Found on EBay — Robinson’s

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Robinsons_jacket_label_ebay

A jacket from J.W. Robinson’s dated 1914 has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $4.99

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Paul Coates — Confidential File, January 22, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Another Claimant to ‘Brave’ Oscar

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There was new confusion today in the "Who Wrote ‘The Brave One?’ " Oscar derby.

Now the window of Juan Duval, a Spanish-born writer-dancer-actor, claims the story idea for the Academy Award-winning picture was his.

She has a $300,000 suit pending against the King Brothers, producers of
the film claiming "The Brave One" was stolen from a story her husband
wrote.

Only last week blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo "confessed" to
the press he was the mysterious "Robert Rich," who two years ago failed
to claim the Academy Award for Hollywood’s best original movie story of
1956.

Trumbo, jailed for contempt of Congress in 1950 for refusing to answer questions of the Un-American Activities Committee, says he’s ready now to accept the Oscar if the Academy will give it to him.

Disputes Claim

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Trumbo discounts Mrs. Duval’s claim. He told me he wrote both the screenplay and the story on which it was based.

The widowed Mrs. Carmen Duval, a shy, soft-spoken Los Angeles secretary, has an impressive portfolio of documented evidence.

Controversy
as to who wrote the motion picture has been brewing in Hollywood since
the Academy’s banquet of 1957, when no one would claim to be the
"Robert Rich" credited with authoring Herman and Frank King’s
much-honored production.

A nephew of the King brothers by the
name of Robert Rich denied that the inspiration was his, but at the
time, Frank King assured Academy officials that the mystery was only a
temporary one.

Now, two years later, Mrs. Duval has appeared with two scripts written by her husband which she claims were the basis for "The Brave One."

Both were registered in 1952 — the first, "Corrida de Toros," with the Radio Writers Guild; the second, "Gypsy Shadows," with the Screen Writers Guild.

Similarities in Plot

Each
had remarkable similarities in plot to the award-winning motion
picture, which dealt with the love of a Mexican boy for a fighting
bull.

Mrs. Duval charged that her husband’s "Corrida de Toros"
script was submitted to the Kings in 1952 through an acquaintance,
Eugene Gould, who was a stockholder in the brothers’ enterprise.

"That’s true," Gould told me by phone yesterday. "I met Mr. Duval through a friend of mine and I read his script. I liked it and volunteered to submit it to Mr. King."

Didn’t Like It

He
added that when he picked up the script a week later, Maurice King said
that he personally had read it and that he did not care for the story.

"Some
time later," Gould continued, "I ran into Frank King and asked what
their next production would be. He said, ‘The Boy and The Bull,’ and
started to tell me the story.

"I stopped him after he related
part of it and said, ‘That sounds like the story I gave Morry.’ He said
to me, ‘What are you talking about?’ Then he turned around and walked
away."

I asked Gould if he was still connected with King Productions.

"I have a few thousand shares in the company," he answered.

He paused, then added: "But if ‘The Brave One’ was from Juan Duval’s original story, I see no reason why I should hide anything to keep him from getting credit."


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10 Feared Drowned in River; Ballplayer Hopes for Comeback, January 22, 1969

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1969_0122_meyers Here’s a weird story about a baseball player I never heard of.

Lee Meyers was making a comeback, hoping to get a job with the first-year Kansas City Royals. This was news, apparently, because Meyers was a local kid who was potentially rich and previously married to actress Mamie Van Doren. She was no stranger to seeing her name in the paper associated with an athlete, such as former Angel Bo Belinsky.

Meyers and Van Doren were married in 1966 and divorced by 1969. By then, Meyers had quit the Cubs and the Giants. As for the money, he told writers he would inherit $1 million on his 21st birthday and another $1 million when he turned 30.

John Weibusch’s story in The Times let Meyers talk and talk and he was a pretty good talker. Here’s a favorite quote: "Listen, I’ve just been misunderstood in the past. I got a lot of bad publicity. Well some of it was good–but most of it was bad. You wanna hear my life story?"

I tried to find a later reference to Meyers in 1969 editions of The Times and came up with only one story. He was mentioned in a feature on Boston’s Tony Conigliaro, because Conigliaro was then dating Van Doren.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Front Pages, Hollywood, Sports | 1 Comment

Musial, Campanella named to Hall of Fame, January 22, 1969

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1969_0122_campanella Roy Campanella, whose Dodger career was cut short by a car accident before the team moved to Los Angeles, was elected to baseball’s Hall of Fame.

"I never had any idea I’d even play in the majors, much less make the Hall of Fame," said Campanella, the National League’s most valuable player in three of his 10 seasons in Brooklyn. "It shows we’re living in the right country."

The wire story published in The Times noted Campanella’s remarkable career path. He started as a 15-year-old playing in the Negro Leagues for $15 a week, then became a star with the Baltimore Elite Giants. He signed with the Dodgers in 1946 and reached the majors in 1948. He was partially paralyzed after a car accident in January, 1958.

Stan Musial, also a three-time National League MVP, was selected in his first year of eligibility. Incredibly, it took the Hall of Fame voters four tries to elect Campanella.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Dodgers, Front Pages, Sports | 1 Comment

Voices — Christine Collins, February 12, 1932




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Rams draft Rafer Johnson, January 22, 1959

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The Rams picked a real winner in the NFL annual draft.

Rafer Johnson would become world famous in 1960 by winning the gold medal in the decathlon at the Rome Olympics. He already held the world record in the event and when not competing in track was playing basketball at UCLA.

Cal Whorton’s story didn’t mention the round in which Johnson was drafted, but the website stlouisrams.com listed Johnson as the Rams’ 28th round selection that year.

The Rams had gambled on multi-sport athletes before. The Celtics’ K.C. Jones might have made the 1958 team but decided to concentrate on basketball.

Johnson never played for the Rams, but he made history at the Coliseum in 1984 when he took the Olympic torch up the stadium steps during the opening ceremonies.

–Keith Thursby

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Obama Calls for Hope in Face of Cold Reality




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In case you don’t recall the bunting across the top of The Times’ Obama inauguration cover, there’s a reason. On the left, the home delivery edition with an ad for "Lost." On the right, the commemorative reprint edition that was delivered to the newsroom.


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Former child star dies in fight over $50, voices of Chavez Ravine, January 22, 1959

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1959_0122_chavez I finally found a Times story in which the paper talked about people living in the Chavez Ravine area. Cordell Hicks’ short story told of some local kids who tried to find a place in their neighborhood to play baseball.

Hicks wrote: "They were out in force yesterday with pick and shovel and a burro named Jenny Lind intent on clearing a portion of the site they hope will be a 40-acre youth recreation center promised by [Dodger owner Walter] O’Malley. ‘We can’t wait forever," they said."

Father Raymond Reha, director at Queen of Angels school, said the boys "have grown strong and quick climbing these hills and scrambling in and out of the arroyos. They could be the baseball players on tomorrow."

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Dodgers, Downtown, Religion, Sports | Comments Off on Former child star dies in fight over $50, voices of Chavez Ravine, January 22, 1959

Found on EBay — Batchelder Tile

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I haven’t noticed too many Batchelder figures on EBay, but here’s one. (Yes, it’s stamped "Batchelder Los Angeles" on the base). Bidding starts at $199.
Posted in Architecture, art and artists | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Batchelder Tile

January 21, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Cagey Mr. Mikoyan

Matt WeinstockNow that Anastas Mikoyan has returned whence he came, a lady named Natasha Smith would like a few unkind words.

She was born and reared in Russia and barely escaped with her life during the revolution. She speaks and understands the language.

She watched TV interviews in which Mikoyan answered questions through an interpreter. She knew what he and the interpreter said. She found
Mikoyan very sharp and admired his sense of humor.

She is certain, however, that Mikoyan understands some English and used the time taken to translate to figure out his answers, usually evasive or retaliatory. Continue reading

Posted in 1959, Columnists, Matt Weinstock | 1 Comment

January 21, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Smut Purveyor Reaps Harvest

Paul Coates, in coat and tieIn the smut business, the biggest losers are the customers.

They shell out something (more than 1 million dollars a year) for nothing.

But they’re not the only ones who come out on the short end.

A couple of years ago, I printed a letter received by an 11-year-old boy here in town.

It was the typical pitch to peddle nude photos, written as a “personal” note.

It said, in part:

“Maybe it isn’t proper for a girl to write to a strange man this way, but I hope you don’t mind . . . Continue reading

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Voices — Christine Collins, February 9, 1932

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De Mille Dies! January 21, 1959

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"The greatest showman on earth."



This trailer for "The Ten Commandments" calls it "the greatest motion picture of all time." Hedda Hopper described the film’s director, Cecil B. De Mille, "the greatest creator and showman of our industry."

But what is he today, 50 years after his death? Does De Mille remain the towering figure of cinema, or a shorthand reference to overblown costume dramas, remembered mostly for his cameo in "Sunset Boulevard?"

The Daily Mirror is asking readers to share their thoughts on Cecil B. De Mille. Send them in and I’ll post them

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Raised in a religious atmosphere.

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Helped found Paramount Studios.

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Advocate  for religious tolerance.

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"Never a favorite with critics."




 
Posted in Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Obituaries | 2 Comments

Found on EBay — Earl Carroll’s

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Here’s what appears to be an original snapshot of Earl Carroll’s, listed on EBay. Bidding starts at 99 cents.
Posted in #Jazz, Hollywood, Music, Nightclubs | 1 Comment

Matt Weinstock — January 20, 1959




Worried Ad Men

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Some earnest
men in the advertising business are concerned about the derogatory
image of their profession that has been created in the public mind and
quietly are running it up on the flagpole to see who salutes.

As
they see it, the constant references to the Madison Avenue boys as
polite villains, enforcing conformity on people through fear and
repetition has reached an alarming point.

They feel that even
greater damage can be done potentially by the rash of current books
depicting advertising and public relations men as ruthless,
double-crossing, three Martini boys who will stop at nothing to sell a
bill of goods.

1959_0120_alcoholics_2
"EXECUTIVE SUITE,"
the novel and later the
movie started the trend and now the shelves are loaded with
disillusioning books about life and love in the upper echelons of
public opinion molding.

Paul Pickrel, Harper’s book reviewer,
this month does a long specialty job on what he calls business novels,
mostly written by men who work or have worked in these fields of
calculated enlightenment.

Many will find irony in the fact that the advertising business now finds itself in need of public relations.

* *

NO QUESTION about it, our friends south of the border have a slightly different approach to law enforcement than we do.

Al
Meyers was standing on a Tijuana sidewalk, waiting for a friend, when a
gendarme came by checking the parked cars. Observing the violation sign
on a parking meter he efficiently removed the license plates from the
offending car.

Fascinated, Al asked how come.

"We do
this just to Mexican cars," the officer explained. "Americans pay their
fines but some of our people don’t co-operate —  so we make sure."

* *

KIDS’ NOSES
In summer they came dry,
Well-tanned and cunning;
But this winter, while still cute,
Some came running.
– HERB OXSTEIN

* *


LAST CHRISTMAS
some bank employees held a party in the Pen and Quill restaurant in
Manhattan Beach and as a gag presented their boss with a Federal
Reserve canvass bag filled with rocks and paper, Owner Bob Reuben found
it after they’d departed and took it to the office. Now it’s gone.
Thieves who broke into the place a few nights ago took only the bag,
apparently in the belief they had hit the jackpot, and some whisky.

* *

SPEAKING OF Christmas, Miss Caroline Tupper,
a schoolteacher here, is still wondering about a card she received last
December. Postmarked Los Angeles and printed in Old English letters, it
stated, "Buckingham Palace. HerBrittanica Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
and His Royal Highness Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, Prince
Charles and Princess Anne and their friend Mr. George Atkinson wish you
a very merry Christmas."

She has no idea who George is.

* *

QUOTE & UNQUOTE — A
man complaining about a traffic ticket was overheard saying, "All I
know is that I never heard an L.A. cop say, ‘It’s my duty to advise you
that anything you say may be used against you’" . . . The Post this
week salutes its copy editor, Harley P. Cook, retiring after 45 years,
with this tribute: "He made life miserable for the ambiguous, the
inaccurate and the profane."

* *

AROUND TOWN — Geologists
will complete a searching study in a few days of what could be a
world-shaking new source of water in arid areas . . . Frank L. (Lefty)
James, crime-crushing detective of another day, is in Queen Angels
Hospital. Ticker acting up . . . Some wag put Hilton hotel matchbooks
in the lobby ashtrays of the Town House; pardon me, Sheraton West . . .
Anyone else notice that Superior JudgeEvelle J. Younger recommended to
the Department of Motor Vehicles that the left-turn law, which he
describes as "inadequate and confusing," be clarified? Seems to me some
other guy had the same idea.

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Actually, this ad ran on the same page as the feature on alcoholism. The guys at the Mirror-News really had a sense of humor.

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — January 20, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, January 20, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

U.S. ‘Big Stick’ Attitude Deplored

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Fidel Castro, the bearded boy wonder of Cuba, has been sassing his kindly, benevolent, slightly wealthy Uncle Sam lately.

Young Fidel has taken it as a personal insult that a few of our
congressmen are suggesting tough measures to let him know that we don’t
like the way he’s doling out justice to the beaten men of Fulgencio Batista’s crumbling dictatorship.

The lad is most annoyed at one Rep. Wayne Hays (D-Ohio), chairman of the House foreign affairs subcommittee, for the latter’s suggestion that we cut off U.S. credit to Cuba, or stop importing Cuban sugar.

Fidel states flatly that how he disposes of his country’s "war criminals" is none of our business.

And I — for one — reluctantly agree.

I am as sick as the next person at wire-service photos of people getting their heads blown off by Castro’s firing squads.
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But how this should become an issue in official U.S. foreign policy
toward Cuba’s new government, I don’t know. It’s their internal affair.
They fought the revolution. We didn’t.

We’ve assumed — and rightfully so — an international obligation to
help protect the free world. But we don’t have a license to meddle
where we’re neither needed nor wanted.

From a ruthlessly realistic point of view, the biggest mistake Castro
could make now would be to grant amnesty to his enemies, or to let them
off with deportation. Batista made that error with Castro five years
ago. He turned him loose.

From their cushioned seats in Washington, some U.S. politicians don’t
seem to grasp that the rebels in Cuba weren’t just playing games.

And another lesson which these same politicos apparently have failed to
learn is that other people like to run their own countries. Dollars and
special favors may buy occasional votes in this country, but they
aren’t necessarily a medium of exchange elsewhere. What other people
seem to appreciate most is respect.

That applies double for Latin America.

From Mexico south to the Straits of Magellan, every man, woman, burro
and child lives under the shadow of our economic superiority.

We’re the big one. Quite possibly, we could make or break any country
in this hemisphere. This is our legacy. It’s something our forefathers
fought and sweated and worked and voted for: To make us strong.

Disapproves Big-Stick Tactics

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But I question whether they did it so we could shake big sticks at little neighbors on matters which don’t concern us.

I’m no authority on the Latin mind.

However, it doesn’t take an expert to sense the distaste which too many Latin peoples have developed for their rich northern tio.

That’s a resentment which we should be able to overcome by sincere
diplomacy — by exhibiting a constructive interest in their problems.

But so long as men like Rep. Hays go around with bully complexes, it’s not going to be easy.

And it should be.

If there’s anything we must do now, it’s to encourage more democracies in this world. The moon we’ll worry about later.


Posted in @news, Columnists, Paul Coates, Politics | 1 Comment

February 2, 1932: Voices — Christine Collins

February 2, 1932: Walter Collins asks to be put on a road crew until he can be paroled. Continue reading

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President takes oath of office, 1909

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Bain News Service via Library of Congress

President Taft visits Los Angeles, c. Oct. 11, 1909.

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"No inaugural address of recent years has won such great success."
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Someone at The Times had a sense of humor to talk about putting Taft "in a nutshell." As Daily Mirror readers will recall, the paper was a staunch Taft supporter.

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Bain News Service via Library of Congress

An image from Taft’s inauguration, although The Times says the actual ceremony was held in the Senate chambers because Washington was swept by a blizzard.

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Elias J. "Lucky" Baldwin looks as cynical in death as he did in life. The three things he loved in life were horses, women and music, The Times says.

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Taft addresses the situation of African Americans, specifically the 15th Amendment.

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Taft kisses the Bible.

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Mrs. Taft’s gown is one of the handsomest models ever seen in Washington.

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Taft names his Cabinet.

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This isn’t related to the election but is a time capsule of ethic stereotypes prevalent in this era.

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It’s difficult to imagine any reporter having this kind of access to a president today.

Posted in @news, Front Pages, Politics | 2 Comments

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

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These shoes (Julianelli for Bullock’s Wilshire) have been listed on EBay. Bids start at $9.99. I don’t normally pay that much attention to women’s shoes, but these did the trick.
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January 19, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Life in Beverly Hills

Matt WeinstockDuring a lavish party in a Beverly Hills home the host guided a group of guests to a huge shelfful of glassware in the trophy room.

“Of course you know about Bruges glass,” he said proudly. “It’s unbreakable. Here, I’ll show you.” He tipped a glass off the shelf. It shattered into fragments.

“That can’t be!” he exclaimed.

He tipped another and it too crashed. He shook his head in utter bafflement and tipped another. Crash.

“I can’t understand it!” he shouted hoarsely, “These glasses have been
in the family for generations! We’ve been the victims of a hoax!” Continue reading

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