Voices — Christine Collins, August 18, 1932


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Posted in #courts, Changeling, Film, Hollywood, LAPD | 2 Comments

2 Die in Midair Plane Crash; Lombardi at USC? February 2, 1959

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Wreckage landed in the 7900 block of East 8th Street, Buena Park.
 

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At left, Officer J.F. Harkan shoots Edwin Kelly, 17, during a stakeout at the RKO Hill Street theater at 8th and Hill.

Above, Judy Holliday will appear in "Bells Are Ringing" at the Philharmonic Auditorium … Bob Hope makes an unscripted appearance in Ken Murray’s "Blackouts."

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Delbert Wong becomes the first Chinese American judge in the U.S. and American Airlines promotes its nonstop jet service to New York.

1959_0202_sportsDid USC really have a chance to hire Vince Lombardi before he became coach of the Green Bay Packers?

Maybe, according to Braven Dyer of The Times. In a sports journalism version of the old-boys’ network, Dyer said he got a "long-distance call" from the sports editor of Look magazine asking that he put in a plug for Lombardi. Dryer said the Look editor was an old Fordham booster. That’s where Lombardi played in college.

Anyway, Dyer said he tried but "SC went elsewhere. I don’t remember the year."

Did Dryer and The Times really have the juice to make that happen or did he just need a lead for his column? Would Lombardi have even considered a West Coast job? Would a college president really listen to the opinion of a sports columnist? And if Dyer was advising USC, who was talking to UCLA?

— Keith Thursby

[Keith: Am I imagining things? The Globetrotters vs. the Rams? Jerry Lewis with the Dodgers? –l rh] 

Posted in Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, LAPD, Sports, Stage, Transportation | 1 Comment

Found on EBay — The Insomniac

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A poster from the Insomniac, the Hermosa Beach coffee house, has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $49.99.

At left, Jack Smith visits the Insomniac, May 1, 1963.

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Voices — Christine Collins, August 17, 1932




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Posted in #courts, Changeling, Film, Hollywood, LAPD | 4 Comments

Aragon Suspected of Fixing Fight, February 1, 1959




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Los Angeles Times file photo

Art Aragon in training, Oct. 14, 1949.

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Art Aragon, the Golden Boy of Los Angeles boxing in the ’40s and
’50s, was in trouble again after apparently winning a fight too easily.

The referee of Aragon’s fight against Charley Sawyer at Hollywood
Legion Stadium recommended that the purses for both fighters be held up
pending an investigation. Aragon won on a fourth-round knockout.

"I warned Sawyer after the first round, ‘I want an honest effort,’"
referee Tommy Hart told The Times’ John De La Vega. "No one can hit you
on the shoulder and knock you out."

Hart said there was "possible collusion."

De La Vega said Sawyer seemed to fight harder in the later rounds,
"actually fighting back when stung by some pretty solid Aragon hooks.
While it looked good at the time, the point was that Sawyer had been
forced to put out."

Aragon was no stranger to controversy. This incident didn’t even
rate a mention in his 2008 obituary by The Times’ Lance Pugmire. Here’s
one paragraph summing up some of his other boxing troubles:

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"Tommy Campbell testified he "threw" a 1950 knockout loss to Aragon.
Boxing officials claimed [Jimmy] Carter sandbagged his first fight
against Aragon on a Mafia figure’s orders, and the California Athletic
Commission investigated judges who awarded Aragon a disputed decision
over Chuck Davey in 1954. Aragon was later convicted of offering
opponent Dick Goldstein $500 to fix a 1956 fight, but the verdict was
overturned on appeal."

By the end of the fight against Sawyer the crowd was booing loudly, not an unusual emotion at Aragon’s fights.

"You ever get booed by 10,000 people? It’s exciting," Aragon told
The Times’ Earl Gustkey. "I liked it even better when I beat … some
guy the crowd loved and then I’d look out at ’em, give ’em a big smile
and the boos would be even louder. I loved that."

The Times reported in April that Aragon’s manager had asked the
state Athletic Commission to return $2,000 that had been withheld. "No
evidence was produced that Aragon did anything less than his best
against the aging Sawyer," The Times reported. It’s unclear if that was
the commission’s view or someone not quoted directly.

–Keith Thursby



Posted in Sports | Comments Off on Aragon Suspected of Fixing Fight, February 1, 1959

Imagining the Future, 1959




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The home of the future will have a "television recorder" and a flat-screen TV! And the kids will have microfilm books that can be projected on the ceiling… In all, pretty accurate, but I’m still waiting for "Kukla, Frank and Ollie" in 3-D.

Posted in broadcasting, Science, Television | 2 Comments

Burbank Installs Time Capsule; Wilt Chamberlain Debuts in L.A., February 1, 1959


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The people living in 1959 had noble expectations for Burbank: Atomic
power! Monorails! I wonder if anyone plans to actually pop it open this
week.

This is the bridge that spans the Golden State Freeway, the railroad tracks and the river channel.

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Detroit promises to address two major complaints about cars: Poor workmanship and fuel economy.
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Yes, The Times once led the nation
in newspaper advertising.

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Wilt Chamberlain scored 40 points in what The Times called his
Southland debut, leading his team to an 85-74 victory at the Pan
Pacific Auditorium.

Wilt’s teammates spent most of the night clowning around.

The Harlem Globetrotters have been about basketball and comedy for a
long time, so Chamberlain must have been an unlikely part of the cast.

"It’s difficult to say how well the great Chamberlain will fare in
the NBA off his Trotter showing," Mal Florence wrote in The Times. "But
one thing for sure, the big fella is agile and knows what to do under
the basket."

Here’s a quick look at Wilt with the Trotters.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Freeways, Front Pages, San Fernando Valley, Sports, Transportation | 1 Comment

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

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Check out this fabric. Definitely of an era. From the Wynshire department at Bullock’s Wilshire, listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $6.99.

Posted in Fashion | 1 Comment

January 31, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Dash Dashes Dreams

Matt WeinstockAmong those who went along on American Airlines’ first jet flight to New York a few days ago was this paper’s Bill Thomas. His colleagues felt the event should be commemorated, and as the hour for departure neared they gathered solemnly around the city desk and each contributed 25 cents for a $25,000 insurance policy on his life.

It is hardly necessary to mention that newspapermen are lacking somehow in reverence for the things most people hold dear. Doubtless this comes from seeing
civilization at its worst.

“As the plane goes down,” one said, “it should be comforting for you to know you are doing a nice thing for your friends.” Continue reading

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January 31, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Junks ‘Junk’; Grads Applaud

Paul Coates, in coat and tieIt’s commencement week, but the proudest graduate in Southern California today isn’t from any institution of learning.

He went through his ceremony in a shabby Ocean Park store-front dwelling crowded with friends whose combined arrest records could overflow the filing cabinets of any middle-sized town in the country.

Most of the guests, like the graduate, were former gutter dope addicts.

A couple of months ago I wrote about their experiment in “communal kicking” of the habit.

The group calls itself Synanon. Continue reading

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Voices — Christine Collins, August 17, 1932




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Posted in #courts, Changeling, Film, Hollywood, LAPD | 3 Comments

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Company Town

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You may recall my recent post about lunch with Harry Medved and the continuing quest to determine the name and date of the first film shot entirely in Los Angeles.

Val Almendarez, collections archivist at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, writes:

The first fiction film made in Los Angeles
(as travelogues and documentaries had been filmed here earlier) was probably THE
HEART OF A RACE TOUT, which was released July 29, 1909. 

William Selig later
named this film as the first one shot here.  It is not known when the film was
shot, but as the company arrived in Los Angeles on March 21, 1909, it is
probable it was made either at the end of March or the first week of April.

According to a Selig scholar, IN THE SULTAN’S POWER was the fourth film made by
the Selig Company in Los Angeles.

As to your second question, Sing Lee’s
laundry was on Olive between 7th and 8th Streets.

We do have some of Bosworth’s papers here at the library, but did not receive
the journal pictured in your blog.

We also got his scrapbooks, but he only has a
few pages about his time at Selig, and nothing about IN THE SULTAN’S POWER.

Below, a long list of Los Angeles firsts by E.V. Durling, including "The Heart of a Race
Track Tout."
I’m not sure what a "roundhouse" haircut is–but I don’t think I want one.
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Posted in Downtown, Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on Company Town

Found on EBay — Haggarty’s

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A 1961 catalog for Haggarty’s has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $1.99.

Haggarty’s, a prestigious chain of women’s clothing stores that began in 1917, closed in 1970 with $4.4 million in debt after losing money for years, The Times said.

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Matt Weinstock — January 30, 1959




Life Can Be Lovely

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Everywhere a person turns, it seems, another Tishman
building is springing up. It’s a magic name in the construction
industry. And the other day there was 56-year-old, Harvard-educated,
serene-looking Norman Tishman himself, proudly showing people around the latest Tishman triumph, the $13 million Wilshire Terrace, perhaps the most luxurious apartment structure ever built. 

Located
on Wilshire Boulevard at Beverly Glen, the highest point on the
fabulous boulevard, the 14-story edifice is distinguished by its
staggering design and by large salmon-colored Italian glass plant
boxes, one for each suite.

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There are 112 apartments and five
penthouses. They are intended for wealthy people; for instance, those
whose children have grown up and gone off, and who wish the privacy and
elegance of a home without the headaches of running one. You now,
mowing the lawn and taking out the garbage and trapping gophers and all
those little irritations.

IT IS ALMOST superfluous to
mention that there is a maid service, a beauty shop, a restaurant, a
70-foot pool and an underground garage for 300 cars — two and a half
cars per apartment.

The Wilshire Terrance is a co-operative
apartment building which means tenants don’t rent, they buy. The
smallest apartment, four rooms and two baths, goes for from $24,000 to
$36,000. The largest, eight rooms and three baths, $71,000 to $81,000.
Penthouses are up to $125,000.

There also are maintenance charges, $2,640 to $13,750.

However, tenants can claim substantial tax deductions, $1,668 to $8,687.

Chatting with Edgardo Contini of Victor Gruen
Associates, who designed the place, I brought up a question that has
always fascinated me: "Where in the world do all the people who can
afford such luxury get all that money?"

He sighed and he said
he didn’t know, but they do. And he pointed out there are scores of
$150,000 homes nearby, many even more expensive, whose owners will be
attracted to the Wilshire Terrance.

Very classy joint.

* *

A PRESS RELEASE
from the National Association of Suggestion Systems in Chicago states a
personnel officer in Sacramento recently developed a novel idea to
attract employee attention. As a worker approached a Genie suggestion
box, an electric eye sets in motion. To quote: "A music box plays and
moving, printed tapes, give a suggestion pep talk. At the bottom of the
box, a mechanism provides a free shoe shine."

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Sometimes a person can’t help wondering whither electronics leadeth.

* *

TWO MEN got
into a political argument and soon were shouting violently at each
other. A friend broke it up, but a lady who’d been listening
disapprovingly was overheard by Rosetta Case Bent in this charming malaprop: "You wait! In a minute they’ll go through the whole rigamaroar again!" 

* *

A FISHERMAN asked Tony Costa, who tends the boat rentals at Paradise Cove, where the fish were hitting.

"It
is very good at the Depot," Tony replied. Or at least that’s what the
fisherman’s baffled expression indicated he thought Tony said. Tony, of
course, was referring to the Deep Hole, a spot between the Cove and Zuma Beach, where the big ones lurk. 

* *

MISCELLANY-
It was old home week for customers and clerks again yesterday when
supermarkets reopened. One lady asked a checker what she’d done all the
time. "Just sat there on my hands," was the reply . . . Wonder if it’s
true that engineers at a plant here have developed a laboratory model
which cancels the force of gravity? Could be the biggest thing since
splitting the atom . . . A waitress in the Sparkletts plant commissary
has an effective formula for dispersing girl employees who block her
path. Instead of the usual warning, "Hot stuff! Coming through!" she
says, "Watch your nylons!" They scatter like frightened birds.

Posted in Architecture, Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — January 30, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, January 30, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Crackdown Hits Death Ballads

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Stop that dancing up there. And sit down a minute. I want to talk to you.

I suppose you know that most of this town’s top disc jockeys have —
either by choice or station edict — banned a new release called "The
Ballad of Barbara Graham.
"

If you didn’t know, I’m telling you now. The record’s subject matter, they say, is too hot. Too controversial.

It’s such a sizzling "political" issue that in the space of a week, KFWB has jerked it off the air, KDAY has gone out of its way to inform listeners that the record is banned, and KMPC program director Bob Forward has warned his disc jockey staff by memo:

"There are several new recordings on the market which appear to be out-and-out propaganda against capital punishment.

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"The decision as to whether to be for or against capital punishment is
one that will be made by station management and will be plainly stated
in an editorial campaign.

"I am referring specifically to ‘The Ballad of Barbara Graham’ and ‘The
Last Mile.’ Please do not play these or any other similar records
without first discussing it with me personally."

Now, hold on a minute, boys. I’ve heard this ballad about Barbara
Graham. But the only controversy I can work up with myself is whether
it’s music.

But that’s something I could question about a lot of the stuff passed off as "hit" material.

The Graham piece- if you’ll excuse my close scrutiny- has a melody
which sounds suspiciously like the tune I used to sing "Sweet Rosy O’Grady" to, years ago.

I quote, in B-flat:

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"Poor Bar-bar-a Gra-ham was wild and couldn’t be tied.

"But could she com-mit mur-der? And should she real-ly have died!"

That’s about as controversial as the lyrics get. And the only question
they seem to bring up, somewhat belatedly, is whether Mrs. Graham was
guilty.

And now, it’s my turn to raise an issue.

Who let Tom Dooley in? According to his defense attorneys, the Kingston
Trio, the poor boy is going to be strung up tomorrow at dawn for a
crime of passion. Any decent criminal attorney in the land could almost
guarantee to get him off on second-degree murder, at the worst.

It’s clearly and issue involving capital punishment.

Vocalist Avoids Arguments

Out of idle curiosity, I telephoned the vocalist and co-writer of
the Barbara Graham ballad last night to find out what kind of a fanatic
this town’s disc jockeys were barring from the turntables.

The young man’s name was Val Norman, and he admitted that the idea for the song came to him after he’d seen the movie.

"It had commercial possibilities," he told me.

"Do you have any views on capital punishment?" I asked.

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He
hesitated, then answered, "Well, I have some personal opinions. But I’d
rather not get involved. Religion, subjects like that- I just don’t get
into arguments."

Still, I’m bothered. Not so much for Mr. Norman.

But because of what looks like the beginning of a trend.

It
just so happens that Chuy Reyes and I have been collaborating in our
spare time on a jumpy little tune called "The Cahan Decision Cha-Cha."

But I guess we better forget the whole thing. Some disc jockey is bound to call it too controversial.  

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul Coates — Confidential File, January 30, 1959

Voices — Christine Collins, August 16, 1932

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Posted in #courts, Changeling, Film, Hollywood, LAPD | 5 Comments

Movie Star Mystery Photo

January 26, 2009, Cecil B. De Mille and Mary PickfordUpdate: This is a Los Angeles Times photo of Mary Pickford and Cecil B. De Mille after he received an Oscar and an Irving Thalberg Award at the 1953 Academy Awards.


Update: Many Daily Mirror readers have correctly identified the people in the photo (or at least one of them). Congratulations! If I haven’t posted your answer, you’re right. (I’m delaying the correct answers to give other people a chance). Check back tomorrow for more pictures! Continue reading

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | 114 Comments

Man Kills Dentist Over Picture, 1936

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I said in a previous post that the fate of Peter Voiss' burros was unrecorded. Unrecorded in The Times, that is. Regular Daily Mirror reader Dick Morris sent along some information about Voiss and his beloved animals, Trixie, Jimmie and another whose name is illegible in an old story from the Hayward (Calif.) Review.

In his later years, Voiss worried about what would become of his burros, and he prepared a will in which he bequeathed the burros to a beneficiary. In fact, any time someone lent him money, he left them a will in which he bequeathed them the burros.

"He scattered 'wills' along the coast from Los Angeles to Seattle like Johnny Appleseed," the Hayward paper said.

Of course, this came to light only when he was on his deathbed and there were competing claims for the animals.   

According to census records, Voiss was born in Germany about 1867. He immigrated to the U.S. in 1886. He apparently was a brewer before becoming a gold miner.

Thanks to Dick Morris for the info!

Posted in #courts, Animals, Homicide | Comments Off on Man Kills Dentist Over Picture, 1936

Marilyn Monroe Mystery

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Until I came across the news stories about him threatening his wife with a butcher knife, I’d never heard of Thomas T. Chamales. I picked up a copy of "Never So Few" because The Times’ Robert Kirsch called it "Easily one of the best novels to come out of World War II." I also got a copy of "Go Naked in the World," at left. Check out the acknowledgment, above. Marilyn Monroe and Tom Chamales? That’s a new one on me. Or maybe it was just wishful thinking…. 

Posted in books, Film, Hollywood | 2 Comments