Found on EBay — One Magazine

One Magazine, 1953

The inaugural January 1953 issue of One magazine, published in Los Angeles, has been listed on EBay. One was a historic magazine that dealt with gay issues. It was declared obscene by the Postal Service, resulting in a landmark 1st Amendment ruling. Bidding starts at $9.99.
Posted in #gays and lesbians, books | Comments Off on Found on EBay — One Magazine

Matt Weinstock, June 23, 1959

June 23, 1959, New Dress

"Hazel, I Said No! You Can't Have a New Dress!"

Numbers Game

Matt Weinstock A lady named
Julia has been confronted with a major dilemma — to move or not to
move. Normal accretion being what it is, her apartment has become
inadequate for her needs. She gets a crowded feeling every time she
enters it. However, she also knows about the ordeal of moving and the
headaches of getting adjusted somewhere else.

The other day she made her decision. She's staying.

What
decided her was the awful thought of all the tabulating machines
whirring to a stop, maybe tying up the economy a little, while new sets
of holes were punched in her cards for magazine subscriptions, utility
bills and bank statements and new serial numbers were assigned her for
credit cards and whatnot.

Frightening, but that's life today.

::

June 23, 1959, Clennon King A
NEWSMAN
talking to a first-time visitor to L.A. said, "It's this kind
of a town. You can go  downtown at 8 a.m. and the sun will be shining
and the birds will be singing, then suddenly around 3 o'clock somebody
will say or do something and you'd swear everybody had gone crazy. You
never know what's going to happen around here." 

::

REUNION
Last night I met my family. The tube went out on our TV.
–Richard Maples

::

LITERARY
NOTES —
The
mystery of the B-24 found recently in the African desert
reminded writer Sparks Stringer of an "unbelievable" radio drama he
wrote in 1937. In it he had a World War I  plane landing in the same
place with footprints leading away from it, then suddenly disappearing
… Devotees of J.D. Salinger ("Catcher in the Rye") are fascinated and
puzzled by his rambling, stream-of-consciousness tale which ran through
69 pages in the June 6 New Yorker, dealing with his brother Seymour,
who committed suicide … Through a line here, CBS Radio located Joseph
Hudock, whose "Suspense" script, "Spoils for Victor," was repeated a
few weeks ago, and he has received his "spoils," a check. Hudock is a
chemistry teacher at St. Monica Boys High School in Santa Monica.

::

A
PLAYFUL
young man exploded a firecracker under the chair of an
unappreciative colleague in a downtown office yesterday, thereby
creating all sorts of consternation.

June 23, 1959, Mirror Smog Never
mind the obvious question, where did he get the illegal firecracker?
The upsetting thing was that when the victim examined the blasted bits
of the firecracker he discovered it was fashioned from an American
syndicate's colored comic section marked "Copyright 1957." Furthermore,
its point of origin was Red China via Hong Kong.

He doesn't know whether to charge his joker friend with trading with the enemy or leave things as they are — inscrutable.

::

KID
STUFF —
While his parents were inspecting the new models in a showroom
in San Fernando, their son, 9, rushed up and asked, ""isn't this where
they sell Chevrolets?" The salesman said it certainly was. The boy
exhibited the gum balls he'd gotten from the vending machine –with
"Ford" imprinted on them … His teacher asked Hank Naylor, 9, to
define the word "sandbar" and replied, knowingly, "That's a bar at the
beach."

::

AT
RANDOM —
Know how papers and refuse are gathered from the parking lots
at Hollywood Park? They're blown into piles with a wind machine. Beats
stabbing them with nail-pointed sticks … Someone asked columnist
Sydney J. Harris if capital punishment is a deterrent to crime and he
replied, "Statistics prove conclusively that not a single person who
has suffered capital punishment has been indicted a second time" … The DMV crackdown on misbehaving motorists will get even tougher July
1 …  An unseen TV announcer said, "Some programs are mechanically
produced to prevent them at a more convenient time" … Someone, Herb Schneble reports, has written in two-ft. letters on Ocean
Blvd., Long Beach, "Tourist Go Home."

June 23, 1959, Smog

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Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, June 23, 1959

 

Confidential File

Spoil-Sport Coates Tilts the Machine

Paul CoatesFor a boy barely out of knickers, I have remarkable mental powers.

Invariably, I can pick out the good guys from the bad guys on western TV.
I'm
uncanny at predicting the forest-fire season, and, with rare error, can
tell you whether a man's happily married or not after only one casual
conversation with his wife.

Where I fall down is politics. 
They confuse me.
Ordinances, issues, propositions — no matter
how simple they're spelled out on the ballot, they have a way of
reducing me to a gibbering shadow of my former precocious self.
Take, for example, the one and only item in the city of El Monte's
municipal election today. According to the sample ballot I read, it
concerns pinball machine pay-offs.
The question before the people is: Should the machines be banned?
June 23, 1959, Mirror Cover
A couple of months ago I detailed the fight that some of the town's
citizens were having in prodding their local politicians to take action
to get the apparatuses out of cafes and bars where school kids were
pouring their nickels, dimes, and –these being times of inflation
–dollars into them.
I pointed out that the machines weren't fun games. They were paying
off. They were thinly disguised, syndicate-controlled slot machines.
I admitted that there was greater sin in the world today. But I just
couldn't understand how some small-time politicos would fight so hard
to keep this happy little vice within arm's reach of the sons and
daughters of their community. Especially when their own police chief
begged them to ban the machines, as so many other towns in this area
have done.
That's what I said two months ago.
But now, I see by the El Monte Herald, that I'm taking a stand against children. I want to snatch away their toys.

In last Thursday's edition a full-page, paid political ad exposed me for what I really am. The ad read:
June 23, 1959. George Reeves Superman Autopsy "ON TUESDAY, June 23, 1959, VOTE NO * VOTE NO* VOTE NO
"DID YOU KNOW:
"1 — THAT UNLESS YOU VOTE NO, you cannot own or keep in your home any miniature mechanical bowling game or shuffleboard game?
"2 — THAT UNLESS YOU VOTE NO, you cannot own or keep in your own home a
game where, among other things, a ball is released or thrown by hand on
a table with obstructions, even though this game is a TOY and only for
you and your children's amusement?
"3 — THAT UNLESS YOU VOTE NO, you and your children may not own or
possess certain games that are for sale in all leading department and
toy stores?
"KEEP OUR CITY FREE FROM POLITICS."
It was an unnerving experience for me, after all these years of thinking I liked children, to find out that I really hated them.
So yesterday I telephoned some of the people — clergymen, PTA leaders
and El Monte Betterment Assn. members — who had conned me into taking
such an un-American stand.

Youth and Its Flingding
They assured me that the political ad was a desperation effort by the
pinball faction to scare the citizens into voting against the ban. They
said the ordinance was carefully worded so as not to deprive El Monte's
younger generation of its toys.
They admitted that they were shocked and caught off guard by the clever
maneuver, and surprised that the El Monte Herald would print it without
checking its veracity.
But I'm afraid, in my case, it's too late. The damage is done.
I've got to go home and face my kids tonight, and they don't understand politics any better than I do.
Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates, Politics | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, June 23, 1959

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Music

June 23, 1966, Marantz

June 23, 1966: The Marantz Model 10B FM stereo tuner costs $750, or $4,924.09 USD 2008.

Posted in broadcasting, Music | 2 Comments

Dog Attacks Actress — Koufax Sets Record

June 23, 1959, Hello

June 23, 1959: "Hello, Young Lady."

June 23, 1959, Ethel Barrymore

June 23, 1959, Elaine Stewart

Elaine Stewart said she was watching TV at the home of tenant Floyd Appel when his dog bit her on the lip. In 1963, she was awarded $4,500 in damages.

At left, Irene Dunne is one of the few celebrities at Ethel Barrymore's funeral.

June 23, 1959, Nixon Biography

Richard Nixon lives from paycheck to paycheck, according to "Richard Nixon: A Political and Personal Portrait" by Earl Mazo

June 23, 1959, Democrats

Democrats draft a plan to avoid a walkout by Southern delegates at the 1960 presidential convention, to be held in Los Angeles. 

June 23, 1959, Coed Raped

Four white men are sentenced to life in prison for raping a black coed. 

June 23, 1959, Smog

Scientists say paint and solvents contribute to smog.

June 12, 1959, Nuclear War  

Fallout from a nuclear war between the U.S. and the Soviet Union would not make the human race extinct, a Defense Department scientist says. But half of the homes in the U.S. would be badly damaged.

June 23, 1959, Fiat

Maybe there's a reason Detroit didn't take imported cars seriously.

June 23, 1959, Chavez Ravine

Chavez Ravine update.
 
June 23, 1959, Water Skiing

Burt Reynolds and Clint Eastwood on water skis! Chuck Courtney?


June 23, 1959, Sandy Koufax Sandy Koufax tied a team record and set an obscure major league record with 16 strikeouts in a 6-2 victory over the Phillies at the Coliseum.

Koufax had a shot at the major league and National League records but failed to strike anyone out in the ninth. He settled for the most strikeouts in a night game and a share of the Dodger record, which according to The Times' Frank Finch was set in 1909.

Only 10,290 fans attended the game.

— Keith Thursby

Posted in #courts, books, Comics, Dodgers, Environment, Film, health, Hollywood, Obituaries, Politics, Richard Nixon, Sports, Television | Comments Off on Dog Attacks Actress — Koufax Sets Record

Nuestro Pueblo: Central Jail

June 23, 1939, Nuestro Pueblo

June 23, 1939: I think this is my favorite "Nuestro Pueblo" so far. The dialogue could come right out of some 1930s movie. Interestingly enough, the text was completely rewritten for the book.

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Crude Oil Floods Figueroa Street!

June 23, 1899, Crude Oil

June 23, 1899: Crude oil floods Figueroa Street. A city inspector discovered that workers dismantling a storage tank on a triangular lot at 1st and 2nd streets (recall that several downtown streets have been realigned since 1899) directed about 200 barrels of oil and sand into a storm drain that emptied at Figueroa and 18th streets. 
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Geronimo

June 23, 1889, Geronimo

June 23, 1889: The story of Geronimo as told by the Rambler.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Geronimo

Found on EBay — First Methodist Episcopal Church

Aug. 20, 1899, First Methodist Episcopal Church

Aug. 20, 1899: The cornerstone is laid for First M.E. Church

First M.E. Church

This postcard showing First M.E. Church has been listed on EBay. The church was designed by Austin and Skilling and built on the northeast corner of  6th and Hill streets in 1899.  Bidding starts at $4.

Aug. 20, 1899, First Methodist Episcopal Church

Posted in Architecture, art and artists, Downtown, Religion | Comments Off on Found on EBay — First Methodist Episcopal Church

Matt Weinstock, June 22, 1969

June 22, 1969, Matt Weinstock

Note: At the moment I'm unable to provide Matt Weinstock's June 22, 1959, column. Instead, here's his June 22, 1969 column.
Posted in Architecture, Columnists, Film, Hollywood, Matt Weinstock | 1 Comment

Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, June 22, 1959

Confidential File

Hear Duncan Trial on New LP Record

Paul CoatesThe murder trial of Elizabeth Ann Duncan is past, but the din isn't

In
fact, momentarily, another story may break in the same Ventura
courtroom where Mrs. Duncan was convicted of the murder of her
daughter-in-law Olga and sentenced to die in the gas chamber.

This
story involves a Los Angeles newsman by then name of George Moran, who
attended the sensational trial. He's head of the Moran Film Co. in
Hollywood.

A few days ago he put on the market a long-play phonograph record entitled "The Duncan Trial."

Narrated by John Babcock, it contains the dramatic highlights of the courtroom testimony:

Mrs. Duncan's running feud with Dist. Atty. Roy Gustafson
over his repeated referral to her son as "Frankie" … heated charges
and denials of incest … the damning testimony of Mrs. Elizabeth
Short, Barbara Reed and a parade of other witnesses.

The record is a composite taken from the tape-recorded proceedings.

June 22, 1959, Cover But the delicate question which could lead to trouble for Moran is:

Who taped the proceedings? And how?

According to my information, Moran, or his agents, did not have permission from Superior Judge Charles F. Blackstock to bring any recording devices into the courtroom.

Yet, from the record, it's obvious that they had them inside, or had the room wired, from the beginning to the end of the trial.

This, alone, is enough to disturb the judge.

But, I'm sure, when a copy of the LP reaches Ventura, neither he nor prosecutor Gustafson will enjoy listening to what he hears.

Through selection of testimony in the record and editorial comment, there's no room for doubt as to "whose side Moran's on."

While the recording isn't pro-Mrs. Duncan, it definitely isn't complimentary either to the judge or Gustafson.

The trial, it hammers — both by innuendo and flat statement — wasn't a fair one.

A
Ventura minister is recorded saying: "… I have yet to meet anyone …
who has not already made up his mind as to (Mrs. Duncan's) guilt. They
expressed the thought that it might be difficult anywhere in this part
of the world to have a fair trial for her, but it would be particularly
impossible in the atmosphere that is at present reigning in Ventura."

And Babcock concludes:

June 11, 1959, Abby "There
were many witnesses to substantiate the jury's verdict. There was also
overwhelming prejudice. She had been prejudged and condemned before the
trial began…."

'With Fitting Dignity'

Among the canons of judicial ethics adopted by the American Bar Assn, there's one, No.35, which reads:

"Proceedings
in court should be conducted with fitting dignity and decorum. The
taking of photographs in the courtroom during sessions, and the
broadcasting or televising of court proceedings are calculated to
detract from the essential dignity of the proceedings, distract the
witness in giving his testimony, degrade the court and create
misconceptions with respect thereto in the mind of the public, and
should not be permitted."

The ABA's canons are commonly
interpreted as being for the court's guidance, rather than
hard-and-fast rules. Enforcement and interpretation is generally left
up to the presiding judge.

Most judges, for example, will permit newspaper photographers limited freedom to work.

But
I've got the feeling, in this case, that Mr. Moran is flirting with a
contempt-of-court charge. Anyway, it'll be interesting to see if he can
get away with it.

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | 1 Comment

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Religion

June 22, 1965, Ogamisama  

June 22, 1965: Japanese spiritual leader Ogamisama visits Los Angeles.

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Ailing Lou Gehrig Retires From Baseball

June 22, 1939, Quiet Stupid!

"Quiet, Stupid! … Yeow!" 

June 22, 1939, Gambling

The state Senate approves a bill that would license bookies and take 5% of their gross. I wonder what the lobbying was like on this bill.

June 22, 1939, Business

A Ford executive says industry voluntarily reduced the workweek to 40 hours. "The charges that these improvements were made at the insistence of a morally outraged society is not tenable."
 
June 22, 1939, Gilmore

Talk about fuel economy: 23 mpg.

June 22, 1939, Gator

Maybe I'm an overprotective parent, but I really wouldn't want my kid doing this.


June 22, 1939, Hosiery

Maybe more than any other era, I find the artwork — and lettering — in the 1930s ads just remarkable.

June 22, 1939, Churchill

I recently listened to a program on Winston Churchill. He certainly had a knack with words that put everybody in their place. Especially "Corporal Hitler."

June 22, 1939, Contest

The Times begins a contest on movie titles. I'll try to run some of the entries.

June 22, 1939, Mrs. Tarzan

June 22, 1939, Old Dark House

Above, a stylish ad for "The Old Dark House" and "My Man Godfrey."

At left, a feature on the arrival of Michael Farrow, born to John Farrow and Maureen O'Sullivan. 

June 22, 1939, Harris and Frank

Another elegant, stylish ad, this one for Harris & Frank.

June 22, 1939, Fiesta

Re-creating the early days of California.

June 22, 1939, Moral Rearmament

Moral Rearmament!

June 22, 1939, Marijuana

June 22, 1939, Cat Eats Watch

The cat ate a watch?


 

June 22, 1939, Sports Lou Gehrig's career was over. The Yankees slugger, whose skills
had seemed mysteriously in decline, was diagnosed with what was then
called infantile paralysis.

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis,
also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, is an incurable ailment that
attacks nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord. Gehrig, who had
played in 2,130 consecutive games with the Yankees and took himself out
of the lineup in May, died in 1941.

The Times ran an Associated Press story with a horrible lead: "The
'Iron Horse' was consigned to the baseball roundhouse today — to
stay." The Yankees tried to be optimistic about Gehrig's recovery,
discussing a post-baseball job with the Yankees "in some executive
capacity."

The next day, The Times ran a short story on plans for a day in Gehrig's honor. Here's footage from the event.

— Keith Thursby

Update: Keith is on vacation so I'll pinch hit for him. The Times' original story indeed says Lou Gehrig had "infantile paralysis." Later stories also say he had "infantile paralysis" or "a form of infantile paralysis." His June 3, 1941,  obituary says he died of "a rare disease" called "amyotrophic lateral sclerosis." –lrh

Posted in Animals, art and artists, Comics, Fashion, health, Politics, Sports | 2 Comments

Civil War Veterans Plan Cross-Country Trip

Feb. 7, 1918, Civil War Veterans

Feb. 7, 1918: Civil War veterans plan to drive across the country and visit old battlefields in the South.

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Veteran Burglar Convicted Again

June 22, 1899, Bathing Suit

June 22, 1899: Adjusted for inflation, these suits cost $51.10-$102.20.

June 22, 1899, Burglar

I was curious as to what "door key nippers" might be. Evidently they were some type of lock-picking device. I found this story:

Feb. 16, 1903, Burglar

Feb. 16, 1903: "Stealing was going on all over the city, and killing resulted.

"Frank Nerski fittingly closed a career of sin and crime with his arms around his swag — shot by two policemen as he attempted to escape earthly law. The 'key-nipper' man and other burglars robbed at least four separate dwellings and as usual escaped arrest."

Earl Boebert writes:

A key nipper is a thin forceps or needlenose pliers. People would  lock the
old-fashioned "skeleton key" locks from the inside and leave  the key in to
frustrate lock picking. The thief would grab the key  with the nipper from
the outside and turn it to unlock the door. An  example of the security
axiom that for every countermeasure there is  an attack and for every attack
there is a countermeasure. (The countermeasure against key nippers is a
deadbolt lock).

The lack of legitimate use for the tool let them to be
categorized as  burglar tools, whose possession in those days was
illegal.

Posted in #courts, LAPD | 1 Comment

White Immigrants Needed to Offset Rise in Blacks, USC Grads Told

June 1889, USC Graduation

June 22, 1889: I was casually perusing this issue of The Times, assuming this story would be an entertaining bit of the late 19th century. And then when I got to this portion of the commencement speeches, I exclaimed: "They said WHAT?"

"Clarence Dougherty said in substance:

 "There seems to be some question in the minds of many of our prominent writers as to whether future Americans will be mostly English, German, Irish or Negroes. One thing is certain; that a large proportion of the future population will be Negroes. The only adequate offset to the natural increase of the Negroes is the immigration of white foreigners. In the white population of the future a vast majority will be of recent foreign descent. The average American cannot trace his ancestry very far back without crossing the Atlantic. The coming American will solve the great moral questions which are now coming before the American people. He will justify the greatest confidence in the human race and especially in our own part of it. The future of America is to be preserved by a body of Americans gathered from all sources and loyal to the great moral reforms. The American of the future, by reason of special natural advantages, will be able to excel all other nationalities, but unless we solve the problems that are before us, we must yield the first place to other nations."

Was he actually saying that white people can't reproduce as prolifically as blacks so we better import some from Europe? I guess he was. And he doesn't even mention Asians or any immigrant that would "cross the Pacific." Wow.

Posted in Countdown to Watts, Education | 1 Comment

Found on EBay — Veterans’ Chapel

National Soldiers' Home Chapel

This postcard of the chapel at the National Soldiers' Home near Sawtelle has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at 99 cents.

In 1917, The Times reported that widows usually remarried within two weeks of moving to Sawtelle because of all the single veterans.

Posted in Architecture, Religion | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Veterans’ Chapel

Father’s Day Without Dad

Father's Day Without Dad

Mysterious Paper Airplane Lifts Grieving Daughter's Spirit

June 17, 1990

By
TAD BARTIMUS, ASSOCIATED PRESS; Tad Bartimus is a special correspondent
for the Associated Press. Based in Denver, she covers the Rocky
Mountain states.

March 19, Monday:

My father is dying.

It
is my worst childhood dread, the terror in the night come true. I sit
by his bed and hold his hand, trying to ward off my fears. I am failing
in my duty. I cannot save him.

There is a scene in the film
"Terms of Endearment" where the mother stands at the nurses' station
and screams for another shot of painkiller for her terminally ill
daughter. Now I, too, stand at a nurses' station. I say quietly,
politely: "I think it is time for my dad's shot."

They look up
at me, these kids, many of them young enough to be my daughters, and
say, "OK, we'll get it in a minute," and then go back to talking about
last night's date, a friend's birthday party.

I feel my face
contort. I have become Frankenstein. I stand there and fidget, my hands
balling into fists, my eyes welling with tears. My eyelids are already
so swollen I can hardly bear to touch them. I say again, between
clenched teeth: "I'm sorry to trouble you, but it is time NOW for my
dad's shot. NOW. NOW. NOW!"

My breath gets shorter. My voice
rises to a screech. I turn into a monster in that antiseptic hallway. I
hate myself for being this way, but I seem to have no control over my
rude behavior. It seems my only way to fight back against a medical
system that has my whole family in the strangling grip of its tubes,
wires, needles, thumping noises, offending smells and a cadre of
strangers who invade at their convenience our tiny cubicle of pain and
grief.

Cancer has transformed me, molded me into a 42-year-old
daughter whose only aim in life is to help her father die as
comfortably, and with as much dignity, as I can provide.

Three
months ago my father was on the golf links, a 68-year-old retired pilot
with a wide circle of friends, a keen intellect, a comfortable life. We
were so pleased because he had shed much of the extra weight he'd
carried around on bad knees since he was in his forties. He was proud
of himself as his pants size kept shrinking. Christmas brought him a
new wardrobe. But my mother was having secret fears, which she revealed
in the darkened room we often share with the quiet man in the bed: too
much weight, too fast. But never mind. Worry about it tomorrow. The old
saw is true. We see only what we want to see.

There was no
cancer in our family, ever. As a journalist, I read the statistics, I
kept up with the developments. Until Jan. 7, when the dreaded phone
call came, I thought of cancer only with detached, clinical interest.
Now the disease invades my heart, my mind, my very soul.

My father has become a statistic. Lung cancer. But where is the primary tumor?

"We
may never find it," said his oncologist, a father of five girls. He has
just a few more answers than I, the layman. The killer cell, the rogue
that launched the insidious assault on my father, will always elude the
CAT scans, MRIs, X-rays, blood tests and all the other diagnostic
invasions inflicted on the silent man in the bed.

We will never know how it began. But we know, with terrible finality, how it will end.

March 23-24, Friday and Saturday:

Like
the forest of Hansel and Gretel, my father's hospital room is littered
with reminders of the long journey we have traveled together.

Books
and magazines for when he could see; the television set for when he
cared, as he passionately once did, about the revolution in Romania and
the budget deficit and the verdict on the Exxon Valdez captain; lotions
for when he still complained of aching muscles, juice for when he could
still sip through a straw.

Finally, the last supper: 1 sugar
packet, 1 salt substitute packet, strained cream of chicken soup, 2
milks, Coke, vanilla ice cream cup, cranberry juice, coffee. The tray
was set aside, untouched.

It is nearly over. The nurses, every
one a father's daughter, increasingly care for us as well as him. They
have become allies, friends, the only constant in a situation out of
control. They never pass me now without a touch, a pat, a hug. They
have done this before. They know how close we are to saying
farewell–to each other, to him.

My father's doctors call in
from restaurants, from their own beds at 3 a.m. We are consulting
hourly now. I am making decisions I never knew anyone had to make,
making them with a cold detachment that stuns me. Yes, increase the
Demerol. No, it isn't working, so yes, I think we should switch to
morphine. Increase the morphine. More. More.

I hear myself
issuing opinions, but I keep looking at the still figure under the blue
blanket, half waiting for him to sit up and contradict me.

He
was always in charge. I never had a say in what we did, where we went
as a family. He was the leader, the chief of the clan, the only voice
of authority. When did the torch pass? I do not want it. But I cannot
give it back.

There is no privacy in a hospital. I discover the
linen closet down the hall and retreat there, behind the boxes of
plastic-coated pillows. In that tiny sanctuary I hyperventilate, cry
until I hiccup, pull myself together enough to go back into the
darkened room.

It is the cusp of spring, but the last storm of
winter has hurled itself out of the west and paralyzed Kansas City.
Nothing moves on the streets. The lamps glow yellow in the reflected
snow. The world is silent, suspended.

My father and I are alone
in the middle of the night. I am half on the bed, cradling him, telling
him all my secrets, all my hopes. I am racing the clock, my new enemy,
trying to cram the story of my entire life into the last precious hours
I will have with my daddy.

I sob. I laugh. I talk about the dog
of my youth who was blown to us in a tornado and learned to play second
base. I remind him of the time the cat ate the Christmas goose. I thank
him for the blue bicycle, for teaching me to drive, for sending me to
college, for waving goodby with a smile on his face when I boarded the
plane for Vietnam, for all the money spent on phone calls to find me
halfway 'round the world. I thank him for all that extra champagne at
my wedding, and for all the steaks he barbecued for my journalist
friends who dropped in from Beirut and Bombay over the years.

I
feel closer to my dad that night than ever before. Occasionally his
eyes open, and I look deep into them and whisper in his ear, "I love
you," because everybody says no one knows what he hears, what he
thinks. Those three words become my mantra, chanted over and over and
over till dawn.

I also tell him how proud of him I was, and am,
how his exploits as a fighter pilot reflected on us, made us feel
special. I reassure him of my happiness in my marriage. I promise to
look out for mother, to love his grandsons forever, to treasure every
snapshot, every scrap of advice. I pledge to be good. I promise to
remember.

And then I give him permission to let go. I say goodby. I feel as if I am dying too.

"You can go now, Daddy. It's OK. Honest. I love you. You can go now, Daddy."

I
carry on the one-sided conversation for more than 12 hours. There is no
sound in the room except my hoarse voice. The only tube left is the
morphine drip. The nurses glide in and out. There is pain in their
eyes. The young doctor who has become my lifeline, my greatest source
of strength, stands at the foot of the bed.

"When?" I ask.

"I don't know," he replies. There are tears in his eyes.

My
father picks his own time, as he has his whole life. He waits for my
mother and my brother. At high noon, the storm over, the blinding
spring sunshine flooding the window, he opens his eyes. He speaks.
"Love!" he says, as they hold him in their arms.

And then he is gone.

March 27, Tuesday:

The
photograph in front of the altar shows a smiling young man in a
50-mission hat and a dashing Army Air Corps trench coat. A white silk
scarf is draped over the edge of the frame. On a velvet board are the
medals awarded for bravery, daring and endurance. Hyacinth freshly cut
from a neighbor's yard complete the memorial tableau.

I take a deep breath and pray for the strength and composure to deliver a eulogy.

"The newspaper obituary," I began, "gives you the frame surrounding the portrait of the man. This is the true picture.

"He
loved the song of a single bird in the morning, the sight of a chevron
of wild geese at dusk. He was sentimental and loved cards that rhymed.
. . .

"He could untangle any fishing line and fix any toy. . . .

"He taught his children that only people mattered, not things. . . .

"He was a fisherman, farmer, civil servant, lifelong Democrat, loyal American.

"But
at the core he was a pilot. A true hero. Dad's pilot buddies said no
man ever flew an airplane with such grace and skill and that God-given
gift that only angels have for flight. . . .

"A friend, trying
to comfort me, said she knew why Dad took his own time in leaving us.
He did not go in the dark of night when the blizzard raged. Instead, he
left with the sun high overhead. He waited, she said, for clear skies
to take off. . . ."

At the end, I borrowed the words of a friend who had walked this path before:

"Daddy,"
she wrote, "just follow the heading Peter Pan gave Wendy Darling. As
they surveyed the stars spread across the night sky, he showed her the
way like you have shown me:

"Second to the right, then straight on till morning. Have a wonderful flight. We'll all meet you there."

Then
the pianist broke into a resounding rendition of "Wild Blue Yonder" and
my duty was done. I had used the only true gift I had, the ability to
string words together, to say farewell. I believe he heard me.

March 29, Thursday:

I
was in the dream house my parents built when they retired. Stumbling
around in the dark, I reached into my open suitcase for a bathrobe. My
hand touched something that hadn't been there an hour before. Turning
on the light, I found an intricate paper airplane folded out of a
hospital dietitian's form.

Even though it was late I called my
husband, who'd flown back home that day. I thanked him for leaving me
the wonderful airplane. After a long pause at the other end of the
line, he told me, as one would speak to a slow-witted child, that he
hadn't made me a paper airplane.

The next morning I showed it to
my mother. She had no idea where it came from. I am sure there is a
logical explanation. I just haven't found it. Until I do, I've put the
delicate little plane away in a box in my hope chest, along with my
most precious treasures. When I feel inconsolable, I get out the box
and sail the beautifully proportioned craft through the air. It makes
me feel better.

"Take my hand," wrote the friend who is a year
ahead of me. "We'll walk together on the twisting road back." She
exhorted me to "look for the signs." And so I took the little paper
airplane to be the first one.

Father's Day, June 17, Sunday:

Father's Day was the weekend we always used to pick cherries
from the back-yard tree and bake Daddy a pie. Or clean out the garage
for him. Or endure a hot afternoon at the old fishin' hole. There were
shirts to buy and ties to wrap and cards to sign.

But not this year. Or next. Or ever again.

I
look out my kitchen window in Colorado, eastward toward my roots and my
past in Missouri. There is an old, majestic Ponderosa pine across the
way. In recent days an owl has perched on the highest tip of the
highest branch. Occasionally he leaves his aerie to soar over my house
in a graceful arc, his wings barely moving, catching the thermals and
letting the breeze take him high, higher, highest.

I watch him
in wonder and delight. I believe, as Wendy Darling believed in Peter
Pan. As long as there are larks to sing and eagles to fly and owls to
look down from the highest tree, my father will live on.

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: New Pope

June 21, 1963, New Pope

June 21, 1963: Pope Paul VI becomes the successor to Pope John XXIII and Jerry G. Tees is arrested on charges of impersonating an astronaut. I can't find any further information on what became of Tees — sounds like an interesting story. 

Posted in Front Pages, Religion | Comments Off on A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: New Pope

U.S. Bans D.H. Lawrence Novel

June 21, 1959, I Feel Terribly Different

"I Feel Terribly Different."

June 21, 1959, Fathers Day

The Farmers Market ad pokes gentle fun at Times columnist Hedda Hopper.

June 21, 1959, Lady Chatterly's Lover

Postmaster General Arthur Summerfield defends his decision to ban "Lady Chatterly's Lover" from the U.S. mails.

June 21, 1959, Lady Chatterly's Lover

June 21, 1959, Lady Chatterly's Lover

Times book columnist Robert R. Kirsch says Summerfield's ban is "shockingly like the kind of literary criticism issuing recently from the Kremlin."
June 21, 1959, Best Sellers

What's on the bestseller list? Why, it's "Lady Chatterly's Lover"!

 
 

June 21, 1959, Miss Young Republican

Even the Republicans have beauty contests!

June 21, 1959, Neutra Church

A drive-in church designed by Richard Neutra? And get this: The minister is some fellow named the Rev. Robert Schuller.

June 21, 1959, Sophia Loren

Joe Hyams interviews Sophia Loren.

June 21, 1959, Duncan Trial

Audio excerpts from the Elizabeth Ann "Ma" Duncan trial.
 

June 21, 1959, Superman

June 21, 1959, Jealousy

At left, George Reeves' mother hires Jerry Giesler to investigate his apparent suicide. Above, Richard Ingledue kills Charles De Long in a fight over Dolores Mayfield. The judge sentenced Ingledue to a year in jail, calling him a "spoiled brat."
 

June 21, 1959, Murder Suicide

Abe Ben Fisher kills one man and wounds two others before committing suicide. "He just put the gun to his head and fired," says Donald T. Giertz, who was shot in the mouth. 

June 21, 1959, Puzzle

Newspapers in the 1950s often ran contests featuring peculiar puzzles — like this one. 

June 21, 1959, Ballet and Baseball

Ballet is like baseball — except I don't think dancers spit nearly as often. 

June 21, 1959, Sports  

Don Drysdale leads the Dodgers to a 9-2 win over the Reds, bringing the Dodgers within 2 1/2 games of first-place Milwaukee.
Posted in art and artists, books, broadcasting, Comics, Dodgers, Film, Hollywood, Sports, Suicide, Television | 2 Comments