
August 29, 1959: Paul Coates hears from Elvis fans who want to forgive him for the scathing review Coates wrote of Elvis’ notorious performance at the Pan-Pacific Auditorium. Dear Abby has advice for a man whose wife doesn’t care for her dog.

August 29, 1959: Paul Coates hears from Elvis fans who want to forgive him for the scathing review Coates wrote of Elvis’ notorious performance at the Pan-Pacific Auditorium. Dear Abby has advice for a man whose wife doesn’t care for her dog.
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Update: Our mystery guest is LeRoy Pnriz. Just I If The answer to last week's mystery star: Laurie Mitchell! Randy Skretvedt writes: I still say I'm correct, with the exception of LeRoy Prinz. Go look at Very well, then. See for yourself: Los Angeles Times file photo
Update: Six LeRoy Prinz dancers were recently given contracts as stock actresses at Paramount studio because of their all-around beauty and ability to act. They are shown with Prinz, dance director. Left to right, bottom, Esther Pressman, Dene Myles; middle, Kay Gordon, Prinz, Beula McDonald; top, Dorothy Thompson and Bonita Barker, March 5, 1935. Here's another photo of our mystery guest with some mystery companions. Evidently there wasn't a photo in the world that couldn't be improved with a little tilting by The Times' art department. The cropped and tilted version. Los Angeles Times file photo
Update: Edward A. Prinz, right, with his son LeRoy. The dancers are, from left, Esther Pressman, Dene Myles, Bonita Barker, Dorothy Thompson, Kay Gordon and Beula McDonald, rehearsing for a sequence in "Rose of the Rancho" with Gladys Swarthout, Aug. 8, 1935. Here's another photo of our mystery guest with even more mystery companions. Please congratulate Dewey Webb for identifying him! Los Angeles Times file photo
Update: LeRoy Prinz with 12 dancers leaving Hollywood for a tour of the British Isles. Front, from left, Jean Dillon, Joan Matthews and Claudia Fargo. Middle, from left, Dorothy White, Harriet D'Busman, LeRoy Prinz and Bonita Barker. Back, from left, Sentha Williams, Jean Carmen, Althea Henley, Elizabeth Cook and Margaret Carthew, Dec. 31, 1935. Here's another picture of our mystery guest with more mystery companions! Please congratulate Mike Hawks and Mary Mallory for identifying him! Photograph by Los Angeles Times
Dec. 19, 1945: LeRoy Prinz, studio director-producer, as he testified at trial of Herbert K. Sorrell, union leader, on contempt charge. Prinz said he was knocked down in film strike riot and when he got up saw Sorrell standing in mob with fists clenched. Please congratulate Jeff Hanna, Meara and James Curtis for identifying him! |
Aug. 29, 1899: Cupidene restores lost manhood. Continue reading
Aug. 29, 1889: J.T. Sheward has the latest in mourning fashions, including wool warp Henriettas.
Detectives looking for stolen merchandise at a bordello find an opium setup and a naked man hiding in closet. One of the officers makes himself comfortable during the search by closing a trunk and sitting on the lid. As they are about to leave, they decide to open the trunk and find a nearly suffocated man hidden inside. |
Pasadena City Hall by Marion Eisenmann, Sept. 6, 2008 |
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| Marion sends her impressions of this Pasadena landmark, which was closed for a major restoration and renovation after being badly damaged in the 1994 Northridge earthquake and the 1991 Sierra Madre quake. As part of the work, the building's substructure was replaced with a system of base isolators to insulate it from further seismic damage.
There is no palm tree in the
When we began this project, it was without any thought of sales so Marion and I hadn't discussed the matter until now. We decided that the project is still new and evolving, and that it's a journey about discovering Los Angeles rather than creating things to sell. Working as an independent artist, Marion is busy with other projects and says she isn't set up to mass-produce prints but she would entertain inquiries about specific pieces. For further information, readers should contact Marion directly. Note: In |
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Above, an ad for Palm Beach suits at Mullen & Bluett, June 23, 1952. Adjusted for inflation, the $29.99 suit cost $240.70 USD 2008. |
August 28, 1959: The success story of L.D. Tallent — a man born with less than half a body — isn’t quite believable, but it happened anyway, Paul Coates writes. Continue reading
| Aug. 28, 1939: Joe Seewerker and Charles Owens visit Ft. Moore Hill for Nuestro Pueblo and The Times writes about Lt. E.O.C. Ord's 1849 survey of the city, giving a history of early street names. |
Aug. 28, 1959: The Times brings out an extra as Chinese troops cross into India. |
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"In the silent room, Tony's whispered words hang like wisps of smoke…" |
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The Air Force does a "meet and greet" with Hedda Hopper and Joan Crawford. Hopper summarizes the Cold War mentality perfectly: "The Soviet Union controls one-third of the people of the world and one-fourth of its geography, and their sworn goal is the conquest of America. Never before in history has a peaceful nation been prepared to go to war within 15 minutes."
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The last-place Phillies take a double-header from the first-place Giants! |

| This week in Cooking With the Junior League, Mary McCoy focuses on the brunches of Las Vegas.
She writes: Food-wise, Las Vegas has come a long way in However, there are two old, scuzzy |