Retro holiday gift suggestion


The Parker T-Ball Jotter, 1957
Newspapers, magazines and websites are full of holiday gift suggestions. But frankly, in this economy, I can’t in good conscience recommend spending lots of money. (True, I may post pricey items from EBay, but I never recommend them as gifts; they’re just historic curios.)

Here’s an economical present that’s totally retro: the Parker T-Ball Jotter, available in most office supply stores for a few dollars.

The Parker (yes, in black) is the ballpoint pen of choice at the Daily Mirror. My only concession to modern times is the gel cartridge. Great for doing the New York Times’ crossword puzzles.

Posted in Architecture, art and artists, books, Fashion | Comments Off on Retro holiday gift suggestion

Bomb found at Coliseum, December 4, 1958




1958_1204_bomb


1958_1209_bomb
A time bomb was discovered under a temporary platform for college cheerleaders at the Coliseum.

The device apparently had been set to go off at 2 p.m., which was
the starting time of the Nov. 15 UCLA-Oregon game, police said. The
clock alarm on the bomb went off but there was a malfunction in the
wiring, according to D.A. Wolfer of the police department’s crime
laboratory.

A maintenance man at the Coliseum found the bomb as workers were
dismantling the temporary platform in preparation for an upcoming Rams’
game.  The cheerleaders’ platform had been put up for the UCLA game and
remained for USC games against Notre Dame and UCLA. 

Police said that any college chemistry student could have made the device. Eventually USC students Dave Visel and Neil Baizer, members of the Trojan Knights, were suspended after admitting that they made the smoke bomb. 

–Keith Thursby



Posted in LAPD, Sports | Comments Off on Bomb found at Coliseum, December 4, 1958

Remakes of science fiction classics




Check out what my blog colleague Geoff Boucher has to say on Hero Complex:

Hollywood, Back to the Future: Top filmmakers have already dipped into the sci-fi vault for 21st century remakes of “The War of the Worlds, “The Planet of the Apes” and the upcoming “The Day the Earth Stood Still,”
so what’s next on the revival list? Plenty. Here’s a list of a dozen
remakes and revival projects now at various stages in the studio
pipeline.

When_worlds_collide_2 "When Worlds Collide" Steven Spielberg is one of the producers and Stephen Sommers (“The Mummy,” “Van Helsing”), infamous for his “give me more” attitude toward CGI effects, is directing. Like the original 1951 film produced by George Pal,
this “Worlds,” due in theaters next year, is about the mad scramble to
build a spaceship to save humanity before Earth is destroyed by a rogue
planet entering its orbit. The problem comes when there aren’t enough
seats for everybody on Earth.

Theterminatorposter_5"The Terminator" It’s not a remake, but filmmaker McG’s plan to revive the killer robot franchise with a new sequel next summer starring Christian Bale as John Connor has been circled by fans after a strong showing this past summer at Comic-Con International. “Terminator Salvation” is set in the future and shows the grim war between humans and Skynet
with its murderous metallic armies. The plan is for a full trilogy —
which means a certain California politician may well live up to that
long-ago promise: “I’ll be back.”

Read more >>>


Posted in books, Film, Hollywood, UFOs | Comments Off on Remakes of science fiction classics

Duesenberg for sale




Duesenberg_j_hemmings

Photograph courtesy Hemmings Motor News

Now listed for sale on Hemmings Motor News, this 1929 Duesenberg J belonged to one of the Barbee brothers (probably A.K. Barbee) who headed the Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Los Angeles. It was later owned by Glendale car collector Fred Buess. As someone pointed out, the body was modified by Bohman & Schwartz of Pasadena in the 1930s.


Posted in art and artists, Food and Drink, Transportation | 2 Comments

Hayakawa reopens S.F. State; Dodgers bid for Joe Torre, December 3, 1968




1968_1203_cover

 

1968_1203_sports
Turns out the Dodgers were interested in more than Joe Torre, the manager. They once tried to acquire him as a player.

The Dodgers offered the Braves Willie Davis and Tom Haller for Torre
and Felipe Alou, according to a story in The Times. The Braves wanted
to trade Rico Carty instead of Alou. But the Dodgers apparently didn’t
like that combination.

Torre started his career with the Braves in Milwaukee and was traded
to the Cardinals in 1969 for Orlando Cepeda. He finished his playing
days with the Mets.

Torre ultimately managed the Mets, Braves and Cardinals before the Yankees and of course the Dodgers.

–Keith Thursby

 


Posted in #courts, Dodgers, Education, Front Pages, Sports | Comments Off on Hayakawa reopens S.F. State; Dodgers bid for Joe Torre, December 3, 1968

36 homes burn in Malibu fire, December 3, 1958


 
1958_1203_extra

I have seen some ugly Page 1 layouts but this headline takes the prize.
  1958_1203_map Corral Canyon fire, 1958
  2007_1125_malibu_fires
Corral Canyon fire, 2007.
1958_1203_page2 One fire began near Bob Hope Ranch, the other near 20th Century Fox movie ranch and they joined. Surely you have heard the remark that if history doesn’t repeat itself, it rhymes. Here we have fires in Corral Canyon, at the top in 1958 and above in 2007. At this point, the 1958 fire had covered 15,000 acres. Actors Strother Martin and Lew Ayres lost their homes and Jackie Coogan skipped a TV appearance to protect his home from the flames.

And I have to say that my jaw dropped when I saw what they did with the headline.

We also followed the deadly fire at Our Lady of the Angels in Chicago, where official speculate that the blaze was started by a student sneaking a cigarette.

1958_1203_page18

The set for "War and Peace" survives the flames.
1958_1203_sports
Bill Barnes signs three-year contract
to head UCLA football.

Posted in @news, Architecture, broadcasting, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Real Estate, Sports, Television | 2 Comments

Killers die in gas chamber, December 3, 1938


1938_1203_pix

"There’s nothing to it." — Robert Lee Cannon

"So long." — Albert Kessel

1938_1203_cover

"That was the most terrible thing I’ve ever seen. I’ve witnessed 52 hangings. I could find nothing humane about it and I never want to watch anything like that again."

–Father George O’Meara, prison chaplain

"Hanging is a damned sight quicker and better."

–San Quentin guard

"These men went easy." 

–Dan Cox, Sacramento County sheriff

1938_1203_runover
A 59-year-old man gets a day in jail
for carrying a blackjack on his honeymoon with his 14-year-old wife.
 
1938_1203_sports
USC meets Notre Dame in the Coliseum.
 

Posted in #courts, Caryl Chessman, Front Pages, Homicide, Sports | 1 Comment

Voices — Odetta, 1930 – 2008





1961_0827_odetta

Odetta at the Hollywood Bowl, 1961. I have to admit, Dean Jones on a bill with Odetta is not something I ever imagined.

Versatile Odetta Found Her Folk Roots and a Message

Music: Now she feels a necessity to perpetuate the kind of songs that turned her life around.

April 21, 1990

By THOMAS K. ARNOLD,

DEL MAR — Odetta is a human jukebox of traditional American folk music. Her repertoire, both on record and in concert, ranges from 19th-Century slave songs and spirituals to the topical ballads of such 20th-Century folk icons as Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger.

And, although she periodically strays into other styles of music–she’s sung jazz, Broadway show tunes, even opera–Odetta likes nothing better than to apply her rich, powerful voice and intense, evocative singing style to traditional American folk music–the music that made us think, then made us act, in times past.

"People are always asking me, ‘Why don’t you do more modern songs?’ And I guess it’s because I’m an ancestor worshiper and a historian," said Odetta, who will appear Saturday night at the Del Mar Shores Auditorium.

"This is the music that turned my life around, and I feel a need to continue that music so that more and more people can hear it–and hear messages from those who have gone before us, hear how our ancestors got us through to better positions than they were in."

History, after all, has a way of repeating itself, she said, and the message contained in these vintage tunes is as relevant today as when they were written.

"We in this country are terribly confused," Odetta said. "I’m not sure we know exactly how we’re confused, but there is something amiss with millions of dollars being shipped into other countries to kill civilians, and then there’s not enough money to continue providing medicine for the elderly, who have worked all their lives and contributed to this country’s welfare and should be receiving dividends, or for working people and their children.

"There’s a lot of stuff that just doesn’t compute, and I think people need to be assuaged, to be soothed, by knowing they’re not the only ones feeling like there’s something wrong.

"The words to traditional folk songs were written out of concern, and there’s as much to be concerned about now as there ever was."

Odetta, who turned 59 Dec. 31, was born in Birmingham, Ala. She lost her father when she was 6, and later moved to Los Angeles with her mother, sister and stepfather.

There she sang in her junior high school glee club and began taking private voice lessons. She later worked as an amateur at the Turnabout Theater in Hollywood and studied music at Los Angeles City College. In 1949, she won a part in the chorus of the touring musical production of "Finian’s Rainbow."

Later that year, the musical hit San Francisco for an extended stay, Odetta recalled, and it was there–in the coffeehouses she frequented after the shows–that she discovered folk music.

"For the first time in my life, I heard the music of the people I came from," she said. "One of the things we read in our history books, when I was in grammar school, was that the slaves were singing all the time because they were happy, but the songs I heard debunked that theory.

"And hearing this music made me feel proud. I straightened my back and kinked my hair, and from that point on I was determined to learn all there was to learn, not just about my black heritage, but about my American heritage."

Odetta promptly left the "Finian’s" chorus line and ventured out on her own. She made her debut as a solo folk singer in San Francisco’s Hungry i, earning $25 a night; she subsequently hit the road, singing in folk clubs and coffeehouses up and down the West Coast.

By the mid-1950s, Odetta was touring nationwide and in Canada; she cut her first record, for San Francisco’s Tradition label, in 1956. With the advent of the folk revival, she began getting plenty of national attention.

Odetta performed at the Newport Folk Festival in 1959, 1960, 1964 and 1965 and released several albums on Vanguard Records, the home of fellow folkies such as Joan Baez, Doc Watson and the Jim Kweskin Jug Band.

Odetta has since toured Europe, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, the West Indies and Northwest Africa and has recorded for independent folk labels. She’s also made countless television appearances and popped up in several films–including "Sanctuary" and the TV movie "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman"–in both singing and dramatic roles.

She said she plans to continue doing plenty of benefit work for social and environmental organizations and causes, something she’s always been known for.

"I have to do that. I need to put something back into the pot; I need to be helpful and useful to those who are on the firing line with their energies focusing on areas that will improve the lives of more people in this country."

Posted in Music, Obituaries | Comments Off on Voices — Odetta, 1930 – 2008

Found on EBay — Black Mask magazine

Black_mask_1943
A copy of the May 1943 issue of Black Mask magazine has turned up on EBay. Bidding has started at $50, about average for an issue of this vintage. Note that UCLA Special Collections has a nearly complete collection of original issues.


Posted in art and artists, books, Homicide | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Black Mask magazine

Coming attractions — Black Chrome

Black_chrome
At long last I’m digging through the handouts I gathered at the Archives Bazaar (my companion, newly published author Brady Potts is way ahead of me on that score) and came across a flier for an exhibit at the California African American Museum. It’s called "Black Chrome" and focuses on African Americans and motorcycles. The exhibit continues through April 12, 2009.

Special programs include:
–Trick’in Out My Bike, Jan. 25, 2009
–African American Motorcycle Culture with Na’il "Shayk" Karim, Black Biker Magazine, Feb. 8, 2009.
–"Free Black Horse," Feb. 22, 2009.
–Women in Biker Culture, March 22, 2009.
–Motorcycle Superhero, April 4, 2009.

   
   
   

Posted in art and artists, Transportation | Comments Off on Coming attractions — Black Chrome

College campus struggles to reopen; Rams win over Vikings, December 2, 1968




1968_1202_cover


Here’s a 1968 interview with S.I. Hayakawa that aired on ABC.
It’s nice to see the late Frank Reynolds, one of my favorite TV news anchors, once again. For all his gifts with language, Hayakawa was not a man given to speaking in sound bites.–lrh


1968_1202_sports
Several Rams went into their game at Minnesota sick with the flu but
they left with a healthy victory over the Vikings, 31-3. The Times’ Mal
Florence noted that it marked the first time all season that the
offense and defense had performed at a high level in the same game.

Deacon Jones was the sickest Ram–he had a 102-degree fever but it
didn’t slow him down. "Jones merely played one of the most flawless,
intimidating games of his All-Pro career," Florence wrote.

"When I got up Saturday I had such a bad headache that I felt my
head was going to come off," Jones said. "I felt lousy this morning
too. But nothing was going to keep me out of that game. I’d have gotten
out of my deathbed to play in it."

The victory put the Rams in position to face Baltimore on Dec. 15
for the division title, as long as they took care of the Chicago Bears
in their next game.

"We had begun to doubt ourselves before this game but we don’t
anymore," Greg Schumacher said. "This team has found itself. We’re
going to rewrite the record books."

–Keith Thursby



Posted in @news, Current Affairs, Education, Front Pages, Sports | Comments Off on College campus struggles to reopen; Rams win over Vikings, December 2, 1968

December 2, 1958: 90 die in Chicago school fire

1958_1202_extra
Continue reading

Posted in 1958, @news, Front Pages | 2 Comments

Speeding train crushes school bus; UCLA gets new football coach, December 2, 1938

1938_1202_gas_chamber

1938_1202_cover

A truck carrying Christmas trees crashes into a streetcar … and a
man is charged with buying a cougar cub at a pet store and killing it for
the $75 bounty.

Robert L. Cannon and Albert Kessel, sentenced to die in an aborted prison break in which the warden, a guard and two convicts were killed, are about to become the first two men to be executed in California’s new gas chamber … a Sacramento legislator says that if lethal gas is truly inhumane he would advocate shooting the condemned.

A small Utah town grieves for its children after an accident in a snowstorm in which a train plowed into a bus that stopped at the crossing and then went onto the tracks.

And Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 and Schubert’s Symphony No. 5 get their Los Angeles premieres, The Times says.   

1938_1202_theater

Wilbur Kurtz is brought in as technical advisor on "Gone With the Wind."

1938_1202_sports

Edwin C. "Babe" Horrell is named UCLA head football coach.

Posted in #courts, @news, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, Sports, Transportation | 1 Comment

Found on EBay –Harvey Milk

Milk_page
The new movie about San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk has brought a bit a ephemera to EBay. Here’s the extra the San Francisco Examiner brought out the day of the shooting. Bidding started at $9.99 and rose quickly.

   
   

Posted in #gays and lesbians, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, Politics | Comments Off on Found on EBay –Harvey Milk

Rams win over Cards, December 1, 1958




1958_1201_party_girl

1958_1201_sports
The Rams survived the cold of Chicago to edge the Cardinals, 20-14.
The statistic that stood out in Cal Whorton’s story was the
attendance–only 13,041 watched the game at what Whorton called Comisky
Ball Park.

Whorton said temperature at game time was 16 degrees.

Rams quarterback Bill Wade got closer to a couple of Ram season
milestones. He tied Norm Van Blocklin with 156 completions and moved
closer to Bob Waterfield’s record for passes thrown.

–Keith Thursby

 


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

December 1, 1938: California prepares to execute two killers at San Quentin

December 1, 1938: Babe Ruth's secret to a happy marriage? White Owl cigars!

The secret of Babe Ruth’s happy marriage: White Owl cigars.


December 1, 1938: California prepares to use the gas chamber for executions rather than hanging. Continue reading

Posted in #courts, 1938, @news, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD, Politics, Religion, Sports | 1 Comment

Found on EBay — Bullocks Wilshire

Irene_lentz_ebay
Here’s an Irene Lentz outfit from Bullocks Wilshire, listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $99.99 with buy it now at $200. Another Irene Lentz dress from Bullocks Wilshire was listed earlier at $349. As with all EBay items, check the description carefully before bidding.
Posted in Fashion | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Bullocks Wilshire

Found on EBay — Mullen and Bluett

Mullen_bluett_ebay
Here’s a postcard showing Mullen and Bluett, one of the high-end clothing stories in the early days of Los Angeles, Broadway and 6th Street. On EBay starting at $7.99.
Posted in Architecture, Downtown, Fashion | 1 Comment

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

“It is best to have two sets of underwear and alternate them, wearing them one day at a time, allowing the other set to air for 24 hours. If possible hang them in the sunshine for it will purify them by destroying all disease germs.”

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

November 30, 1958: Former deputy strangles wife, kills himself as police close in

This is one of those stories where I wouldn’t change a word. We can only speculate as to who the anonymous rewrite man was, but he did a first-class job. All I can say is the obvious, which is that it’s tragic for everyone involved.

Continue reading

Posted in 1958, Front Pages, Homicide, Suicide | Comments Off on November 30, 1958: Former deputy strangles wife, kills himself as police close in