Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, July 9, 1959

 1959_0705_cockrum

July 5, 1959: Ira Cockrum is arrested in the death of his grandson.

Confidential File

About a Grandpa Who Killed

Paul CoatesMichael Gary Cockrum, a stocky little kid with blond hair and desert-brown skin, was buried yesterday.

After
14 years of being alive, he was laid to rest in Lancaster Community
Cemetery. And all the family was there to pay final respects.

All except his Grandpa Ira, who blasted Michael to eternity with his shotgun last Friday.

Grandpa Ira's in jail.

You
probably read in the papers over the week end how deputies picked him
up and booked him for murder of Mike and for injuring Mike's brother,
George Jr., 10, in a family feud over a $12 electric iron.

I read it, too, but somehow, I forgot about it until I got a call yesterday from the dead boy's father. George Cockrum
Sr. phoned me shortly after he, his wife and his three other sons,
Georgie Jr., Charles, 9, and Dennis, 4, had left the cemetery.

"About
my father killing my son that way," the 44-year-old hod carrier told
me, "I'd kind of like to straighten out some of the things that was
said."

July 9, 1959, Cover The reports in the papers said that Cockrum, who arrived at the scene minutes after the tragedy, was restrained from attacking his father with a baseball bat.

"What
happened," he explained, "was that I did pick up that baseball bat. And
I was walking at my papa. But nobody got in my way.

"By myself, I dropped it.

"I knew, before I reached him, that if I hit him, God would punish me."

Cockrum told me that his father was a big, strong man for his 64 years.

'Pa Had a Bad Temper'

"He
drank and he had a bad temper," he said. "Pa always had a bad temper.
When I was a kid, he used to beat on my mother something awful.

"But he was an awful hard worker, and he paid the bills. My father would be good sometimes. He could be real good, too."

Then George Cockrum talked about his dead son.

July 9, 1959, Vietnam "Michael was a good boy. He wasn't a tall boy. He was stocky, but there was no fat on him.

"Strange," Cockrum
recalled, "but my father always did kindly favor Michael. In fact,
Michael had been helping him work on his house until just lately, when
Michael told me he'd rather not go over there no more. Grandpa was
cussing at him too much, he said.

"I told the boy that if he didn't want to, he didn't have to.

"My
papa's been worse lately," the dead boy's father continued. "His father
— my grandpa — died two or three years ago. He grieved over that.
Then, two months ago, my mother died. That hit him. Extra hard, I
guess, 'cause of the way he treated her.

"It got so he wouldn't listen to any of us. He told me just last month, 'Georgie, if you don't watch out, something's going to happen. It's going to happen to one of your loved ones.'

'I Hope He Finds God'

"I said, 'Papa, you're sick. I'm going to take you to a doctor.' Last week I got an appointment for him. For the 10th of this month. I just got it too late."

July 9, 1959, Accordion Cockrom cleared his throat.

"If
anybody was to ask me how I feel about my father, I'd have to say that
I feel sorry for him. I hope and pray that he gets down on his knees
and finds God. I hope God helps him, because I know he's a sick man.

"I love my father. I loved my boy. He thought a lot of that boy, too.

"Tomorrow," George Cockrum
told me, "they'll be bringing him back here to Lancaster for his trial.
I haven't seen him, but I hear he's been asking for cigarettes. I'm
taking him a few, I guess.

"But what I don't know," he added, "I just don't know why he done me this way."

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

July 9, 1932, Movies  

July 9, 1932: Constance Bennett stars in "What Price Hollywood."  Don't you just love this lettering?

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Dodgers Back in First Place

July 9, 1969, Sports A memorable night for the Dodgers and Manny Mota.

The Dodgers climbed back into first place in the National League West by sweeping the Atlanta Braves in a Dodger Stadium doubleheader, 5-3 and 4-3. Mota led the way with four hits in each game.

He won the nightcap for the Dodgers with a bases-loaded single that went over the head of Atlanta's right fielder, none other than Henry Aaron.

"It is the greatest thrill of my life," Mota told The Times' John Wiebusch. "A Dodger I always want to be and now I am one and we are in first place. I want to play on a champion."

–Keith Thursby

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Executive’s Killing Reveals Double Life


View Larger Map

Seco Street, Pasadena, in the vicinity of the killing, via Google maps' street view.

Jan 30, 1948, George T. Judd George T. Judd lived a model life as far as anyone could tell. He was a
respected financial executive, and he and his wife, Margaret, were
often listed in The Times' society columns. Judd belonged to the
Kiwanis, was active in the Republican Party, supported the Pasadena
Playhouse and attended All Saints Episcopal Church. He and his wife
raised a son and a daughter in a home on Lagunita Road in an upscale Pasadena neighborhood. 

When
he was killed in 1948 at the age of 55, Judd was vice president of West
Coast Bond and Mortgage Co. and living alone at 840 Seco Street, a new,
2,200-square-foot home near the Rose Bowl. His wife, Margaret, had died
in 1945 and another life, one he had been leading all along in great
secrecy, took over.

We don't know for sure that Judd was gay,
although it would explain what happened to him. The Times never
addressed the question directly, but left the strong implication that
he was. One story said he "had no particular women friends" since his
wife's death and quoted Pasadena homicide Detective Lt. Cecil H. Burlingame as saying: "We are not looking for a woman in the case."

What we do know is that Judd had a history of being beaten and robbed
by men he picked up hitchhiking or in bars, and eventually one of them
killed him.

The first incident reported in The Times occurred
in San Francisco 20 years earlier. As he recovered at University of
California Hospital, Judd told police he picked up a stranger who
offered him a "headache tablet." The pill made him sick and the
stranger beat him and took his car, which police recovered outside the
city. In reporting the attack, The Times noted that Judd had gone to a
Mill Valley ranch the previous summer after resigning from his job at a
Pasadena bank due to health problems.

Feb. 1, 1948, Judd

Nothing appeared in the
paper for two decades, but homicide detectives learned that he had been
beaten by two hitchhikers about 1936 during a trip to San Francisco.

The
beatings and robberies became more frequent in the year before his
death. On Aug. 30, 1947, Judd met two men in a bar and had them drive
him home. He told police that one of the men, named Tex, threatened him
with a knife and when he ran for help, the men stole his car, which
police found wrecked. He also told police he suspected the men of burglarizing his house.

Although he never reported anything to authorities, friends told homicide investigators
that in the six months before he was killed, Judd had been beaten and
robbed several times, with his attackers usually taking his wristwatch.
 

Two days before his death, Judd contacted a neighbor who was
a building contractor to see about getting a shower head replaced. He
explained that he let three men spend the night at his house and one of
them had broken the fixture.

His daughter found him Jan. 29,
1948. She came over in the morning, looked through a window, saw him
in bed and assumed he was sleeping. She returned in the afternoon, went
in and found him dead. She contacted one of her father's business
associates, who called the police.  

Nov. 19, 1948, Bentley 1948_1119_bentley Although Judd was
strangled and stabbed in the neck, and a bloody fork and a carving
knife had been left in the kitchen sink, the daughter assumed Judd died
of natural causes, "pulled a sheet over her father's body and 'tidied
up a bit' while waiting for the doctor," The Times said.   
Homicide investigators
soon focused on the gritty bars around Hill and 3rd streets in downtown
Los Angeles because Judd "often visited resorts below his social
status," The Times said.

Judd's home was thoroughly checked for fingerprints that might have survived his daughter's cleaning and his friends were fingerprinted to eliminate their prints from the killer's.

In October 1948, police arrested a suspect at 6th
and Hill streets: a 19-year-old drifter from Yakima, Wash., named Edgar
Eugene Bentley. An off-duty detective recognized Bentley from a photo
released by Pasadena police based on leads from the downtown bars Judd
patronized. A crime scene investigator matched Bentley to fingerprints found on the refrigerator in Judd's home and on a bottle of soda water.

According to police, Bentley said: "I met Mr. Judd at the tavern and we went to his home at 840 Seco
Drive, Pasadena. We had several drinks. Mr. Judd made a sudden lunge at
my throat — and from then on I can't remember…. I sort of blacked
out."

Bentley also told police: "I must have done it — there was nobody else there but me …"

Under
questioning, Bentley said he hitchhiked out of Los Angeles the next
day. He pawned Judd's wristwatch in New Orleans, then sold the ticket
for $5. Within a few days, police traced the watch to a shop whose
owner "forgot" to report it.

On Jan. 14, 1949, Bentley pleaded
guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to five years to life
at San Quentin. In 1958, he and two companions escaped from a remote
prison honor camp at High Rock in Humboldt County. The men held up a
bar in Redding, Calif., took $250 and forced 11 people into a washroom.
Bentley was captured during a police chase after the men ran a Highway
Patrol roadblock in a stolen 1956 Mercury.

In 1969, Bentley escaped from the Miramonte Conservation
Camp, a minimum security facility east of Fresno, and was captured
several hours later. Washington death records list an Edgar E. Bentley
who died July 11, 1995, at the age of 65.

Judd was survived by his children, mother, sister and half brother. He was cremated at Mountain View Mausoleum in Altadena after funeral services at All Saints.

Note: Thanks to Dick Morris for help in research with this post.

  

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Funeral Home Refuses to Give Up Body of Murder Victim

July 9, 1899, Coroner

July
9, 1899: The coroner gets enmeshed in a grim dispute over the body of a murder victim. Before C.D. Howry, the coroner's preferred funeral home, could claim the remains of Mrs. Earl Hanchette, Bresee and Shafer, a rival company, took the body after being hired by the victim's closest relative. The coroner demanded that Bresee return the body but the company refused.

And Michael McGrath, an East Los Angeles scissors grinder, is killed when his horse runs away and he is thrown from his wagon.

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Drunk Woman Rescued From Surf

  July 9, 1889, Drunk

July 9, 1889: A drunk woman is rescued after she wanders into the surf at Santa Monica. She had just lost her job as a servant because she was an alcoholic.

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Found on EBay — Marilyn Monroe Pictures

Jasgur Photos of Marilyn Monroe

If you have $10,000* that isn't doing anything, you might want to pick up some Marilyn Monroe photos by Joe Jasgur that have been listed on EBay. And yes, you may recall him as the guy who said Monroe had six toes. He also made some claims about the Black Dahlia case, but given his nonsense about Monroe's six toes I wouldn't believe anything he said about anything. 

The listing is here.

*Update: The price has been cut to $2,500.
 

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Matt Weinstock, July 8, 1959

Mother's a Smuggler

Matt Weinstock There
is a nice old doll, maybe 60, who drinks along with the boys in a Hill
St. bat cave. Every now and then some longtime friend calls her Mother,
which leads to mutual merriment.

The Mother story goes back perhaps 15 years, when she was a popular waitress in an all-night restaurant in Long Beach.

One
night a young lieutenant with a full head of steam was chatting with
her when he noticed in horror that the booze-buying deadline had
slipped by. She tried to hustle him a pint but had no luck. Here indeed
was a crisis. He had to make ship, be awake and alert at a certain
hour, without a drop to soothe his nerves which, he knew from
experience, would be jumping. So they plotted.

July 8, 1959, Cover NEXT DAY the old doll got dressed in her best and met the ship's launch at the scheduled time and was taken aboard the battlewagon.
She was greeted lovingly by the lieutenant, who introduced her to the
captain and other officers as his mother. The captain invited her to
lunch. All this took place under the eyes of scores of sailors who knew
darn well she wasn't his mother but that nice hasher in Long Beach.

 Meanwhile,
she was nervously trying to deliver a fifth of whisky concealed in her
handbag to her "son." She couldn't because of all the beaming brass
eager to welcome the lieutenant's dear mother.

Finally he
managed to take her on a tour of the ship and somewhere in the tangle
of the engine room she managed to slip him the bottle, which he stashed.

Topside
again, the lieutenant arranged to get his mother ashore, explaining
that she was only in town for the day and had to catch a plane back to
her home in Boston.

July 8, 1959, Recipe Although seamen do not always revere officers, this has been a well-kept secret and to this day she is known to them as Mother.

::

A BUNCH OF downtown
office workers got into a discussion about ferocious denizens of the
deep, and a girl named Helen came to the rescue of sharks and whales.
Men had no ethical right to kill them, she said, because the sharks and
whales were in their own habitat, minding their business and the
hunters were not. This blew up a storm, led by a girl who disagreed
vehemently, and later sent Helen this verse:

These giant mammals
    would agree
That you excel in
    sympathy.
My daily prayer is

    most devout —
You're never inside
    looking out. 

::

 THE REHEARSAL at
a Huntington Park church for a CBS Church of the Air program went off
fine a few days ago but when director Gene Webster began taping the
show the choir upped the tempo, throwing off the timing. As a result,
the program came out a few seconds short. When Gene pointed this out,
the choir director shrugged, "Oh well, that's show business."

::

ONLY IN L.A. — The
grim drivers, four abreast in the fearful 5 p.m. westbound traffic on
Olympic Blvd., were on the pace to make all the signals when, near
Catalina, an unmistakable whistling decrescendo rent the air. Someone
had a tire puncture. The drivers looked about in alarm, each hoping it
was someone else. A flat tire in rush hour traffic is almost a fate
worse than death. The agonizing whistling finally stopped and was
followed by the familiar thumping. One man, in despair, was seen
wrestling with his steering wheel, the others happily darted off.

::

July 8, 1959, Abby FRAGMENT OF flighty conversation
between two teenage girls overheard in a seaside restaurant by a gal
named Muriel: "I don't know why I get so upset about it because I
really don't care — do you know what I mean?"

::

AT RANDOM — Tex Elgin of Oxnard says that when the folks around Lompoc,
near the Pacific Missile Range, hear a roar they don't know if it's the
Navy sending up a rocket or the Air Force exploding a publicity blast.
. . . A station wagon with Ohio license plates on Harbor Freeway had a
Volkswagen in tow instead of the usual trailer. Only thing Seymour
Mandel could figure was that the couple and their children used it as a
scout car en route in patrolling the prairie.

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Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, July 8, 1959

 

Confidential File

How Secrets Filter From Me to Kozlov

Paul CoatesWASHINGTON, July 8 — Allowing Soviet Deputy Premier Kozlov
to visit the University of California's radiation laboratory at
Berkeley has been called "soft-headed nonsense" by Rep. Lipscomb (R-Los
Angeles).

Lipscomb angrily demanded official explanations for the Russian's visit to the top security installation while American newsmen were excluded for security reasons.

Rep.
Lipscomb makes a good propaganda point in this Washington report, but
as sometimes happens, the story is wrong. Newsmen DID tag along with Koslov.

He raises a point, though, that shouldn't go unanswered.

Should U.S. reporters be trusted with a lot of top-secret information? Or is a little knowledge a dangerous thing?

July 8, 1959, Kozlov I'm
not speaking for all of us American newsmen. Just for me. But the way I
look at it, Rep. Lipscomb should keep his nose out of our private
battles with the State Department.

If [Secretary of State Christian A.] Herter's
hired hands want to show our nuclear secrets to the Russians and bar
the door to us reporters, I say they've got their reasons. They
probably figure that if they let us in and deny admission to Kozlov, the Kremlin would find out soon enough, anyway.

Take me, for instance. Suppose I were admitted into the radiation lab at Berkeley as a newsman.

I'd come home that evening and my wife would say, "What happened at the office today?"

"I'm beat," I'd tell her.

"What'd you do?" she would press.

"Nothing."

"Nothing," she'd snort.

She would keep it up a while longer, and finally I'd blurt out: "If you must know, I was at Berkeley inspecting a double meglacyclotron atom smasher with powerglide. But it's top secret."

Early the next morning the dry cleaning man would come by for his weekly pickup. She would hand him my suit.

"He looks a little baggy in the knees this week," the cleaning man would say.

Had to Get on Knees

My wife would nod. "He was out at Berkeley inspecting a top-secret double meglacyclotron atom smasher with powerglide. And I guess he had to get on his knees to get a good look."

The cleaning man would tell it to his cousin Sandra, who plays bass viol with Phil Spitainy's All-Girl Orchestra. And, on a one-nighter
in Sioux City, Sandra would tell a stage-door Johnny who dates her
because he digs bass viol, that her cousin, the cleaning man in L.A.,
has a customer who saw a top-secret double meglacyclotron atom smasher with powerglide.

July 8, 1959, Stowaways The
stage-door Johnny, a salesman who travels in ladies cut-rate lingerie,
would casually let it drop to the buyer at John Wanamaker in Philadelphia
, who would put it in an air-mail letter to his aging mother in the
Bronx, whose sister Jennie has an unmarried daughter, Sophie, who rooms
with a girl named Tanya who is a waitress at the Russian Tea Room
opposite Carnegie Hall on 57th Street in New York.

During the
post-lunchtime lull, Tanya would confide to another waitress that her
roommate's mother's sister's son at John Wanamaker knows a salesman who
dates a bass viol player with Phil Spitainy whose cousin, a cleaning man, has a customer who saw a top-secret double meglacyclotron atom smasher with powerglide.

Cloak, Complete With Dagger

She would be overheard by a girl with muscular calves and an almost imperceptible mustache who has a 10-minute glass-of-tea break from rehearsals of the Bolshot ballet next door.

Now, this girl is not really a ballerina. She's a fink for Anastas Mikoyan. And she would promptly send him a coded letter.

A few days later, at the regular 9 a.m. sales conference of the deputy premier in the Kremlin, Anastas would take Kozlev aside and smugly ask: "You just got back. Do you know about their double meglacyclotron atom smasher with powerglide?"

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: Your Movies

July 8, 1930, Movies

July 8, 1930: Will Rogers in "So This Is London" and Gary Cooper in "A Man From Wyoming."

Then there's "Anybody's War," a black face film about World War I.

And Helen Kane in "Dangerous Nan McGrew."

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Holy Barbarians — Continued

Holy Barbarians Cover Reading "Holy Barbarians" has turned into a curious case of role reversal. I was a youngster when the book was published and the beats and squares who populate Lawrence Lipton's study of the Venice scene would have been my parents' contemporaries — although my folks were a bit older.

Today, however, although the Beats and squares have remained in their 20s and early 30s, I'm old enough to be one of their parents — and this shift in ages provides an odd perspective. I'm apt to be a little tougher on them than if I'd read the book when I was younger, and I'm also a bit more charitable toward these earnest, naive angry young artists telling the truth.

Even so, I bogged down in Lipton's lengthy defense of smoking marijuana, which may have been dangerously revolutionary in the 1950s but is trite and passe these days. For the record, Lipton didn't even smoke marijuana, which the Beats preferred to call "pod" rather than "pot." But he was "given a pass," which tells you something about the minimum requirements to be a beatnik. And I'll have more to say about that later.

In fact, "Holy Barbarians" had just about gotten a one-way ticket to the discard pile when I came across an incident that's absolutely hilarious. I can't guess why Lipton buried it in the middle of the book, but he did.

He's describing a reading in Los Angeles by Allen Ginsberg and Gregory Corso that's interrupted by a heckler. It's some square, of course, who wants to fight. Instead, Ginsberg starts undressing and dares the heckler to take off his clothes.

 "Holy Barbarians," Pages 195-198

The reading was to be held in a big old-fashioned house that was occupied by two or three of the Coastline editors, living in a kind of Left Wing bohemian collective household, furnished what there was of furniture, which wasn't much in atrociously bad taste, nothing like the imaginative and original decor of the Beat Generation pad, even the most poverty-stricken.

I consented at their request to conduct the reading, "chair the meeting," as these people are in the habit of saying. To them everything is a meeting. In this case they got more than they bargained for. Allen showed up high mostly on wine, to judge by the olfactory evidence and, after an introduction by me, in which I tried to spell out something of the background of this "renaissance," he launched into a vigorous rendition of "Howl." "Launched" is the word for it. It was stormy, wild and liquid. In his excitement he tipped over an open bottle of wine he had brought with him, spilling it over himself, over me and over his friend Gregory Corso who was with him and was also scheduled to read.

Allen and Gregory had refused to start till Anais Nin arrived, and now that she was seated in the audience Allen addressed himself exclusively to her. He had never met Anais before and knew her only from Henry Miller's books. She had written the preface to Miller's "Tropic of Cancer" in the Paris edition of the book. He was sure that Anais was one person who would be able to dig what he was putting down. For him there was no one else in the audience but "beautiful Anais Nin ." That she had long ago come to the parting of the ways with Henry Miller and was making her own scene now, a very different scene from the one they had once made together on the Left Bank of Paris, made no difference to Allen. She was still, to him, the Anais Nin of the Henry Miller saga, a fabulous figure out of a still brightly shimmering past. Artistically, he felt, she was his nearest of kin, and Anais very graciously acted out the role he had cast her in that night.

The audience, except for Anais and the people we had brought with us from Venice West, was a square audience, the sort of an audience you would find at any liberal or "progressive" how that word lingers on even though the song is over fund-raising affair of the faithful who are still waiting for the Second Coming. Few of them had come knowing what to expect. They never read anything but the party and cryptoparty press. The avant-garde quarterlies are so much Greek to them. Most of them don't even know such magazines exist any more. They associate that sort of thing with the little magazines of the twenties which were swallowed up with the advent of the Movement, the real Movement (capital M), in the thirties and transformed into weapons in the class struggle. The few who had heard rumors of what was going on in San Francisco and Venice West were there as slummers might go to a Negro whorehouse in New Orleans, to be with, briefly, but not of. But even they were not prepared for Howl, or for the drunken, ecstatic, tortured, enraptured reading Allen was giving it that night. A very moving performance, for all his tangle-tongue bobbles and rambling digressions. He was reading from the book, which had just came out, but he changed words, improvised freely, and supplied verbally the obscenities that the printer had in a few cases deleted.

As it happened, Allen and Gregory were not the only ones in the place who had been drinking. There was one other in the audience. He was someone who had drifted in, having somewhere picked up one of the pluggers advertising the reading. At first he applauded Allen's reading at all the wrong places and too loudly. Then he took to cheering, the kind of cheers that are more like the jeers they are in tended to be. I watched him and it struck me that he looked and sounded like a brother Elk on the loose, or an American Legion patriot on a convention binge. When Allen got to the poem America, the drunken square was visibly aroused. He began to heckle. Allen ignored him and, at one point, interrupted the reading to ask the heckler, very gently, to hear him out and he would be glad to talk to him about it later and listen to any comments or criticism he cared to make. That, and disapproving scowls from some members of the audience who, being squares themselves and sober dislike anyone "making a scene," stopped him for a few minutes.

Gregory Corso now got up to read or, rather, sat down to read Gregory, unlike Allen, is the gentle, relaxed persuader rather than the shouter. At least he was that night. When the drunk started heckling him, too, he turned the face of an injured angel to him. When that failed he reversed himself and tried shock therapy.

"Listen, creep, I'm trying to get through to you with words, with magic, see? I'm trying to make you see, and understand "

The square had an answer for that. "Then why don't you write so a person can understand you, instead of all that highfalutin crap?"

"You will understand," Gregory replied patiently, "if you open your self up to the images. Try to get with it, man."

You think you're smart, don't you?"

Gregory ignored the remark and went on with his reading. Nothing could have angered the drunk more. It brought out the righteous citizen in him.

"Think you know it all, don't you? I know your kind. It's punks like you that are to blame for all this -all this " he sputtered, unable to make up his mind which of the crimes punks like
this were to blame for were equal to the enormity of the occasion. He tried again, gave up, turned a beet red and, to cover his chagrin, launched into a tirade of uninspired, stereotyped, barroom profanity, ending with, inevitably, an invitation to "step outside and settle this thing like a man!"

Gregory grinned. "Yeh, I know, you want to fight. Okay, let's fight. Right here. Not with fists, you cornbalL That's baby stuff. Let's fight with a mans weapon with words. Images, metaphors, magic. Open your mouth, man, and spit out a locomotive, a red locomotive, belching obscene smoke and black magic. Then I'll say:Anafogasta. Rattle-boom. Gnu's milk. And you'll say: Fourth of July, Hydrogen bomb! Gasoline! See? Real obscenities. . . ."

The drunk was indignant. He was outraged. When he heard snickering in the audience he started toward the front of the room, menacingly, repeating his challenge to step outside and settle this thing. "You're yella, that's what. Like all you wise guys. You're yella "

Ginsberg got up and went forward to meet the drunk.

"All right," he said, "all right. You want to do something big, don't you? Something brave. Well, go on, do something really brave. Take off your clothes!"

That stopped the drunk dead in his tracks.

Ginsberg moved a step toward him. "Go on, let everybody see how brave you are. Take your clothes off!"

The drunk was stunned speechless. He fell back a step and Allen moved toward him, tearing off his own shirt and undershirt and flinging them at the heckler's feet. "You're scared, aren't you?" he taunted him. "You're afraid." He unbuckled his belt, unzipped his fly and started kicking off his trousers. "Look," he cried. "I'm not afraid. Go on, take your clothes off. Let's see how brave you are," he challenged him. He flung his pants down at the champ's feet and then his shorts, shoes and socks, with a curious little hopping dance as he did so. He was stark naked now. The drunk had retired to the back of the room. Nobody laughed. Nobody said a word. The audience just sat mute, staring, fascinated, petrified, till Allen danced back to his seat, looking I couldn't help thinking at the moment with inward amusement like Marcel Marceau, the great French mime, doing his hopping little David and Goliath dance. Then the room was suddenly filled with an explosion of nervous applause, cheers, jeers, noisy argument. Our hosts, the editors of Coastlines, had been having a huddle on the sidelines. Now one of them, Mel Weisburd, dashed up front and stood over Allen menacingly.

"All right," he shouted, "put your clothes on and get out! You're not up in San Francisco now. This is a private house . . . you're in someone else's living room. . . . You've violated our hospitality. . . .

"If this is what you call . . ."

He looked over at me as if to say, "You re chairman here, do some thing."

I rapped for order like a proper chairman and announced the next order of business. Gregory Corso would read another group of poems and then we would hear from Allen Ginsberg once more with his poems Sunflower Sutra and A Supermarket in California. Corso was all for leaving at once. "We'll go somewhere where we can get good and drunk and take Anais Nin with us."  But Allen shook his head and quietly put his clothes on, one piece at a time, in slow motion, smiling to himself with half-closed eyes. A sly, mysterious, inner-directed Buddha smile.

The reading went on amid general approval and with closer, more respectful attention than before. The incident had sobered up the drunk. When the reading was over he approached Allen and said, loud enough for everybody to hear, that he was sorry he had made such an ass of himself and where could he buy a copy of Howl?

Through it all Anais Nin, faithful to the role in which the poets had cast her, sat imperiously still, only slightly disdainful of the hubbub, like a queen on a throne.

 

  

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

Chessman’s Execution Upheld; Drysdale Throws Perfect Innings

1959_0708_Times_cover_thumb

July 8, 1959: The state Supreme Court upholds Caryl Chessman's death sentence. A fire breaks out at the compressor plant at Kanola and Fullerton roads in Union Oil's drilling field.

Kanola and Fullerton via Google maps' street view.

July 8, 1959, Sports Don Drysdale was the starting pitcher in the National League's 5-4
victory over the AL at Pittsburgh. He pitched three perfect innings and
edged Willie Mays for the honors as the game's top player.

Drysdale struck out Nellie Fox, Al Kaline, Rocky Colavito and pitcher Early Wynn.

Mays' triple made the difference in the eighth inning off the Yankees' Whitey Ford.

The all-stars would visit Los Angeles later in the summer, since
1959 was the first of baseball's short-lived experiment with two
all-star games each season.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Dodgers | 1 Comment

Officer Arrests Boy, 7, in Burglary

July 8, 1899, Officer Ziegler

July 8, 1899: Officer Ziegler arrests a couple of youngsters in the theft of some tools. "Officer Ziegler holds the record for being a terror to small boys," The Times says. "All lawbreakers look alike to him, regardless of age, sex, color or previous condition of servitude."
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An Unusual Bet on Boxing Match

  July 8, 1889, Bet

July 8, 1889: Dutch Pete and Charles Beaucaire make a bet on the Sullivan-Kilrain fight. Evidently the loser will carry the winner in a wheelbarrow from the Anheuser saloon to the Nadeau Hotel, at 1st and Spring, and back. A band will accompany them.

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Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Pink Elephant Dress EBay

Pink Elephant Dress

This rather remarkable pink elephant dress from the Playdeck department at Bullock's Wilshire has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $100.

Posted in Fashion | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Matt Weinstock, July 7, 1959

 

Feverish Fourth

Matt Weinstock Let us calmly reflect on the Independence Day weekend.

July 4 came on Saturday and by all rights it should have been observed then and then alone.

But
a kind of fever now seems to grip people when a holiday weekend rolls
around. There is a compulsion to go places or to gather in tribal
ceremonies dedicated to food, drink and fierce relaxation. Nothing
wrong with that except it becomes a big project. Many offices closed
Friday, ostensibly to prepare for the event. And the siege at the supermarkets was awesome. Hardly a pound of ground round or a single wiener escaped the impetuous customers.

THEN THERE
was the repetitious, head-pounding propaganda about death on the
highways. No one is against traffic safety and certainly no one is
naive any longer about what he faces when he goes for a drive on such a
weekend. One wonders if such overwhelming reminders are necessary.

July 7, 1959, Asian Counseling Almost
completely lost in the celebration was the reason for it. July 4 used
to mean something, something about a war that was fought and a document
that was written.

Perhaps it has become too safe and sane. A beach resident, anticipating
a large family gathering Saturday, thought it would be appropriate to
set off some fireworks on the beach. He'd heard that most of them were
illegal so he phoned a sheriff's office and asked if he could set off a
few safe ones. He described them, one by one. The deputy said no and
read him the law.

"How about sparklers?" the beach burgher asked. No, not sparklers either.

"How about marshmallows?" the beach resident then asked, adding, "I mean if we make sure the edges don't catch fire when we toast them."

::

THERE'S FRANTIC
competition among radio stations for the attention of listeners and no
gimmick remains untried. There's a story going around about a bright
young man who rushed into the boss' office with a great idea for an
attention getter.

July 7, 1959, Spaceship "We could make up our own weather reports," he said breathlessly, "then we'd have them exclusively."

::

HAD YOUR frightening thought for today? Bill Duniway is haunted by the implications
of the big Pentagon fire. It was one of those things that supposedly
couldn't happen. But it did. Suppose, in the confusion and excitement,
the fire had reached the inner inner secret sanctum and set off the
panic button, sending our bombers winging for Russia. A real bigoopser.

::

July 7, 1959, Abby TRAFFIC BOUND residents of San Fernando Valley may be interested in this excerpt from a deed turned up by Denny Olinger
of Title Insurance on a piece of property there, dated Dec. 28, 1910:
"An easement for an automobile boulevard for the passage thereon and thereover
of those vehicles generally known as automobiles and propelled by
gasoline, electricity, steam or alcohol, said automobiles to carry
passengers only and no such vehicles carrying freight nor any vehicles
propelled by horses, mules or animals of any description shall be
allowed to be on or use this easement."

::

ALTHOUGH
560 million new Lincoln pennies were issued in the first six months of
1959 you don't see many of them and for a strange reason. The rumor has
been spread that they're collector's items because of an alleged error
in design — the fact that the o in "United States of America" on the
reverse side is in lower case instead of upper case as it was in the previous issue.

Actually the o was deliberately changed to lower case as part of the new design.

1959 Lincoln Cent Anyway,
some coin dealers are offering the new pennies for a dime and the word
has been circulated that they may be worth 15 or even 25 cents. As a
result they're being hoarded. Even the banks are having difficulty
getting a supply of them.

To repeat — they're not worth a penny more than a penny.

::

AT RANDOM — Roger
Beck said it first: "I wonder if the two dogs the Russians sent up
there along with the rabbit were greyhounds? Maybe they're going to
start a dog track" . . . Jack Jarvis, Seattle columnist, who creates
fictitious organizations on his home printing press, is sending friends
membership cards in the I Suffer So Beautifully Assn. . . . Famous last
words: "Oh, but I don't burn, I tan!"

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock, July 7, 1959

Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, July 7, 1959

Confidential File

Ensenada's Brooding About Tijuana's Sins

Paul CoatesFor natives of Ensenada there's a long, lean summer ahead.

The gaiety picked up a little over the Cuatro de Julio* weekend, but so far this year, the Baja California resort city has been suffering from more than the heat.

Its problem is one of economics.

Ensenada
was conceived and weaned on the Mexican peso, but it grew city-big on
the American dollar. And it's been the American dollar which has
supported its relative prosperity in the last few decades of its
phenomenal growth.

Specifically, the American tourist dollar.

But now, I'm informed, the economy is hurting badly.

July 7, 1959, Freeway Holdup Visitors
from north of the border — once as reliable as San Juan Capistrano's
swallows — suddenly aren't reliable any more. In fact, they're
avoiding Ensenada this summer like they're unaware that the overgrown seaside village exists at all.

The reason they are, in case you can't guess, is that they're afraid.

 Not
afraid in the cowardly sense. It's just that they'd rather not take
unnecessary chances on the strange brand of justice which too
frequently is meted out by Baja California courts and police.

The
atrocious treatment accorded visitors in the border town of Tijuana and
the publicity it received in recent months have influenced an awful lot
of people to change any Baja California vacation plans which might have been formulating in their minds.

Now that the pocketbook pinch is on, I'm told that the merchants of Ensenada are beginning to wake up to the fact that some terrible things have been happening to tourists in Tijuana.

They're outright shocked, I'm told.

They're stunned by the inhumane treatment being doled out to prospective paying customers.

July 7, 1959, MacArthur Park Now they're adding their voices to the cry of clean up Tijuana.

And while I'm sad that the current economic squeeze might be hurting some of the small, decent individuals in Ensenada, I'm glad that the businessmen there are finally "aware" of conditions in the sin city 72 miles to their north.

I'm glad, even if their compassion is inspired by the dollar signs.

::

 Not just some things, but apparently everything is haywire in Gov. Long's domain these days.

I received a letter this week from a longtime correspondent of mine in the Louisiana State Penitentiary.

It was postmarked Angola, La.

The date stamped on the envelope by the post-office canceling machine was Aug. 11, 1959.

Maybe it's true, after all, that we damn Yankees are behind the times.

*Cuatro de Julio: A holiday celebrated annually in Ensenada and
Tijuana honoring Jorge Washington, whose picture is on the U.S.
one-dollar bill.

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, July 7, 1959

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: Your Movies

July 7, 1927, Movies  

July 7, 1927: Now playing in Los Angeles, Pola Negri in "Barbed Wire."

And look! It's our old pal Rube Wolf!

What's this? "Her Unborn Child." "A startling problem play of youth   love   sex."

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

Services for Theater Organist Bob Mitchell

 

April 10, 1962, Bob Mitchell Daily Mirror fan Karie Bible of Film Radar reports the death of theater organist Bob Mitchell. Mitchell was a regular feature of the Los Angeles Conservancy's Last Remaining Seats series. He was quite frail at this year's event but it was good to see him.

Mitchell's services are scheduled on Friday at 9:30 a.m. at  Christ the King Catholic Church, 624 N. Rossmore Ave. He will be buried at Hollywood Forever Cemetery, 6000 Santa Monica Blvd.

Memorial donations may be made to the American Heart Assn. or Boys Town.

Here's a field recording I made at Last Remaining Seats a few years ago of Mitchell playing "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands."

Thanks to our friend Jon Weisman of the fabulous Dodger Thoughts blog for reminding us that Mitchell was the first organist at Dodger Stadium. At right, an article from April 10, 1962.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Music, Obituaries | 2 Comments

Angel Pitcher Exiled to Hawaii

July 7, 1969, Sports The Angels were a fine mess.

New Manager Lefty Phillips tried to get his players' attention by attacking their wallets. Five players who missed curfew were fined. Then pitcher Phil Ortega was charged $500 for being found in a Kansas City hotel lobby allegedly wearing only underwear (that costs you only $500?).

Pitcher Bob Priddy fought back, going public after he was sold to the Angels' minor league team in Hawaii. "I could no longer play for Lefty Phillips," Priddy told The Times' Ross Newhan. "I've played for many managers, but he's the worst."

Priddy wasn't exactly Cy Young. He was 0-1 with the Angels after coming with Sandy Alomar in a trade with the White Sox for Bobby Knoop.

The Angels said Priddy had publicly criticized his coaches and, besides, had told Phillips he was going to retire. "I've never heard a player talk about other players like he did," Phillips said about his confrontation with the pitcher. "He broke a code. I lost all respect for him."

Newhan saw the developing trend and wrote a smart story about the struggling franchise.

"It has been seven weeks ago that Dick Walsh … appointed his friend, Harold Phillips, as manager of the tottering Angels. The 'big' stories continued to occur off the field.

"They have, for the most part, involved fringe players and the question is, are they symptomatic or should they be forgotten? Are they indicative of dissension within or simply a change in style from the laissez-faire policy of Bill Rigney?"

It's not every day you find baseball players accusing their manager of a "reign of terror." Others suggested that the Angels were a last-place team and the manager could do what he pleased.

— Keith Thursby

Posted in Sports | 1 Comment