January 19, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Way Out Back, a Head of Hair

Paul Coates, in coat and tieSee that picture down the column a few lines?

The one of the smiling, bushy-haired boy?

That’s me.

I’ll concede that it wasn’t taken yesterday. But if you want to get technical, I wasn’t born yesterday either. Which doesn’t make sense. However, I warned you not to get technical.

Columnists have certain inalienable liberties. One of which is the right to decorate their columns with vintage photographs of themselves.

At most, it’s petty deceit. And I certainly don’t stand alone in my guilt. Continue reading

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Voices — Christine Collins, December 24, 1931

1931_1224_clerk01_2


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Historic Images of Los Angeles on Flickr




Love_field_texas_loc

This is my new favorite thing: The Library of Congress’ Flickr account with thousands of photos such as the panorama of flying officers at Love Field, Texas, Aug. 20, 1918.

First_woman_jury_loc

And this is the first all-woman jury in Los Angeles, from the Bain News Service, Nov. 2, 1911. Update: This is the first all-woman jury in California. They acquitted the editor of the Watts News of printing obscene and indecent language.

P51_north_american_loc_02

And here’s a P-51 being built at North American Aviation about 1942. (Note: The scan was quite dark so I lightened it up a bit. Someone more skillful than I could probably get a very nice picture out of this).

Posted in #courts, Downtown, Transportation | Comments Off on Historic Images of Los Angeles on Flickr

We’re looking for Butch Harris




1958_1210_coates_harris

Many people have written to the Daily Mirror asking "What happened to Butch Harris?" or "Did he finally get into the Cub Scouts?" At this point, we don’t know.

Here’s the background. Recently, the Daily Mirror got a UCLA intern named Catriona Lavery and she started going through the microfilm of the Mirror-News, which unlike The Times, isn’t online via ProQuest. Catriona found Paul Coates’ followup story, then went back through the microfilm and dug up the original. Catriona is going to continue through the Mirror-News and check the African American weeklies (the California Eagle and the Los Angeles Sentinel) to see if there’s any further information.

I haven’t had any luck checking the online databases for his name, so if anybody knows Butch Harris, tell him we’re looking for him!

And no, The Times never wrote a word about this incident, which is one reason we’re tracking it down now.

Email me


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Found on EBay — Batchelder tile

Batchelder_tile_bird_ebay
Here’s a Batchelder tile of two birds, listed on EBay. Bids start at $120. Note: Before you spend any serious money on EBay, always check the item and the vendor carefully.
Posted in art and artists, Real Estate | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Batchelder tile

December 14, 1931: Voices — Christine Collins

 

December 13, 1931: Christine Collins letter

“I have tried real hard to secure some kind of employment for my husband…”

December 14, 1931: Christine Collins letter, part 2
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Jerry Lewis Plays First Base for Dodgers, January 18, 1959

1959_0118_jerry_lewis

I’m sure there’s a joke here someplace.

1959_0118_editorials
The Times’ political power broker Kyle Palmer writes a glowing piece about biographies of Eisenhower and Nixon.   
1959_0118_comics

On the comics page, Stephen F. Austin straightens out some pesky Indians and Delilah gets the drop on Samson.

1959_0118_wyman
Rosalind Wyman was a bright, young politician and a driving force in
bringing the Dodgers to Los Angeles. The paper profiled the City
Council member as a Times woman of the year, noting brightly that "she
is quite a woman."

"The dark-haired, more-green-than-brown-eyed young woman … wants a
first-class zoo for the city, more cultural assets and greater
improvements in the central district," wrote Cordell Hicks.

Wyman put it this way: "A city must grow or stand still. Los Angeles
is growing. An opera house in a MUST. Those who appreciate opera should
have it. … I like football better than baseball, too, but that does
not mean to me that there should not be an opera house or a Dodger
team."

–Keith Thursby

1959_0118_cukor
George Cukor prepares to direct his first Western with Sophia Loren and Steve Forrest.
1959_0118_sports
UCLA beats USC, 65-63 at
the Pan-Pacific.
Posted in City Hall, Current Affairs, Dodgers, Downtown, Sports | Comments Off on Jerry Lewis Plays First Base for Dodgers, January 18, 1959

A. Victor Segno — “How to Live 100 Years”

“I have in mind a man who is now legally 55 years old who has used olive oil and distilled water internally and externally for a few years and has so far regained youth and vigor that he looks not a day over 25.”

–A. Victor Segno,
“How to Live 100 Years,”
Los Angeles, 1903
Posted in books, health | 2 Comments

December 10,1958: White mothers bar black child from Cub Scouts

Who Wants to Kick Little Butch Harris?

Paul Coates, in coat and tieThis is a personal column. Personal to a group of young mothers who probably consider themselves pretty typical American parents.

They’re the mothers of 8, 9 and 10-year-old Cub Scouts in Thunderbird Pack No. 298, here in town.

The rest of you can read on, if you’d like. Or you can turn to the comics. Unfortunately, they might be a little more enlightening than what I’m going to talk about.

Besides, what I want to say, I want to say directly to the small group of mothers whose sons are in Pack No. 298.

The subject, ladies, in case you haven’t guessed, is a 9-year-old named Butch Harris.

You know him. If not personally — at least for the color of his skin.

Butch Harris is a Negro.

He’s a handsome little kid, well-dressed, well-mannered and smart.

He’s the kid you ganged up on not long ago. Remember? The hushed meetings after he tried to accept your invitation to ALL boys at 87th Street School to join your Cub Scout pack?

That was more than two months ago. And Butch took you a little too literally. He thought you meant — like it says in the Scout pamphlet I have on my desk:

“It makes no difference whether he’s a fat boy, a skinny boy, a tall boy or a short boy — no difference where his mom and dad were born, what their family bank account might be, or what church they attend.

“Nor does it make any difference what color skin a boy might have — Scouting’s hand of fellowship is extended to him.”

That’s what the pamphlet says. And I guess Butch’s mom and dad took it literally, too.

They told Butch — who’s their only child, incidentally — that, yes, they’d get him a uniform. It would be alright if he joined. It would be a good, wholesome experience for him.

Now, before I remind you of exactly what you did to freeze Butch out, I’m going to tell you what he’s been doing lately.

He’s been reading the manuals, just like your kids have.

With no prompting, he can recite:

“On my honor I will do my best to do my duty to God and my country and to obey the Scout law; to help other people at all times; to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight.”

He knows a few of the Scout knots, too. He begged his mother to buy him a book that explains them.

But what Butch doesn’t know is that you don’t want him.

He’s not aware of your original tactic to just ignore his application.

Nor does he know that finally, after Butch’s mom begged you repeatedly for a yes or no answer you met and took another vote. And then sent a spokesman to the Harris residence in your neighborhood to explain to his parents that Pack No. 298 “just isn’t ready to integrate.”

It’s Like This, Butch . . .

These things Mrs. Harris has been afraid to tell her boy.

As of yesterday, at least, she still hadn’t told him. Then, she admitted to me that she just plain didn’t know how.

“Two days ago,” she told me, “I finally worked up the courage to ask him if any kid at school had ever called him ‘Nigger.’ I thought maybe I could lead into it that way.

“But he answered, ‘No, Mom. Why would any kid say that?'”

Mrs. Harris wondered if I could possibly help her explain to Butch why he’s not going to be a Cub Scout.

I can’t. I’m afraid I wouldn’t know where to begin.

But if one of you Pack No. 298 Den Mothers wants to volunteer. I guess Butch is going to have to be told by somebody.

 

 

Posted in 1958, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Matt Weinstock — January 17, 1959




Only in L.A.

Matt_weinstockd
Last week it was John Keats telling everyone what was wrong with Los Angeles. He didn’t like the place at all.

He
described it as "a vast sprawling slum . . . an incredible clutter
without political cohesion . . . a monument to the lack of wise
community planning . . . an example of the triumph of blind greed in
the relentless exploitation of living space . . . the absolute nadir of
American taste."

Of course, Keats has done quite well in the
epithet sweepstakes. He has written books blasting schools, the
construction industry and the auto manufacturers.

THIS WEEK IT’S Oscar Mandel, University of Nebraska English professor, who visited here last summer.

In an article entitled, "Los Angeles, From a Corner Darkly," in the magazine, "L.A.," due out Tuesday, Mandel writes:

"It is a city without the power to assert its own identity; a city with nothing unexpendable
in it, nothing which, vanished, would cause a civilized man at the
other end of the world to weep . . . I have the impression of a
Technicolor slum . . . a dance macabre of uproarious stucco fonts . . .
a honky-tonk of exclamations . . . It is nobody’s city; it is only a
place with more ‘housing units,’ it seems, than there are hills in the
world . . . I felt, in Los Angeles, that I did not need to notice
anything. Could anything really remarkable happen where ‘everything is
okay?’ "

1959_0117_jazzLET US HOPE that Oscar has calmed down now that
he got it off his chest. There’s no need for anyone to get that
excited. Hit and run heckling is an old story out here. It has been
going on a long time. We really don’t mind. In fact, some of the things
both Keats and Mandel say are true.

But I detect no indication
of mass exodus. What do you suppose it is, John and Oscar, that makes
people stick around? There must be some redeeming feature to the poor,
battered old pueblo.

AND THEN there’s author Robert
Carson’s Holiday article, "West Coast Journey." Carson, who lives here,
drove about 3,000 miles, from Seattle to San Diego, leisurely taking in
the sights.

He quotes a friend who said of Los Angeles, "It’s
a wonderful place to live, but I wouldn’t want to visit it." Carson
disagrees, he thinks it’s a fine place to visit and humorously mentions
some of the picturesque things that Keats and Mandel seem to have
overlooked.

1959_0117_sleeping_beautyThe same friend, who has lived in Berlin, Rome,
Paris, London and New York, said also, "It is the only city in the
world where you can get a sunburn in the daytime, a cold from the damp
night, and during that 24 hours be hit on the head out on your patio by
one of your own oranges."

Carson concludes, "You are bound not to be bored in the basin."

AN ITEM HERE
about a Philadelphia lawyer’s offer to endow an Al Capone Chair in
Taxation at Princeton reminded Malvin Wald of some information he came
upon while working on the script for RodSteiger’s movie about the gang lord. 

When
Capone bought an estate near Miami, authorities told him he was
undesirable and would have to leave. He pointed out that he’d committed
no crimes in Florida and didn’t intend to and suggested they read the
Constitution which protected such law-abiding, tax-paying, home-owning
citizens as himself.

Incidentally if a Capone Chair in
Taxation should be created, the trend is obvious — the Adolf Hitler
Chair of Humanities, the John Dillinger Chair of Crime Prevention, the
Billy the Kid Chair of Juvenile Delinquency Prevention, the Barbara
Graham Chair of Home Economics. Just a bunch of misunderstood kids.

* *

FOOTNOTES —
Mikoyan’s cryptic remark that Molotov soon may leave his post in Outer
Mongolia for a more important assignment was clear to Alan Wilson. ToVyacheslav obviously would go the honor of being the first man shot to the moon . . . A 1952 Ford parked on West Pico
Blvd. had a sticker, "Help Stamp Out Black and White City Cars" . . .
Oops, an SC prof. in a letter to a lady on South Avenue 63, wrote, "he
would be permitted to use his own disgression in the matter" . . . Variation on a theme, electrocardiogram division, by H. Mabie: "That’s the way the ventricle vaults."  

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — January 17, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, January 17, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Mash Notes and Comments

Paul_coates
"Dear Paul Coates,

"I am writing to you–

"(1) Because I received a beautiful portable typewriter for Christmas;

"(2) I have written to all my relatives and friends who live more than five miles away;

"And (3) because you are a standing joke in our house . . .

"We (my husband and myself) never watch your night television show because we are wrapped up in stereo until the wee hours.

"We (my 4-year-old son and myself) are not so fortunate at 2 p.m.,
though. He is a TV bug and figures that any channel that employs
Sheriff John deserves at least half his time. This includes your
program.

 1959_0117_curtis
On Jan. 17, 1959, the Mirror-News published a photo of "Jamie Curtis" making "his camera debut to the world." It may seem a bit late, but the Daily Mirror wishes to offer a correction for that little gaffe. Jamie Lee Curtis is female.

"We used to swear by you and your ideas when we were new at the TV
game. Now you know what I’m going to say next, so I’ll say it anyway.
We swear at you.

"Doesn’t anyone ever meet with your approval, Mr. Coates?" (signed) Mrs. John F. Hughen, 9937 Rideau St., Whittier.

–Yes. Sometimes I like my mother.

* *

(Press Release) "Actress Phyllis Standish observed the other day that a
man never marries a girl who looks sensible because a sensible girl has
more sense than to look sensible!"
(signed) Levin, Cohen &
Fletcher, Public Relations, 1356 N Vine St., Hollywood.

— For her sake, I hope nobody overheard her.

* *

"Dear Mr. Coates,

"I stopped by your office with the hopes of meeting you — a prospect I have been looking forward to for some time.

"Your secretary suggested that I call on Monday to inquire what time you may have free from your busy schedule.

1959_0117_trumbo
"I shall look forward to our meeting. Cordially," (signed) Phyllis Standish, Hollywood.

— Drop in anytime, Phyllis. You sound like a nice, sensible girl.

* *

(Press Release) " ‘Let Me Call You Sweetheart’ will be the theme of the
colorful Valentine’s Day celebration to be held at Vagabond’s House,
Feb. 14, JoeChastek announces.

"Beautiful hearts will be given to the diners and those ordering liquors from the doctors of mixology.

"To live up to the theme of the evening, organist Pomping Vila
will play Victor Herbert’s ‘Sweethearts’ and ‘Sweet Mystery of Life’;
Irving Berlin tunes such as ‘Always’ and ‘Because I Love You’; L. Wolfe
Gilbert’s ‘I Dream of You in Lilac Time’; and JimmyMcHugh’s ‘I Can’t Give You Anything but Love, Baby’ and ‘I’m in the Mood for Love.’ 

"P.S.: Please, dear Paul, come and be our Valentine." (signed) Arthur S. Wenzel, Publicity, 2505 Wilshire Blvd., L.A.

— I can’t. I’ve already been spoken for.

* *

"Coates:

"I
found my wife in a bar last night, drinking with two guys I didn’t
know. They seemed like OK guys. She was gone, like they say in beatnik
land.

"She said to me, how are you, Baby Doll. I said OK you old beatnik. Then she said, I feel real cool.

"I
said I feel cool, too, dear, let’s have a beer. Then my wife says,
let’s dance, man. I said, OK Baby Doll, let’s dance. We did.

"Then my wife says, don’t talk about me when I’m gone."

"I said, Baby Doll, I am gone — I am going home and get a good night’s sleep.

"My wife said, if you go home, I’ll make a date with another guy. I said, I don’t care. I am gone. Good night.

"P.S.: Before I left, I told her, don’t EVER call me Big Daddy." (signed) Anon, L.A.

— I’m sure she didn’t mean anything by it.


Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Paul Coates — Confidential File, January 17, 1959

Movie star mystery photo

2009_0112_mystery_photo
Los Angeles Times photo

Our mystery star has more than 100 credits on imdb.

Update: These are pictures from the 1936 trial over the custody of Marilyn Astor Thorpe. Mary Astor charged that her ex-husband, Franklyn, wasn’t a fit parent (he allegedly had women spend the night while his daughter was in his custody and was supposedly abusive to the girl)  and he made similar accusations. citing passages in her diary describing her affair with playwright George S. Kaufman. 

From left, Attorney Joseph Anderson, Franklyn Thorpe, attorney Ethel M. Pepin (that’s the lady in the hat),  attorney A.P. Michael Narlian, attorney Roland Rich Woolley and Mary Astor. Ruth Chatterton is in the audience between Thorpe and Pepin. 

1936_0804_astor

2009_0113_mystery_photo

Los Angeles Times photograph
Several people have guessed correctly: Steven Bibb was first, followed by Mary Mallory, Nick Santa Maria and Jany. Congratulations! Here’s another clue for everyone else.

At left, Mary Astor, Roland Richard Woolley and Ruth Chatterton

2009_0114_mystery_photo

Los Angeles Times photograph
Today, we have a big clue to our mystery star. Imagine my surprise to find this in the archives.   Update: A page from Mary Astor’s diary — written in lavender ink.

Several more people have guessed correctly: Regular reader Dewey Webb and Jeff Hanna. Congratulations!

Many people talk about Mary Astor’s diary. It was supposedly burned on orders of the judge. However I have been told by people who worked at the Examiner that Hearst photographed the whole thing. That’s a story that I doubt will ever be verified but it shows what a big deal the diary was at the time.

2009_0115_mystery_photo

Los Angeles Times photograph

And we have many more correct guesses. Congratulations to: Nathan Benedict, Carol Gwenn, Gregory Moore, "Zabadu," Pamela Porter, Richard Heft and "Laura" fan Waldo Lydecker.   

At left, Judge Goodwin Knight — the future California governor — with Lois Carpenter, 12, and Dorothy Carpenter, 6. Astor’s diary surfaced during a child custody dispute.

2009_0116_mystery_photo

Los Angeles Times photograph
Here’s our mystery woman. Add Rance Ryan to the folks who have recognized her.

Isn’t this a great picture of Mary Astor? She had just been awarded custody of her daughter Marilyn during the school year.

Mary_astor_1936_0731_crop

Los Angeles Times photograph
And yes, this is Mary Astor. I usually end the contests on Friday but I like the art so much I just had to go another day. People sometimes ask me why I run black and white pictures in color but the image at left shows why. The print happens to be a sort of sepia tone as if they didn’t fix it long enough because they were in such a hurry to get it into the paper. I could clean it up digitally and make it nice with pure blacks and whites but to me that spoils the experience.

The outfit was blue taffeta, by the way.

Posted in Mystery Photo | 29 Comments

Black Lakers players barred from white hotel, January 17, 1959


1959_0117_cover

The Times reports that detention facilities for juvenile girls is badly overcrowded but doesn’t really address the reason, merely saying that the rapid increase in Southern California’s population and lack of room at state facilities are to blame. But why were they suddenly locking up so many girls? I hope we find out in the days ahead. –lrh
1959_0117_baylor I’ve been looking for references to the Lakers to see when The Times
started reporting on their eventual move from Minneapolis to Los
Angeles. This story caught my attention for all the obvious reasons.

Elgin Baylor sat out a game during his rookie season with the Lakers
after he was denied a room at a Charleston, W.Va., hotel. According to
the short wire story published by The Times, "The entire Minneapolis
team walked out of a midtown hotel after Baylor and two other Negro
members of the Lakers were denied rooms."

"They told us there we couldn’t even get in a halfway decent
restaurant and we had to buy some things from the grocery store and
make sandwiches for dinner," Baylor said.

The Lakers lost to Cincinnati, 95-91. Baylor watched the game on the bench in street clothes.

A story the following day said Baylor would not be disciplined. "I
know his failure to play cost us the game but he was under great
emotional strain because of his attitude toward segregation," owner Bob
Short said.

–Keith Thursby

1959_0117_theater

Sinatra and Nelson Riddle at the Sands!

1959_0117_sports

UCLA over USC 57-53 at the Pan-Pacific!

Posted in Countdown to Watts, Environment, Film, Freeways, Front Pages, Hollywood, Music, Nightclubs, Sports | 1 Comment

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Bullocks_ebay_gold_outfit
Here’s a real period piece from Bullock’s Wilshire. The vendor, alas, did not include a photo of the label. It’s listed on EBay with bids starting at $19.99.
Posted in Fashion | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Coast Guard rescues passengers of plane crashed at sea, October 18, 1956




1956_1018_stratocruiser

Another Pan Am Stratocruiser goes down, but the 31 people aboard are rescued. Some other flights weren’t so fortunate.

Posted in Transportation | Comments Off on Coast Guard rescues passengers of plane crashed at sea, October 18, 1956

January 16, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Saved by the Knell

Matt WeinstockIn everybody’s life there is a dark, unforgettable moment when it doesn’t appear he’s going to make it. A downtown group somehow got around to discussing the this topic over coffee, and Ken Bromfield Jones, Title Insurance employee and spare-time TV actor, recalled his big near miss.

In 1942 he was in command of a gun post on HMS Londonderry, convoying ships north of Ireland. During a German air attack he was shot through a lung. Hours later, he was removed to a hospital ashore.

In the night he came out of a sedative. He felt no pain, only extreme lassitude. As in a dream he heard a nurse say, “He’ll be on the slab by morning.” Continue reading

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January 16, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

January 16, 1959: Mirror Cover

CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Someday, Butch H., Try to Be Forgiving

Paul Coates, in coat and tieSome stories I’d rather not print.

And when I first heard about what a bunch of grown men and women were
doing to a kid named Butch Harris, I filed the information into that
category.

It was a little too unbelievable, too grimy, to put in a newspaper.

That was three months ago. At the time, Butch and some classmates of his had accepted an invitation to all boys at 87th Street School, here in downtown, to join the Cub Scouts.

But not Butch. He was ignored — subtly like a sledge hammer. Continue reading

Posted in #courts, 1959, Columnists, Countdown to Watts, Freeways, Paul Coates | Comments Off on January 16, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

Voices — Christine Collins, September 28, 1931




1931_0928_anderson_01

Posted in #courts, Changeling, Film, Hollywood, LAPD, Transportation | Comments Off on Voices — Christine Collins, September 28, 1931

Wyeth / Nixon

1972_0111_wyeth_nixon

Jan. 11, 1972: Andrew Wyeth announces he will paint Nixon’s official portrait.

1972_0112_wyeth_nixon_2
 
Jan. 12, 1972: The White House repudiates Wyeth’s announcement.
1972_0114_wyeth_nixon_2

Jan. 14, 1972: The Nixon White House says it misspoke itself. Kind of.

121

In 1981, the White House unveiled a portrait of Nixon by Alexander Clayton, although I’m not able to locate a copy of the image. Clayton’s painting was replaced with a 1984 portrait by J. Anthony Wills. Norman Rockwell also painted at least two portraits of Nixon during his campaigns for the presidency.

Posted in art and artists, Politics | Comments Off on Wyeth / Nixon

Vivian Leigh cast as Scarlett O’Hara, January 1939


 
1939_0114_gwtw

On January 14, 1939, The Times published the news that an English actress had been cast in the lead of "Gone With the Wind." Excuse me, but Jean Arthur as Scarlett?

1939_0116_hopper

Hedda Hopper covers the furious reaction over David O. Selznick not casting an American actress in the lead of "Gone With the Wind."

1939_0116_jews
The Democratic Party’s dependence on "Jewish financial backers" influences its attitude toward Germany, according to Nazi "philosopher" Alfred Rosenberg.
The Holocaust touches Los Angeles. Dr. Gustav Baar tells of his experiences in fleeing Europe and says he managed to escape because he was an American and because he was on vacation in Rome when the Nazis rolled into Austria.

"No nation in Europe has the courage or the power to stop this gangster," Baar says of Hitler. "I was in Paris when she was mobilized. She was so unprepared that there was not a gas mask in Paris for civilians and only the most pitiful rags as uniforms for most of the troops called to the colors."

And local leaders of the German American Bund are arrested on charges of trying to distribute fliers purportedly written by Jews that would provoke anti-Semitism.

1939_0116_del_gado
1938_0410_pontiacs

You may recall a photo posted in the Daily Mirror last year showing Police Capt. Peter Del Gado accepting new Pontiac police cars. Del Gado fled to Mexico during the investigation of City Hall corruption and remained there until 1970, when his indictment was quashed and the ailing former officer returned to Los Angeles.

1939_0116_cameron

1939_0116_pro_bowl
A great photo page from the Pro Bowl.


Posted in #courts, @news, books, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, LAPD, Religion, Sports | 3 Comments