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Nuestro Pueblo
Posted in Architecture, Nuestro Pueblo, Transportation
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Found on EBay — Santa Catalina Island
| This vintage photo of a young girl on the beach at Santa Catalina Island has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $9.99. |
Posted in travel
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Matt Weinstock — April 30, 1959
Tijuana Exile Hopes
Their enforced separation dates to The frustrating case was first reported here Sept 13, 1957. Three weeks ago a reader, Mrs. William Rosenblatt,
IT APPEARED The sad thing, he "Perhaps," Ohswaldt said, "immigration people won't be considered the ogres they are sometimes painted." LAST WEEKEND when If investigation shows that the requirements have
It's nice to be able to print a story with a happy ending. :: YOU DON'T HEAR about it, but the six-year truce between the Communist North Koreans and the U.N. still presents uneasy moments.
Ed Fleming of KNXT One time last winter Communist More recently they complained ::
Bob Martin at a family gathering and said she'd like to show him some pictures. She brought out a leather-bound book with the gold letters "S.O.G. with P.I.P." on the cover. Meant "Silly Old Grandmother with Pictures in Purse." she explained to baffled Bob … One of the girls in classified took an ad from a man wishing to sell a sorrel mare, some black Angus calves and some "wiener" pigs. In the nick of time it was corrected to "weaner." ::
AT RANDOM — Tom Cracraft |
Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock
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Paul Coates — Confidential File, April 30, 1959
CONFIDENTIAL FILEMurdering Your Wife a High Misdemeanor
Dr. Paul Popenoe, a colleague of mine whose wisdom appears regularly in In Which
In "Perhaps you don't think the matter is especially pertinent to you personally," he prefaced his observations. But then he added, ominously: "After you finish reading this article, then you can draw your own conclusions." I was almost afraid to read on. But I did. His And don't give me that high-and-mighty look. You know what I mean. The basic symptom, according to the doctor, is a nagging wife. A Average Joes just like you an me. "There Trouble was, the wives simply didn't know Day in, day out. Until finally, PFFT! No wife. When I got that far along in Dr. Popenoe's frank discussion, I began to realize that he was performing a perilous but necessary public service. If those were the only symptoms, it's time people were made aware. In In fact, I seldom go home. But you. I'm worried about you. Any one of you is liable to have a murder rap hanging over you head tomorrow. And this thing could spread into a very unpleasant epidemic. Dr. Popenoe obviously deserves our thanks for bringing this touchy matter into the open. How You Can Beat the Rap And But while you're thinking it over, Dr. Popenoe And if that doesn't |
Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates
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Israel Raids Egypt, Celtics Beat Lakers, April 30, 1969
Posted in #courts, Downtown, Environment, Fashion, Front Pages, Lakers, Richard Nixon, Sports
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April 30, 1939: Los Angeles Prepares for Opening of Union Station

The city made a special effort to examine and celebrate its past during the opening of Union Station. Officials mounted a much more elaborate “parade of progress” than I suspect we would see today.
Posted in 1939, Comics, Countdown to Watts, Downtown, Music, Transportation
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Found on EBay — Angels Flight
| This 1908 postcard of Angels Flight has been listed on EBay. Notice that it was originally next to the 3rd Street tunnel. Also notice the lookout tower at the top of Bunker Hill. Bidding starts at $3.99. |
Posted in Architecture, Downtown, Transportation
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Matt Weinstock — April 29, 1959
Money Troubles
A The mother said he had A So, sadder and wiser but not happier, he took the bus back to Fresno. ::
Whereupon Adam's friend jumped up and said to his new-found advocate. "Are you 86? You don't look it! I'm 86, too!" :: NO DISCOVERER, I So they can't find the cap from that nose cone? Now I feel somewhat less of a boob When I can't, though I look all over, Find the cap from my toothpaste tube. — RICHARD ARMOUR :: LET'S FACE IT,
On That "How do you account for the phenomenon?" the caretaker was asked. "No phenomenon at all," he replied, "just those danged 300 Watt bulbs." :: REMEMBER
Things are likely to liven up any week now. :: AT RANDOM — |
Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock
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Paul Coates — Confidential File, April 29, 1959
CONFIDENTIAL FILEPinball Machinery Tilts in El MonteBut And, going on the theory that the officials can read, I print details of the violation. And, ever so gently, I suggest that maybe somebody with a little authority ought to open his eyes. Buried The column dealt with a pinball-machine syndicate The pinball games were nothing
An High school kids — lots of them — were dropping their lunch money and allowances into the machines. My column was strictly a reflection of my public spiritedness. And, naive boy that I am, I figured that's how the city fathers of El Monte would take it. They were incensed, all right. But not at the crooks who were taking money from the kids in their town. Instead, the solons got mad at me. Me! I never did nothing to nobody (except hit them with a double negative if they weren't looking). One city councilman pointed out to me a few days later. "Let's face it. Gambling is here to stay."
El Monte's police chief stood before the councilmen a week after my column appeared and begged them to outlaw the machines: "I know they pay off," he said, "but I just don't have enough men to police every place that's got one." But the majority of the city fathers were apparently very fond of the pinball operation. Staunchly, they did nothing. About Neatly, There the matter rested Finally, the people of El Monte took the matter into their own hands. Church groups, PTA's and other civic organizations began passing petitions early this year demanding the removal of the pinball games. They On June 23 a special I'm not too worried about the outcome. |
Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates
1 Comment
Nashville Cuisine, 1964
| At left, 1964 Nashville is the latest destination of Mary McCoy's Cooking With the Junior League blog. (Mary, the entertaining voice of This Book Is for You, is spending a year preparing meals from Junior League cookbooks).
Mary writes: Published in 1964 by the Junior League of Nashville, Nashville Seasons |
Posted in Food and Drink
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Union Station Turns 70
Los Angeles Times file photo
Los Angeles' Union Station formally opened May 3-5, 1939, with a three-day festival that included parades and displays of historic locomotives and streetcars. The Daily Mirror will be posting photos of the station's construction and the opening celebrations. Above, Union Station under construction, Dec. 22, 1935, with City Hall and the Hall of Justice in the background. The photograph shows the completed underground passageway from the depot to the tracks.
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Posted in Architecture, Downtown, Transportation
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Mayor Slashes Budget for Libraries and Parks; Spring Training in Arizona, April 29, 1959
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The Senate approves Clare Boothe Luce as ambassador to Brazil, but her husband, Time publisher Henry Luce, asks her to resign, saying that her prestige and authority have been impaired by a political vendetta. During her confirmation hearing, Clare Boothe Luce was harshly criticized by Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Oregon) for a remark during a 1944 campaign speech that President Franklin Roosevelt "lied us into war." Morse also challenged a 1952 political speech that left the implication that former President Truman was a "traitor," The Times said.
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Braven Dyer's column suggested that the Chicago White Sox would be moving their spring training home to Arizona. Dyer said new White Sox owner Bill Veeck lived in Tucson and the team was discussing a deal to move out of Sarasota, Florida. All this would interest Los Angeles readers because the White Sox apparently wanted another team to move with them to make it an even six teams in Arizona. According to Dyer, former Dodger manager Leo Durocher was "working with the Arizona people" to get the Dodgers to leave Vero Beach for a spot closer to Los Angeles. Walter O'Malley, who knew quite a bit about moving a team from one side of the country to the other, didn't offer much hope: "Unless we trained in Southern California itself, I don't see any difference it would make where we train." Dyer, on the other hand, saw lots of potential: "Pish and tush, Walter. Don't you know that Arizona, California, Nevada and Florida are expected to have the largest population increase between 1955 and 1970? How many of those people will you lure to the Coliseum from Vero Beach? Sell that plant, go to Arizona and you'll find literally thousands of fans coming over to see your Dodgers after the regular season dawns." Pish and tush? –Keith Thursby |
Coming Attractions — The Legacy of Allensworth
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Posted in Coming Attractions, Parks and Recreation
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Matt Weinstock — April 28, 1959
Stop the Music
In No, and come to think of it, dignity is pretty hard to find anywhere else in the joint. ::
noticed what appeared to be a bookmark in one of them. A closer look revealed it was a piece of notebook paper on which was scrawled, "Be sure and beat up Ronnie in the morning." ::
WARNING SIGNAL
No matter when I enter a yellow – KENNETH H. BONNELL ::
A MAN I KNOW
is on one of those starvation diets designed to remove excess weight in a hurry. He took off eight pounds the first three days, 15 in two weeks. He simply doesn't eat. Instead he takes with him wherever he goes a thermos bottle containing a mixture of orange juice, milk, raw eggs and salad oil, and several times a day gulps a slug. On the ::
— An expensively dressed middle-aged man leaving an Arcadia restaurant was overheard saying to his companion, "Oh well, another day, another 23 cents after taxes!"… Lady named Hilda, turning off a rock and roll program, commented, "If only they didn't sing them as if they were sacred hymns." :: OFFHAND, anyone would say that Webster's unabridged is above and beyond slang. Which makes all the more interesting Frances Hov's discovery that on Page 955 the word fishify is defined as "to change to fish; to make like a fish."
::
AT RANDOM —
Oops, the student-printed program for the play "Detective Story" presented by the L.A. City College theater arts department noted that the cast was "directly supervised and assisted by the Faulty Staff." The faculty is laughing … Understand a man inToluca Lake bought a Scoutarama ticket for $1 from a Boy Scout, then tried to turn it in on some mints when a Girl Scout came to the door … Photog John Gaines saw a bunch of colleagues as he went into the Redwood House and said, "Give all those fellows a drink and gave the religion editor a glass of water and let him perform a miracle" … Received a five-page press release from Philadelphia dedicated to the proposition that diapers are more important than you think. Sometimes a person in the business gets the feeling that it won't be long now. |
Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock
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Paul Coates — Confidential File, April 28, 1959
CONFIDENTIAL FILEA Fellow to Whom We Should Subscribe
Especially other people's newspapers. But today, I make an exception. Right now, this minute, I'm hustling sheets. At no commission. Like I say, it's not The Mirror News I have tucked under my arm. It's The paper, appropriately, is called "The Petal Paper." It's a one-man operation — written, edited and printed by 37-year-old native Mississippian by name of P.D. East.
Five years ago, it was 2,300. But it was shortly after that, that Mr. East began writing the news as he saw it — not as his advertisers wanted him to see it. News that included some pretty shocking copy about the "rights" of Negroes in his home state. With naive honesty, he reported the facts. All of them. And, That's how he fell out of favor. He was branded a traitor, damnyankee and a few other things not quite so genteel. But Yesterday, I met P.D. East for the first time, and if you Yet, I made a similar misjudgment. I called him a crusader. "I'm not a crusader," he informed me indignantly. "I'm not an integrationist, either," he added. "I'm simply against discrimination." East "And why the fight?" I wanted to know. "Well," East The answer was all too obvious. One was a bright new facility; the other little more than a dilapidated shack. "What kind of social life have you led since you make your views public?" I asked East. "On Christmas Day of 1956, my wife and I were invited out. That was the last time," he answered bitterly. I asked him about old friends. "There There are some who wonder how East has managed to stay alive. Why some rebel hothead hasn't mowed him down. "I wonder myself sometimes," he confesses, but adds that he hasn't much time to consider threats of physical violence. "But what about your wife?" I said. "She just wishes the whole thing were over and done with. That everybody, including me, would shut up." But P.D. has refused to be stilled. He wants to continue shouting in print. And he wants, most of all, your help. He
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Posted in #gays and lesbians, Columnists, Paul Coates
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Bob Oates on O.J. Simpson, October 12, 1973
Oct. 12, 1973: The late Times sportswriter Bob Oates interviews O.J. Simpson, who was playing for Buffalo. |
Oates: You say ball carrying can't be taught. Do you mean this literally? Simpson: You never hear a great running back say, "I'm going out to work on this or that." All he says is, "I'm going out to work out" or "I've been working out." |
Posted in Sports
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