 1959 book on the beatniks of Venice West, "Holy Barbarians." I was particularly interested in the account of a reading by Allen Ginsberg in which he responded to a heckler by taking off his clothes.

I recently heard from Mel Weisburd, one of the sponsors of that reading, who figures in Lipton's account. He stated that Lipton's account of the reading was inaccurate and highly slanted to his point of view. For example, Weisburd never said or demanded that Ginsberg "get out," nor was he in any way hostile toward him and others in the reading. He respectfully asked him to get dressed because there was a child in the house.

He has kindly shared his experiences with the Daily Mirror.

Holy BarbariansIf you are able to get John Maynard's book on Venice West, which I urge you to do, at least from the library, which documents the career and life of Lawrence Lipton, you will see that in many ways he was a remarkable though complex man. He succeeded in many of his "commercial" works and writing, particularly in the detective mystery novel field (with his first wife Craig Rice) and in TV, radio script writing, books and promotion and publicity. He was on a treadmill all of his life and had to compromise with the commercial world.
 
Then he discovered the tiny world of poetry and the little magazine which he saw as an underground, anti-academic, anti-elitist, anti-social movement which in Los Angeles he attempted to dominate — and in our case — to take over our magazine, Coastlines Literary Magazine, which ran during the '50s. At the same time, living in Venice he met a group of poets –such as Stuart and Suzanne Perkoff, Tony Scibella, John Thomas and others. From their deprived life style he codified the concept of "disaffiliation" in an extreme form — from job, consumption, conventional life styles etc. I was editor of Coastlines at the time at night, newly married with child, and worked as an air pollution control inspector with the Los Angeles County Air Pollution Control District (forerunner of the AQMD) and felt that I had a constructive, useful job in the fight against smog. Of course, I refused. That began a culture war between him and us, the Coastliners. We were the "squares"; he took it upon himself to represent the Barbarians.
 
June 29, 1958, Lipton Lipton wanted to use me as an example as one who drops out from his job, maybe even marriage and join him in Venice. He began touting poets of Venice West  as great poets who had dropped out.  I wrote an article entitled "The Merchant of Venice" which attacked him and his third rate poets in contrast to substantial poets and writers throughout Los Angeles like Ann Stanford, Thomas McGrath, Lawrence Spingarn, Gene Frumkin and many others. As a young man, I took what Lipton said about me personally. Later, he quoted from my report on my LSD experience, as an example of a pure experience, but then attacked me viciously as a  "Sunday slummer in Paradise" in his book, even though I ventured to be the first in the literary life of Los Angeles to have had that experience. (1956.)
 
According to John Maynard, Lipton succeeded in persuading or finding (I don't know which) a high-paid executive by the name of Charles Foster to drop out in the way he wanted me to do. You have to read Maynard's book to appreciate the full extent of this tragic case. Others in his entourage suffered similar fates. There was considerable anti-Lipton sentiment among his young poets.  Perkoff, who was actually a good poet, referred to Lipton's book as "Holy Horseshit."
 
Three versions of my account of the Ginsberg were published in Grasslimb, a San Diego journal, in the long article "Gene and I" in Blue Mesa Review, published by the University of New Mexico (where Gene Frumkin taught) after he died in 2006.

 Coastlines, Autumn, 1959

Coastlines, Autumn 1959, with a cover story on Lawrence Lipton.

 

THE COASTLINERS

the Other Generation of the 50's

By Mel Weisburd

April 15, 1963, Coastline One evening in October 1956, Allen Ginsberg and Gregory Corso entered a three-story, Tudor brick and stone house on Virginia Road in an old middle-class neighborhood of Los Angeles. Just as he had done in Gallery 6 in San Francisco earlier that year, Ginsberg read Howl, Sunflower Sutra and other poems to a gathering of the local literati. Some were enthusiastic, some ambivalent, some shocked. The reaction of a young man who was probably drunk was clear. His ears heard the whining, shrill voice of an unkempt poet. He interrupted the reading to lambaste Ginsberg for his negativity. The verbal exchange that ensued began to verge on a fist fight, when Ginsberg suddenly challenged the man to take off his clothes instead and then stripped until he was completely naked.

In this manner the Beat Generation was introduced to Los Angeles. Present at this reading were the diarist Anais Nin and Lawrence Lipton, a former pulp fiction writer and founder to be of "Venice-West," each with their own entourage. The reading was sponsored by Coastlines literary magazine which was founded by Gene Frumkin and myself and published from this house which was owned by Barding Dahl, the fiction editor.

Ginsberg was barely known to us at the time, and while his reading was heartfelt, his poetry on first impression did not seem to differ much from the material we were receiving in the mail and publishing. Much of that writing was anti-academic and non-traditional. It protested social conditions, the conservative values of the mainstream, the industrial military complex, the nuclear threat and McCarthyism. While we agreed with the intent, the manner of complaint was becoming repetitious. We were looking for new ways to express these same ideas and feelings, hopefully to a more mainstream audience. In those days we were anxious about the presence of government agents who were in the habit of attending events like ours. If a local undercover cop had been in the crowd, we could easily be cited for indecent exposure or gathering illegally. It also occurred to Frumkin and myself that we had never before seen the stranger who attacked Ginsberg and that he might have been an agent provocateur.

Sept. 26, 1963, Coastlines This was, without our being aware, a defining event of the 50's and this reading has since become legend. In fact, the entire year of 1956 was loaded with defining events. Earlier, we accepted an article by Lipton entitled "American’s Literary Underground." It called for "disaffiliation" from job, political loyalty and middle class mores, the assumption of 'voluntary poverty' and denial of the "Social Lie" (the lie of the assumed social contract in which the government gives more to the people than the people to the government). Then we met Lipton at the New School of Art in Los Angeles where we sponsored a poetry reading of the works of Bert Meyers, Tom McGrath and Lipton. Afterwards, Lipton proposed that Coastlines become a vehicle for the ‘new writing,’ under his tutelage. According to him, writers can be true only if they shun ‘the thickening centers of corruption.’

Because we didn't want to emphasize one group of writers over another, we turned him
down. We argued that his notions were unrealistic and inappropriate for Los Angeles. In addition to the damage done by McCarthyism to the educational and cultural assets of Southern California –the film and entertainment industries and education — Los Angeles was a socially desolate, repressed city, a city where single people of the 50's were often isolated. They were seeking attachment, not disaffiliation. Besides, art was an existential affair and all experience was valid. Right under our noses, a number of the world's greatest writers were working for the movie industry. ‘Thickening corruption’ was the theme of the novels written as a byproduct of the experiences of such writers as F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner, Nathanael West, Budd Schulberg, Howard Fast, Aldous Huxley, Malcolm Lowry. Many of the movies they wrote reflected this complex mood of complicity and involvement, particularly in the film noir of the time. In fact, the novelists working as screen writers within the studio system called themselves insiders, meaning their novels could not have been written in such a socially relevant manner had they been disaffiliated to the side lines.

Also some of us had concerns more germane to Southern California than to San Francisco, such as the local, but immense military-industrial complex with its ‘think tanks’ which created a C.P. Snow type of two-culture conflict in many intellectuals (as represented by the writings of Curtis Zahn in the magazine), the nuclear threat, the alienation and dispersal of "The Non-Existent City," and, of course, the unique symbol of this all, smog.

Coastlines was the name Frumkin and I gave the magazine in 1955. Ocean waves rebounding from the coasts of California suggested to us lines of poetry, while the long coastline symbolized the continuing tradition of literature with its many variations in the forms of jagged indentations, coves and peninsulas. We also saw it as a boundary between the awareness of the land and of the unconscious in terms of the immense ocean. Since the earth’s surface is mostly comprised of water, the planet itself is mostly subsurface and unconscious, to be mined and farmed by poetry.

As the first editor of Coastlines, my opening editorial sought simply to "discover the source of writing in Los Angeles." That was meant to be more than rhetoric; it initiated the search for writers in a vast, urban wilderness. The second intent was to "fully exercise the right of free speech" which was more than cliche, since many social themes and avenues of literary exploration were shut down by McCarthyism. We saw ourselves as partisans daring to publish any material of merit, regardless of content. To make that point, we dedicated the first issue to the passionate and socially aware poet Edwin Rolfe, who happened to have been a veteran of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, and who had died then.

In retrospect, a Coastliner was one associated with the writers and editors of the magazine and who were originally brought together by the poet and teacher Thomas McGrath. Like the beats and Lipton’s barbarians, Coastliners were in the process of transition from the literary traditions of the 30's and 40's to something different. Ginsberg, for example, transformed his political orientation to a point ever as agitated as the 30's, but essentially without direction; Lipton renounced his world of the radical left of the Chicago 30's. The Coastliners hoped to presage a freer and more creative left to come. They sought to re-assert a poetry relevant to the larger society and pursued socially conscious themes, but treated in an individual and personal manner. They often used the devices of surrealism and were r
eceptive to Zen and other influences. They only differed from the writers at Venice West in that their creativity was not contingent on a life style.

Aug. 30, 1964, Coastlines Through McGrath, the Coastliners consciously assimilated the influences of Hart Crane,
Berthold Brecht, William Butler Yeats, Andre Breton and Rainer Maria Rilke – and something called a poetry wheel which through its randomness taught the element of surprise in language and surrealism. Thus, our central concern was above all the craft of poetry geared to the socio-political concerns of the 50's.

Another important defining element was the introduction of mescaline and LSD (acid) in the mid-fifties. Contrary to accepted history, first exposures were by non-beats for whom Aldous Huxley remained the archetype, not the Timothy Leary to come. In Los Angeles, the psychiatrist Dr. Oscar Janiger administered some 3,000 doses of LSD to 1,000 volunteers from 1954 to 1962. I was the first in our group to be given LSD, followed by Gene Frumkin and Alvaro Cardona-Hine.

Most importantly, the effects extended beyond the immediate; they tended to persist in some form, if only in re-activatable memories, across the life span of the individual. Frumkin grew in the direction of a poetry that is a hybrid of realistic narrative and ‘language poetry’ (language in itself as an entity). He regards "poetry-thought" as occurring beyond ordinary cognition, which can be construed to be something like an expression of linguistic substrate in the sense of Chomsky’s ‘deep structures.’ Alvaro Cardona-Hine in his acid trip1 reported that the "five senses have taken off in different directions and are bringing back reports of their wonderful discoveries." 1 Thereafter he grew as a multi-media artist: poet, composer, novelist, painter.

The ingestion of acid altered consciousness in many creative artists in highly individual ways. When positive (many were bad), "the experience" had the tendency to nullify categories, reconcile contradictions and unify disparate concepts, rendering Beat v. Square meaningless.2

After LSD was banned in 1962 it was impossible to study the long-term effects, but I believe the total recall I’ve had of the minute details of this experience 44 years later is a major sign of it–like a single, powerful religious or other peak experience can permanently alter certain aspects of consciousness and perception.3 For me, it appeared to facilitate (1) non-linear, multi-dimensional perception and (2) reflexive perceptions of one’s own brain states. One of the immediate effects of my experience was a feeling of omnipotence — that I could cross professional and occupational lines with the surprising result that I emerged as an inter-multi-disciplinarian. Paradoxically, I believe the experience empowered me in my life-long career in the field of environmental protection to the extent that I founded and ran an environmental engineering company for some 15 years, perhaps the only English Major to have ever have done so. On retirement I began writing a novel based on ecphory, the retrieval of systematically stimulated memories.

The experience not only inspired poems, novels and paintings but also impacted popular culture.4 These changes produced profound and widespread effects both directly and indirectly in succeeding decades, not only on artists, but professions and vocations and society as a whole, often in extremely subtle ways, amounting to a silent revolution. The effects span the spectrum from the most extreme affecting, personal states of consciousness in poetry and art on one end to the most detached, objective point of view in science and technology on the other. Objectivity alone perceives forms at different scales of realities which evoke aesthetic pleasure in themselves. Scientific detachment sometimes can became analogous to the notion of the sound of one hand clapping.

Aug. 30, 1964, Coastlines In my view, the 50's was the most ideal period in history for such drug experiences because they were taken by relatively few, mostly for the purpose to experience higher levels of creativity. By the end of the 60's and up until the present day hard drugs began to be used on an epidemic scale for escape, sensation and ultimately out of addiction, with dire results.

While the beat movement in Lipton’s Venice West was very short lived, often with tragic results, looking back, it is clear that the contribution of the beats to the culture and lifestyles of the U.S. and much of the world continues to reverberate through the generations of the hippies, flower children, street people, punk, yuppies, in the rock and roll/ rap/ slam/ performance/ spoken word performances we see today and in the continuing interest in the poets and writers of that time, especially Ginsberg, Kerouac, Ferlinghetti, Di Prima and Burroughs.

The greatest contribution of the beats was in liberating many human latencies in life-style, language and sexual mores that had been repressed by social and political taboos. They broke the pervasive hold of the new criticism and ended the idolatry of T.S. Eliot. But at the same time they also contributed, although inadvertently, to the loss of an organized, effective political left in this country implicit in the creed of disaffiliation codified by Lipton in 1959.

The Coastliners on the other hand never lost their left orientation, but also never comprised a distinctive school of poetry with a set program. They worked as individuals refining their art down the decades. Many of them are still alive and writing on their own resources. Others like the poetry of Bert Meyers and Naomi Replansky are being rediscovered today. Perhaps the pendulum has swung, and given the times, similar perspectives that radiate to social concerns can be seen and new voices heard.

Copyright, Mel Weisburd, August, 2002. Email here.  This article was originally published in The Lummox Journal, May/June 2003

Footnotes:
1. Alvaro Cardona-Hine, "The Lysergic Acid Diethylamide Experience," (date and publication unknown.)

2. David Ebin (ed.), The Drug Experience, "2. A Symposium", Ronald A. Sandison, p. 378, The Orion Press, N.Y., 1961. — "The introduction of LSD … has transformed the entire hospital, because the whole atmosphere engendered by LSD has spread throughout the hospital and, in fact, forms an essential part of the hospital culture. If LSD is given in a large institutional setting, treatment will be ineffective unless this transformation has occurred."

3. Mel Weisburd, "Lysergic Acid and the Creative Experience," in "Poets of the Non-Existent City, Los Angeles in the Mc
Carthy Era," Estelle Gershgoren Novak (ed.), University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 2002. 

4. Ebin, ibid.

Mr. Weisburd is completing a book-length memoir on the Coastliners and other major events that took place in the 50's. He is currently seeking a publisher for this and other works. He is the author of "A Life of Windows and Mirrors, Selected Poems," 2005, and "The Gloria Poems," 2009, both published by Conflux Press.

Posted in #Jazz, art and artists, books, Music, Venice Division | 1 Comment

Ike Rides Wave of Popularity; Dodgers Call Up Reinforcements

Sept. 2, 1959, Cover

Sept. 2, 1959: A story about President Eisenhower's European trip marking the 20th anniversary of Hitler's invasion of Poland notes that he remains popular. But look at what's happening in the country as Ike prepares to leave office: The prime rises half a point to 5%, the highest rate in 28 years (1931) … and a deficit, though small, is forecast for the national budget.

Sept. 2, 1959, Chavez Ravine The Times spent a lot of space covering the sentencing of two women convicted on misdemeanor charges stemming from the eviction of Chavez Ravine residents to clear way for the Dodgers' new ballpark.

Here's my problem with that.

This is a story The Times covered (I believe) only because it became a huge television story. You couldn't ignore the pictures.

Covering the judge's lecture was an obvious way to paint two Chavez Ravine residents as villains in the drama. This from a paper that had spent years ignoring the Chavez Ravine neighborhood and its residents while taking every opportunity to push reasons why a ballpark should be built

Makes me wonder how many other misdemeanor cases were covered so thoroughly. I think I know the answer.

— Keith Thursby

Sept. 2, 1959, North by Northwest

Should I see "North by Northwest" at the Picwood or the Panorama in Van Nuys? Never mind, let's go see Robert Mitchum and Linda Darnell in "Second Chance."

It's interesting to note that the original display ads featured Cary Grant and the crop duster, one of the classic sequences in film.

Sept. 2, 1959, Laos
Meet Ho Chi Minh, communist leader of North Viet-Nam. You'll be hearing more about him.

Sept. 2, 1959, Prime

Sept. 2, 1959, National Debt

Troubling economic news — and wedding bells for Ernest Borgnine and Katy Jurado.
 

Sept. 2, 1959, Ben Blue

Isn't Mr. Pilsnerhead great? I particularly like the little bow tie.

Sept. 2, 1959, Gun Control

The Gallup Poll surveys America's attitudes on gun control. Remember that this is before the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., and the resulting Gun Control Act, which took effect in December 1968. Note the attitudes toward gun ownership in the South compared with the rest of the country.

Sept. 2, 1959, Khrushchev

Rep. Williams, a Mississippi Democrat, takes a stand against Khrushchev's visit.

Sept. 2, 1959, Beatniks

The jukebox and bongo drums at the Gas House in Venice aren't culture!

Sept. 2, 1959, Comics

"She Will! You Can Be Sure of That!"

Sept. 2, 1959, Sports

 
The Dodgers called up some minor league reinforcements who turned out to have staying power.

Frank Howard, Norm Sherry and Bob Lillis were among the September call-ups. The Times' Frank Finch reported that team officials also were considering elevating Tommy Davis, who was leading the Pacific Coast League in hitting.

Now that's some farm system.

— Keith Thursby

Posted in #Jazz, art and artists, City Hall, Comics, Dodgers, Downtown, Film, Food and Drink, Hollywood, LAPD, Music, Nightclubs, Politics, RFK, Venice Division | 2 Comments

‘Victory or Death’ — Hitler

Sept. 2, 1939, Hitler

Sept. 2, 1939: Hitler puts on a field uniform, saying he will take it off "only in victory or in death."

Sept. 2, 1939, Times
People gather outside The Times building to read the latest news.

Sept. 2, 1939, Cover
Nazi air raids sweep Poland.
Sept. 2, 1939, Runover
Wartime events stun the people of Germany.

 

Posted in @news, Front Pages | Comments Off on ‘Victory or Death’ — Hitler

Thug Clubs L.A. Woman

Sept. 2, 1949, Mirror Cover
Sept. 2, 1949: Cub Scout wins cake contest!

Sept. 2, 1949, Paul Coates  

I thought it
would be fun to dip into the 1949 editions of the Mirror, if only
briefly. At that time, Paul Coates was mostly covering nightclubs and
had yet to become the columnist we know from the 1950s. I don't plan to
run many of these columns because they are fairly dated, but I figured
a week's worth would offer an interesting insight on a writer in
progress.

Posted in Columnists, Current Affairs, Food and Drink, Front Pages, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Thug Clubs L.A. Woman