Trouble Was His Business — Raymond Chandler

   
Note: To mark the 50th anniversary of Raymond Chandler’s death, the Daily Mirror is revisiting some of The Times’ stories about his life and influence. We invite the Daily Mirror’s readers to share their thoughts.

The MEAN Streets

The Heat, the Winds; It’s the Season for Discovering Raymond Chandler’s L.A.

October 3, 1987

By SAM HALL KAPLAN, Times Design Critic

This is the season when the high-desert air, baked by the sun, becomes the Santa Ana winds that lash out across the city to the west, fanning fires, creating havoc and generally getting on everyone’s nerves.

For Los Angeles, it is the Mean Season, when during the day the air conditioner breaks down, the car overheats and the ice cream melts; and during the night the neighbors fight, the burglar alarm won’t shut off and the cats won’t shut up.

Marlowe Sums Up L.A.

For me, it is a time to stay out of harm’s way, avoid the freeways, Dodger games, cocktail parties and conversations with the ex-wife; give in to the whims of the children and the present wife; have an extra beer, water the lawn and reread Raymond Chandler.

His detective-hero, martyr, design critic, alter ego Philip Marlowe summed up the city he experienced, and the season, in "The Long Goodbye":

"When I got home I mixed a stiff one and stood by the open window in the living room and sipped it and listened to the groundswell of the traffic on Laurel Canyon Boulevard and looked at the glare of the big angry city hanging over the shoulders of the hills through which the boulevard had been cut. Far off the banshee wail of police or fire sirens rose and fell, never for very long completely silent. . . . Out there in the night of a thousand crimes people were dying, being maimed, cut by flying glass, crushed against steering wheels or under heavy tires. . . . People were hungry, sick, bored, desperate with loneliness or remorse or fear, angry, cruel, feverish, shaken by sobs. A city no worse than others, a city rich and vigorous and full of pride, a city lost and beaten and full of emptiness."

Exactly where Marlowe is standing and the locations of other buildings and places from Chandler’s rich legacy have challenged readers with curiosity, writers without much else to do and editors looking for a gimmick since his novels and short stories began appearing in the ’30s.

As a result, various articles have been written, maps published and tours offered purporting to locate the scenes and settings of Marlowe’s doings and undoings in Los Angeles.

But as someone who has dog-eared Chandler’s novels, and scoured the Los Angeles cityscape, I don’t trust the gumshoeing of others. And there is no way to check with the prime suspect: Chandler died — nonviolently — in 1959 in La Jolla at the age of 70.

And even if Chandler were alive today I don’t think I would trust the addresses he might offer. Certainly Marlowe wouldn’t trust him, for the Los Angeles that Chandler created was a conscious construct of allusions and lies.

Still, there are enough clues in the novels, and in publications such as "The Raymond Chandler Mystery Map of Los Angeles" (Aaron Blake Publishers: $4.95), to aid the curious in search of Marlowe’s Los Angeles. If not exact locations, then similar moods and scenes.

The house from which Marlowe viewed the city in "The Long Goodbye" is off Lookout Mountain Avenue, above Laurel Canyon.

Site of House Unknown

The avenue still exists, off Laurel Canyon Boulevard, but we don’t know where the house is.

More evocative is his house in "The High Window" — clinging to a cliff above High Tower Drive in Hollywood Heights, marked and reached by a fanciful elevator tower.

That is where he also lived in the movie version of "The Long Goodbye," starring Elliott Gould, and that in my mind is where Marlowe belongs, drink in hand. You can find the tower at the end of High Tower Drive, a short street that runs north from Camrose Drive, which is west of Highland Avenue. Apartments, duplexes and single-family houses still cling to the cliffs above the drive. The elevator, however, is not open to the public; you need a key to get in.

The detective’s office was two small rooms on the sixth floor, in the rear, of the Cahuenga Building (It might be 615 Cahuenga Blvd., but then again, it might not), with a pebbled glass door panel lettered "Philip Marlowe . . . Investigations" in flaked black paint. It is described by Marlowe, in detail, in "The High Window":

"I looked into the reception room. It was empty of everything but the smell of dust. I threw up another window, unlocked the communicating door and went into the room beyond. Three hard chairs and a swivel chair, flat desk with a glass top, five green filing cases, three of them full of nothing, a calendar and a framed license bond on the wall, a phone, a washbowl in a stained wood cupboard, a hatrack, a carpet that was just something on the floor, and two open windows with net curtains that puckered in and out. . . ."

No Fan of Office Buildings

Marlowe does not like office buildings. The Belfont downtown on 9th Street, as described in "The High Window," "was eight stories of nothing in particular that had got itself pinched off between a large green and chromium cut-rate suit emporium and a three-story and basement garage that made a noise like lion cages at feeding time. The small dark narrow lobby was as dirty as a chicken yard."

There is no Belfont there, but there are other buildings nearby fitting the description. Walking east on 9th at dusk, then north on Spring, one can get a feel of the hard-edged city of the 1930s and ’40s, and now.

Marlowe also does not paint a pretty picture of what goes on in these buildings. In the Fulwider at Santa Monica Boulevard and Western Avenue, described in "The Big Sleep," there were "plenty of vacancies or plenty of tenants who wished to remain anonymous. Painless dentists, shyster detective agencies, small sick businesses that crawled there to die, mail order schools that would teach you how to become a railroad clerk or a radio technician or a screen writer — if the postal inspectors didn’t catch up with them first."

Government buildings do not fare particularly well either. Bay City, a thinly disguised Santa Monica, is the site of numerous Marlowe adventures. Marlowe describes Bay City’s City Hall in "Farewell, My Lovely":

"It was a cheap-looking building for so prosperous a town. It looked more like something out of the Bible Belt. Bums sat unmolested in a long row on the retaining wall that kept the front lawn–now mostly Bermuda grass — from falling into the street. . . . The cracked walk and the front steps led to open double doors in which a knot of obvious City Hall fixers hung around waiting for something to happen so they could make something else out of it. They all had well-fed stomachs, the careful eyes, the nice clothes and the reach-me-down manners. They gave me about four inches to get by."

The scene at City Hall at 1685 Main St. is more polished now, but the Santa Monica Pier at the foot of Colorado Boulevard still can have a raucous quality, and, in the evening when the fog rolls in, a hint of mystery. As described in "The Big Sleep," it is the Bay City Pier, from which Marlowe and others catch a launch to an offshore gambling ship.

Chandler also played with addresses. "You could know Bay City a long time without knowing Idaho Street. And you could know a lot of Idaho Street without knowing Number 449," he writes in "The Little Sister." And he is correct, for the scene described certainly is not Idaho Avenue in Santa Monica- – not with a lumber yard, broken paving and "rusted rails of a spur track (that) turned in to a pair of high, chained wooden gates that seem not to have been opened for 20 years."

That sounds more like something off of Colorado Avenue, in Santa Monica’s industrial area.

But Ch
andler adds that "Number 449 had a shallow, paintless front porch on which five wood and cane rockers loafed dissolutely, held together with wire and the moisture of the beach air. The green shades over the lower windows of the house were two-thirds down and full of cracks. Beside the front door there was a large printed sign ‘No Vacancies.’ " The latter description clearly places the house in Santa Monica’s Ocean Park neighborhood. For a hint of that mood, look at some of the fading beach houses, many divided into apartments, in the area bordered by Pico, Lincoln and Ocean Park boulevards.

There is no mistaking Malibu in the description of Montemar Vista in "Farewell, My Lovely":

"I got down to Montemar Vista as the light began to fade, but there was still a fine sparkle on the water and the surf was breaking far out in long smooth curves. . . . Beyond it the huge emptiness of the Pacific was purple gray. Montemar Vista was a few dozen houses of various sizes and shapes hanging by their teeth and eyebrows to a spur of mountain and looking as if a good sneeze would drop them down among the box lunches on the beach."

Canyon Murder Site

In "The Big Sleep," Marlowe is at the palatial home of Gen. Sternwood, where "faint and far off" he can see some of the old wooden derricks from which the Sternwoods had made their money. Says Marlowe, the narrator:

"Most of the field was public now, cleaned up and donated to the city by Gen. Sternwood. But a little of it was still producing in groups of wells pumping five or six barrels a day. The Sternwoods, having moved up the hill, could no longer smell the stale sump water or the oil, but they could still look out of their front windows and see what made them rich. "

But Marlowe adds "I don’t suppose they would want to."

As for the house, the model for it is said to have stood on the 7000 block of Franklin Avenue in Hollywood, where one can see on a clear day the Baldwin Hills oil fields on South La Brea Avenue.

A portrait of Beverly Hills between Santa Monica and Sunset boulevards is painted in one line in the short story "Mandarin Jade": "The Philip Courtney Prendergasts lived on one of those wide, curving streets where the houses seem to be too close together for their size and the amount of money they represent." That is not a bad sketch of the area today.

House in Pasadena

A house in the Oak Knoll section of Pasadena is described in "The High Window" as "a big solid cool-looking house with Burgundy brick walls, a terra cotta tile roof, and a white stone trim. . . ."

It could be one of a number of houses there. The Chandler Mystery Map puts it on the 1200 block of Wentworth Avenue. You take your pick.

The mood and directions are quite clear in "The Little Sister" — as Marlowe drives east on Sunset Boulevard, but doesn’t go home.

"At La Brea I turned north and swung over to Highland, out over the Cahuenga Pass and down on to Ventura Boulevard, past Studio City and Sherman Oaks and Encino. There was nothing lonely about the trip. There never is on that road. Fast boys in stripped-down Fords shot in and out of the traffic streams, missing fenders by a sixteenth of an inch, but somehow always missing them. Tired men in dusty coupes and sedans winced and tightened their grip on the wheel and ploughed north and west towards home and dinner. . . . I drove on past the gaudy neons and the false fronts behind them, the sleazy hamburger joints that look like palaces under the colors, the circular drive-ins as gay as circuses with the chipper, hard-eyed carhops, the brilliant counters, and the sweaty greasy kitchens that would have poisoned a toad. Great double trucks rumbled down over Sepulveda from Wilmington and San Pedro and crossed the Ridge Route, starting up in low-low from the traffic lights with a growl of lions in the zoo."

We have freeways now, but stripped-down cars still shoot in and out of the traffic, drivers wince and grimace and the trucks growl.

Gone is Bunker Hill, which Marlowe described in "The High Window" as "old town, lost town, shabby town, crook town," with "women who should be young but have faces like stale beer; men with pulled-down hats and quick eyes that look over the street behind the cupped hand that shields the match flame; worn intellectuals with cigarette coughs and no money in the bank . . . cokies and coke peddlers; people who look like nothing in particular and know it. . . ."

Now these lost souls can be seen on Skid Row, in the doorways on 6th and 7th streets east of Alvarado Street, in the alleys off of Hollywood Boulevard, along the Venice and Santa Monica beachfronts, and even on Rodeo Drive, if only for a few minutes before they are hustled off by the police.

Marlowe’s mean city is a little more hidden today, but it is there.

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Misterogers Visits KCET; Tom Lasorda at Spring Training, March 3, 1969

1969_0303_misterogers

Fred Rogers visits KECT-TV, with King Friday XIII and the rest.

1969_0303_streak I know that high-minded Daily Mirror readers will completely ignore the story at left about streaking and that the subject of naked college kids running around holds no interest for anybody. Actually, I was surprised to discover streaking this early because I thought it was more of a 1970s phenomenon. Either way, I’m sure there’s a dissertation subject in there for somebody.

On the front page, below, a Navy board of inquiry examines the death of an aquanaut during a project called Sealab … the crew of Apollo 9 prepares for launch … in Paris, President Nixon has a brief meeting with South Vietnamese President Nguyen Cao Ky that ends abruptly … Nixon also meets Pope Paul VI and French President Charles de Gaulle … Chinese guards in Manchuria are reportedly killed in a fight with Soviet troops along the border north of Vladivostok. 

Be sure to read Cecil Smith’s feature on Fred Rogers, who says: "You cannot talk to children until you learn to listen to them."

See, you got all the way to the bottom without even looking at the streaking story. I’m so proud of you!

1969_0303_cover
Vice President Sprio Agnew slips on the ice and cuts his nose while reviewing an honor guard.
1969_0303_tv
"Rat Patrol!" … James Garner on "Laugh-In"… Rod Serling hosts … "Liars Club?"
1969_0303_sports
John Duffie is in trouble for breaking the Dodgers’ curfew.

Here’s yet another spring training story on Tom Lasorda, headed to
Spokane to become the Dodgers’ Triple-A manager. When I first saw the
headline, I thought John Wiebusch’s piece was about the spring hopes of
infielder Jim Lefebvre, but there’s no doubt who dominated the story.

"The pudgy Italian walked toward the crowd as Lefebvre re-entered
the cage," Wiebusch wrote. "’Ladies and gentlemen, you see what this
young man will do for his game? He knows that you can pay wholesale
prices for washing machines and television sets but you’ve got to pay
retail prices for success.’"

— Keith Thursby

Posted in @news, broadcasting, Dodgers, Education, Politics, Religion, Television | 1 Comment

Remembering Kathy Fiscus, 1949

1949_0411_yancey
April 10, 1949, Bill Yancey retrieves the body of Kathy Fiscus.

Stan Chambers discusses covering the Kathy Fiscus story. His comments begin at the 10:50 point.
Sixty years after a frantic attempt to rescue a young San Marino girl trapped in a well near her home, William Deverell of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West will revisit the Kathy Fiscus tragedy. The incident set the mark for live news coverage by commercial television, which was then in its infancy. It also inspired a popular song recorded by Jimmie Osborne and  Kitty Wells.

The free lecture is at 7:30 p.m., March 30 at the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens.

Posted in @news, broadcasting, Television | 3 Comments

Found on EBay — Oviatt’s

Oviatt_robe_ebay

Oviatt_robe_ebay_label

This robe from Oviatt’s has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $29.99.

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Found on EBay — J.W. Robinson’s

Robinsons_stockings_ebay These silk stockings from J.W. Robinson’s, still in the original box, have been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $10.49.
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Matt Weinstock — March 2, 1959


Next Stop: the Couch

Matt_weinstockd
This is to alert psychiatrists to keep their couches dusted off.

At
a party the other night a man was telling about a recurring dream. In
it he would go up to a tobacco counter and ask for a certain brand of
cigarette. At the mention the young lady behind the counter would turn
into an old crone and cackle menacingly, "Show me your tattoo!"

Unable to do so he would ask for another brand, at which she would pull a knife on him and snarl, "Prove you’re a thinking man!"

And so on until he settled for a candy bar.

* *

ONLY IN L.A. —
A certain all-night restaurant near MacWestlake Park is rendezvous for
people who have no particular place to go except home after the bars
close.

The other night a man came in and asked for a piece of coconut-cream pie.

1959_0302_death_penalty"Out!" commanded a stalwart gal named Trudie, who presides over the place.

"All I want is a piece of coconut-cream pie," he said plaintively.

"Out," she repeated. "You’re 86d!"

"But why?" he pleaded.

"Because," she said, "the whole idea of a grown man asking for coconut-cream pie at 2:30 a.m. is repulsive, that’s why!"

* *

INQUIRY
Tell me, dear beatniks,
Is it really a crime
To write plain ol’ verse
With both reason and rhyme?
–TERRI McDANIEL

* *


DISCLOSURE here that I can talk to squirrels is still reverberating fiercely.

A
lady named Mary Louise confides she has had some interesting
conversations lately with Buster, a possum which forages in her back
yard for her dachshund’s leftovers.

1959_0302_lonelyAnd North Young, the
Malibuite, was glad to read of my squirrel talk because now he doesn’t
feel so silly about telling of his linguistic rapport with Sid and
Smitty, two silverfish which adore his library shelf.

A couple
of months ago he found them having a ball on the A section of his
collegiate dictionary. They stopped chewing long enough to exchange
greetings with him, then proceeded down Page 46, wolfing great chunks
of "arcanum" and "archeology."

But when they got to the bottom
of the page he noticed they were spitting out syllables of the
next-to-last word. After that they disappeared and North concluded they
must have gone to the nearest Lepisma mental hospital.

Well, the other day they showed up again, completely cured, breakfasting normally on an old Maugham novel.

"Ever find out what caused your nervous breakdown?" North asked.

Sid and Smitty stopped chewing long enough to reply in unison, "Oh, sure, we were trying to eat ‘archaic’ and have it, too."

* *

1959_0302_abby
SPEAKING OF

dictionary backtalk, Jim Bassett came upon a fascinating standoff. An
"inverted mordent," he discovered on Page 1306 of the big book, is a
"pralltriller." And what is a pralltriller? An "inverted mordent."

It isn’t as bad as it sounds — it’s a musical term.

* *

AS
vice president of Chaos Unltd., I feel it is my duty to report that
while visiting a friend I picked up a book titled "A New Model of the
Universe," by P.D. Ouspensky
, and found a bookmark in a page with this
sentence: "Why is it that people do not understand that they are only
shadows, only silhouettes of themselves, and that the whole of life is
only a shadow, only a silhouette, of some other life?"

I don’t know, but let’s not nag about it.

* *

MISCELLANY — Stand
back, everyone, for the Whirley Whirler, being boomed to replace last
year’s Hula-Hoop madness. You twirl a plate on a stick and hold it
aloft . . . well, maybe you do.  

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — March 2, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, March 2, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

First-Hand Report From Bed of Pain

[Note: I’m always concerned when Paul Coates takes a sick day or writes about his health. He suffered a stroke in 1966, made a startling recovery, but died Nov. 16, 1968. He was 47–lrh].

Paul_coates
This
is an ultimatum to my doctor who last week, sentenced me to a five-day
stretch in Mt. Sinai hospital, "just for a checkup."

That’s a scientific term meaning there’s nothing wrong with you but they dare you to prove it.

"When a man gets to be your age," the doctor explained, "he should go into the hospital once a year."

"Pretty expensive for me to do every year," I said, in hopes he’d take it personally.

"It
won’t be too expensive," he replied, giving me a long, sad look which I
suppose meant that at my advanced age there weren’t too many years left
to worry about.

So, I packed my Pan American flight bag with a
toothbrush, razor, cologne and an adequate little men’s deodorant.
Then, for the better part of a week, a retinue of pretty nurses took my
pulse, my temperature and generous quantities of my blood. They fasted
me, then fed me a nutritious drink called barium which tastes like
plaster of Paris malted.

1959_0302_red_streakProbably there’s something to be said
for taking these yearly precautions. But the medical profession doesn’t
properly consider the psychological abuse it does to sensitive people
like me, when it hospitalizes us merely for a checkup.

They
put us in a bed, and we look like every other patient except that we’re
not sick. Therefore, we’re not entitled to any of the usual niceties of
illness.

Nobody sends us flowers, candies or assorted fruits.
And it would be fairly ridiculous to send one of those clever "get
well" cards to somebody who was well when they went in. We get
visitors, but they don’t ask how we feel. Instead, they tell us about
the time they were "in."

And so, we lie on a bed of pain borne of frustration at having no operation of our own to talk about.

After a few such visitors, I asked the doctor, in some desperation, how my tests were going.

1959_0302_mta"Just fine," he assured me.

"You found something," I said hopefully. "I got symptoms."

He shook his head. "Nothing," he assured me. "So far, you’re in great shape. That is, for a man your age."

About Bella’s Husband

There
was, however, one sweet old lady who gave me some hope that everything
wasn’t as uncomplicated as it seemed. We met while taking out
constitutionals on the fifth floor of the hospital.

She looked at me closely and pointed an accusing finger. "You’re that one from television. Edward R . . ."

"Coates," I finished for her.

"Sure," she said. "I knew it right away. So listen, I’m here for gallbladder. You?"

"Just a checkup," I admitted meekly.

"A
checkup." She clucked sympathetically. "My cousin Bella’s husband,
Harry?" she said in a tone that clearly implied I must know her cousin
Bella’s husband, Harry.

1959_0302_bestsellers"They took him for a checkup. Everything was fine. And two weeks later?"

"What?" I demanded.

Bella’s cousin snapped her fingers. "Pfft!" she said.

"Dead?" I asked.

She shrugged, "What else?" she replied.

That was some help. But, after all, I can hardly go around using somebody else’s
case history. It’s not the same thing. Consequently, I’d like to go on
record with my physician right now. Next year, if he doesn’t come up
with a symptom or two, I’ll damn well find someone who will. 


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In the Theaters — March 2, 1911




1911_0302_theater


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

Trouble Was His Business — Raymond Chandler




Black_mask_chandler


Judith Freeman, author of "The Long Embrace," is giving a four-part continuing education course on Raymond Chandler. The sessions will be held on Tuesday nights, March 31, April 7, April 14 and April 21, at USC University Park Campus.

Part 1 will examine Chandler’s life; his first novel, "The Big Sleep" and the subsequent film starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall.

Part 2 will look at "Farewell, My Lovely" and the film version, "Murder, My Sweet" with Dick Powell. (I happen to prefer the Robert Mitchum version, but that’s just me. Among other things, it has a terrific score by David Shire). 

Part 3 will focus on "The Little Sister" and the script for "Double Indemnity," heavily revised from the James M. Cain novel.

The final part is an evening field trip to Chandler’s haunts and places featured in his novels.   

The course is $250. Online registration is here.


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Can You Pass the Dodgers’ Quiz? March 2, 1969

1969_0302_dodgers

The Dodgers tested The Times’ new man in Vero Beach.

John Wiebusch answered 110 true-false questions about baseball game situations that the Dodgers gave all rookies. Al Campanis, then the Dodgers vice president in charge of player personnel, graded Wiebusch’s exam.

Here are two examples:

The runner on first should get a long lead from first base when a hit-and-run sign is given. True or false?

The curve ball is harder to bunt than the fastball. True or false?

Wiebusch, who covered the Angels for The Times and before coming to the paper covered the Minnesota Twins, said he answered 13 questions incorrectly. "You did about as well as we could expect anyone from the American League to do," Campanis said.

How did you do on our two-question quiz? Both answers are false.

–Keith Thursby

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Grim Sleeper Revisited — January 1987




Barbara_ware_lapd

Barbara Ware, killed at the age of 23, whose body was found Jan. 10, 1987.

I thought it would be interesting to examine the 1987 LAPD tape of the call reporting the death of Barbara Ware, one of 11 homicides attributed to the "Grim Sleeper."

The recording is fairly noisy, so I cleaned it up a bit. The first thing I noticed is that there are a variety of background noises. There’s Morse code, which I assume was picked up by the dispatcher’s microphone/headset from the radios at LAPD communications. There’s also what appears to be the sound of accelerating vehicles, which makes me think the caller was at an outdoor phone. At the very beginning of the recording, there’s a slight bit of what sounds like background music, but it’s too brief for me to identify.

One thing that I particularly noted was the way the caller said "phone." I had to play the recording several times to figure it out. It’s almost as if he were talking like Forrest Gump when he said "fa-ohne."

Then I got to wondering about the speed of the tape as reflected by the recurring "beeps" every 10 seconds. It turns out that they are about 11.3 seconds apart. I tried speeding up the recording, assuming that the tape had stretched slightly but the result was too fast and showed the error of my reasoning. Then I stretched out the recording but maintained the same pitch, which makes it easier to understand.

Here are the two enhanced versions, and my transcription. I wonder why the LAPD didn’t at least bump up the volume before it released this recording, but maybe that’s just me.

Initial speed, as released by the LAPD.

Stretched for better comprehension.


Barbara_ware_alley

Photograph by Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times

The alley where Barbara Ware’s body was found. Notice how narrow it appears.


View Larger Map

Here’s my transcription:


Barbara_ware_van01

1987 LAPD photo

Blue and white Dodge van, possibly a 1977, license plate 1PZP746.

Barbara_ware_van_plate

Detail of the plate.

Here’s what I find to be the most interesting about this call.

Our fellow contacts the LAPD at 12:19 a.m., Jan. 10, 1987. He reports seeing a man throw a body out of a vehicle. It’s a little before midnight in an alley that is narrow and presumably dark. But he can tell us the make and color of the van. He can tell us that the driver threw a gas tank on top of her. He can tell us the plate number–letter perfect–even though the rear plate is partially blocked by this ladder. He seemingly has fabulous eyesight. Maybe X-ray vision. And yet he can’t describe the driver. Isn’t that amazing? 

You’re thinking maybe he saw the front plate. Of course, it’s possible, but that means he would have to be looking into the glare of the headlights, where the driver could have seen him. Do you think a driver who’s dumping a body is going to let a witness get away? And who would be hanging out in this alley in this part of L.A. about midnight?

Barbara_ware_van02

Nice parking job. Over the concrete bumper and into the wall. I wonder if the driver was a little rattled.

Barbara_ware_van_wall

Think anybody heard that?


… Central

Dispatcher: [Unintelligible] city police EIGHT THREE ONE. (music in background)

Caller: Yes. I’d like to report uh, uh murder or a dead body or something.

Dispatcher: Where at?

Caller: The address is 1346 East 56th Street … in the alley … and
the guy that dropped her off was driving a white and blue Dodge van ONE
PEE ZEE PEE SEVEN FOUR SIX [There’s Morse code in the background, probably
picked up by dispatcher’s microphone/headset].

Dispatcher: OK are you saying TEE like in Tom?

Caller: PEE like in puppy.

Dispatcher: PEE what?

Caller: ONE PEE ZEE

Dispatcher: Like in zebra?

Caller: Uh-huh. PEE

Dispatcher: Like in Tom? (Background noise, possibly a siren or a vehicle accelerating).

Caller: No, PEE … like in pup.

Dispatcher: Two PEEs…

Caller: Uh-hu

Dispatcher: …like in pup.

Caller: Right.

Dispatcher: Uh-huh.

Caller: SEVEN FOUR SIX (Morse code in background, probably picked up by dispatcher’s microphone/headset).

Dispatcher: What color van was it?

Caller: Blue and white. (More background noise, possibly of passing vehicles).

Dispatcher: Did you get a look at him?

Caller: Un-unh I didn’t see him.

Dispatcher: How long ago did this happen?

Caller: It happened ’bout … ’bout 30 minutes ago ’cause I’m down the
street at the phone … so it happened about 30 minutes ago. And, uh.
You know, he like … he threw her out … the only thing that’s
hanging out of ‘dis … like he threw a gas tank on top of her and, uh
… and, uh only thing you can see out is her feet.

Dispatcher: OK, what’s your name?

Caller: Huh?

Dispatcher: What’s your name?

Caller: Oh, I’m stayin’ (starts to laugh) anonymous. I know too many people. OK den bye-bye.

Dispatcher: All right. (hangs up).

LAPD blog entry on the "Grim Sleeper" call.



View Larger Map


Notice that although the LAPD revealed the location of the body (B. 1346
E. 56th) and the church that owned the van (A. 6075 S. Normandie) there’s
nothing about where the call was made.


Posted in Crime and Courts, Grim Sleeper, Homicide, LAPD | 10 Comments

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Bullocks_wilshire_tie_ebay This tie from Bullock’s Wilshire has been listed on EBay at Buy It Now for $7.95.
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In the Theaters — March 1, 1909

1909_0301_theaters

I thought it would be fun to spend a month going through The Times’ movie ads, starting with 1909 (check the Orpheum listing) and working forward. Hope you enjoy it as much as I do.

Posted in Music, Stage | 2 Comments

Trouble Was His Business — Raymond Chandler

Black_mask_chandler
On March 25 at 7:30 p.m. at USC’s University Club, Judith Freeman, author of "The Long Embrace,"  will moderate a panel discussion of Raymond Chandler’s legacy. The panel will feature Times film critic Kenneth Turan, author Denise Hamilton and Leo Braudy, USC Leo S. Bing Chair in English and American Literature. The event is free. RSVP here.
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Nuestro Pueblo — March 1, 1939

1939_0301_nuestro

Above, a quirky sentinel welcomes visitors to Sylmar. Below, a 1949
feature on the Olive Festival.

1949_0929_sylmar_olives_3   

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Voices — Jerry Cronin

Ned_cronin

Ned Cronin, left, at the Daily News. Note the headset with his candlestick phone and the wire service ticker.

Jerry Cronin, who has shared other recollections about his father, sportswriter Ned Cronin, writes:

I was cleaning out my basement and came across the box that contained the things that my dad had in his office at our house.


1976_1228_hebert
Bob Hebert’s tips for betting
at the track, 1976.

1976_1228_hebert_02


As newspapers are struggling to survive because we can now bypass traditional media and acquire information ourselves on the Internet, it is interesting to observe the process of news dissemination years ago.

I remember going with my dad to his office and hearing the constant chattering of the teletype machine delivering news from a news wire service. The writers would tear off the paper from the machine and take it to their desks and compose their stories. The photographs on my father’s desk were taken with old Speed Graphic cameras with removable plates in the back with the negative. Compare this with the digital cameras we have now.

It was the Daily News and I am 99% certain that the other man is Bob Hebert, who was the Daily News’ horse racing expert. Notice the picture of the horse on my dad’s desk. Bob went on to the L.A. Times with my dad after the Daily News folded. Don’t ask me how I remembered that because I usually can’t remember where I put my car keys.

In 1954, Aileen Eaton organized a testimonial dinner in honor of my father working 25 years at the Daily News. As I was going through a box on Sunday, I found something that is incredible. They didn’t use audiotape in those days, so the event was recorded in some manner and then the audio was placed on records with the label of a local radio station. I have to find an old record player to hear it. I imagine it was pretty raunchy because it was like a Friar’s Club Roast.

Keep up the great work of preserving journalistic history in Los Angeles.

Jerry

Posted in @news, books, Sports | 2 Comments

Voices — Paul Harvey, 1918 – 2009




1978_1008_paul_harvey
"I never think that I’m talking to millions of people. As far as I’m
concerned, I’m talking to my wife’s sister in St. Louis because I feel
her concerns are the concerns of so many Americans."

–Paul Harvey


 

Posted in broadcasting, Obituaries | 7 Comments

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Bullocks_collegienne_ebay

This dress from the Collegienne department at Bullock’s Wilshire has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $19.
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Matt Weinstock — February 28, 1959




Fix your toaster, mister?

Matt_weinstockd_5
One
Saturday morning about four years ago a man came into the Mayflower
Hotel on Grand Avenue to repair a toaster. In the ensuing confusion
involving the chef, the engineer and the assistant manager, the man
walked off with an extremelyhockable four-slice machine, which didn’t need repair and was worth about $200. 

It was to be returned Monday but he didn’t say which Monday, one of which occurs each week following Sunday, and it never was.

The other night the same fellow came in again and told the engineer he had come to overhaul the toaster.

This
time the same assistant manager, Robert M. Stewart, happened to
overhear him. He remembered the previous incident and affixed the
fellow with a steely eye. The repair man caught his glance, mumbled
something about a mistake in the address and took off through the lobby
like a startled gazelle.

So beware, hotel and restaurant people, the toaster repair man is up to his old tricks again.

* *

A MAN I KNOW was
appalled last Monday at Santa Anita to see hundreds of grim-faced
persons make a break for the exits immediately after the sixth race.
Seemingly they had no regard for the almost sacred obligation to see
the great Round Table run in the seventh, a widely heralded and
historic spectacle provided at great pains by the management. Many of
those hurrying out one exit didn’t even glance at the super horse being
saddled a few yards away.

It left this man with the abhorrent
thought that people don’t go to the race track to see a great horse,
only to try to win money. For shame.

*  *

IT’S A FACT
Stop and think and force a smile.
Spice your life with laughter,
This is but a little while-
The rest is all hereafter.
–G.C. McHOSE

* *

ON A RECENT Sunday Bud Rainey, a city fireman, took his daughter, 10, to San Gabriel Canyon to see the snow.

As
he entered the snow area their car was severely snowballed by
irresponsible youths. This continued all day. On the way home when a
souped-up car passed him and the young men in it threw snowballs in his
open side window, almost causing him to lose control of the car, he
decided he’d had it.

He overtook them, pulled the car to the side, and when one snowballer stuck his head out the window, punched him in the nose. Then he calmly walked back to his car and drove off.

The
next day Bud’s brother, an identical twin who attends a college here,
was walking on the campus when a husky six-footer tapped him on the
shoulder and said, "Hey, buddy, were you up in San Gabriel Canyon
yesterday?" He truthfully said no but he noticed that in addition to a
puzzled expression the fellow had a bruised nose.

* *

A YOUNG bank
teller named Kenneth Brown, who took Malvin Wald’s screenwriting course
at SC eight years ago, subsequently became a producer of technical
films.

Last year Hughes Aircraft assigned him a difficult job — dramatizing the employment of the handicapped.

The budget didn’t provide for an outside writer so he asked his former prof for guidance.

When Bob Cummings saw the film he was so moved he volunteered to narrate it.

The film, "Employees Only," has just been nominated for an Academy award in the short documentary classification.

* *

FOOTNOTES — The
Kingston Trio’s new record, "Tijuana Jail," recounting the plight of
three American youths arrested in a gambling raid below the border, has
this sequence, "So here we’ll stay ’cause we can’t pay, just send our
mail to the Tijuana jail." Familiar? . . . Dr. Robert H.Alway’s talk at
the Stanford conference tomorrow at the Ambassador has the succinct
title, "Ills, Pills and Bills." He’s dean of the medical school . . .
Jack Wagner ofKBIQ-FM is amused at the disc jockeys taking bows for "introducing" stereotape shows. He did it more than a year ago. 

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — February 28, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, February 28, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

"No Place to Pull a Job"

Paul_coates
Half a year ago, I first met Albert Ebert.

He was a short and solid man whose 50-odd years had removed his hair, but none of his backbone.

By trade, Ebert was a storekeeper. Some 30 years ago, in his native South Germany, he had worked as a clerk.

But now, in the states, he had a store of his own. A liquor store. With a "reputation" among the small-time crooks in our town.

It was, according to the grapevine, no place to try and pull a job.

When I talked with Ebert six months ago, I asked him how long it had been since anyone had faced him with a gun.


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1969_0830_ebert02

Aug. 28, 1969–Albert Ebert’s
luck runs out.


Eight
years, he told me. But he added, the first few years he was in business
in L.A., robbers had gone into his store on five occasions and
attempted to take his money.

None walked out with so much as a penny.

One, Ebert killed. Three others, he wounded.

"When you shoot at a man, do you shoot to kill him?" I asked him.

"I do," he said. "Absolutely."

There was a trace of a scowl on his face as he continued:

"Mr. Coates, I don’t have an easy life. I work hard. I get up early. I work late. I earn my money.

Request Not Enough

"I am not going to hand it over to a dirty lazy rat just because he says he wants it."

No
policeman would recommend that a store owner or clerk risk his life in
defense of a few dollars, I pointed this out to Ebert.

"That’s why we have police departments," I told him.

"If
a man comes into my store with a gun, he’s looking for trouble," he
answered. "With me, it’s the only way. If you give in like a meek
sheep, the crooks will run the town."

"How do you feel about killing a man?"

"It is not pleasant."

"Then, to you, it’s a matter of kill or be killed?"

"You’ve got to be smarter than they are."

"But usually they have the advantage of having the draw on you."

Brave Look Scares Them

"That’s right. But if you stand up to them and look them in the eye, they get scared."

"Always, Mr. Ebert?" I asked.

"They are cowards."

"Has it ever occurred to you that some day you might be killed?"

"Mr. Coates, my time comes. Your time comes. When it comes, we go."

These
are some of the notes I have from my old conversation with Albert
Ebert. In our society, he was a strange kind of man. He worked hard for
every dollar he earned. An he was willing to defend each cent of every
dollar with his life.

A few days ago, the headlines told of a new attempt, by three gunmen, to rob the till of Ebert’s cash register of $75.

Ebert was asleep when they entered the store. But his son-in-law was behind the counter.

Only One of Three Escapes

When
the police arrived, two of the trio of would-be armed robbers were
sprawled on the floor, one dead, another critically injured.

The pair weren’t amateurs. They were pros — dangerous, seasoned criminals.

I talked to Ebert about it the following day.

"Eberhardt — that’s my son-in-law — and I have talked about how to handle those kind of men several times," he told me.

"Eberhardt was a brave boy," he added. "He was a smart boy. I’m proud of him."

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