Nuestro Pueblo — Little Tokyo, November 7, 1938




1938_1107_nuestro

Above, 314 E. 1st St. in 1938 and, below, via Google maps’ street view. Pharmacist Shiro Nakamura graduated from USC in 1909. According to California death records, he was born in Japan in Sept. 1, 1892, and died in Orange County, Aug. 25, 1973.




 

Posted in City Hall, Downtown, Nuestro Pueblo | Comments Off on Nuestro Pueblo — Little Tokyo, November 7, 1938

Famous Monsters of Filmland

Forrest_ackerman_photo_by_jack_ca_4

Photograph by Jack Carrick /
Los Angeles Times

Forrest J. Ackerman, 1969

Geoff Boucher writes:

This is the 50th anniversary of the founding of "Famous Monsters of Filmland" by Forrest J. Ackerman, a man who almost single-handedly shaped the very essence of horror and science-fiction fandom. Uncle Forry, as he was affectionately known, was not only a fan, he has been an inspiring figure and friend to several generations of creators (he was Ed Wood’s literary agent, which is just wonderful to consider).

Read more >>>

Posted in art and artists, books, Film, Hollywood | 2 Comments

Vintage fashions on EBay — Bullock’s Collegienne

Bullocks_collegienne_ebay
Here’s another little vintage number on EBay from the Collegienne department at Bullock’s, this time the San Fernando Valley shop. Bidding starts at $145.

   
   
   

Posted in Fashion | Comments Off on Vintage fashions on EBay — Bullock’s Collegienne

Yma Sumac, April 24, 1957




1957_0424_sumac

Former Los Angeles Police Detective Fred Otash gets some rough treatment during a brawl at Yma Sumac’s home in 1957.

By Jack Smith

Singer
Yma Sumac’s home yesterday was the scene of the champion brawl in Hollywood’s history–featuring the Peruvian beauty herself,
her estranged husband, two hot-blooded Inca dancers, three private
detectives, a male Peruvian harpist and a collie dog named Prince.

The head-thumping, hair-pulling Donnybrook took place in the entry hall
of the Cheviot Hills home as the tension in the Sumac household finally
snapped into a shrieking extravaganza with sound effects in two
languages, not to mention the barking of the dog.

Read more >>>


Posted in Jack Smith, Obituaries | 1 Comment

Voices — Rahm Emanuel, March 29, 2001




Rahm_emanuel

Photograph by Charles Rex Arbogast /  Associated Press

Rep. Rahm Emanuel and Barack Obama, June 2008

Oddly, Bush Has a Lot to Learn From Clinton

March 29, 2001

By RAHM EMANUEL, Rahm Emanuel was senior advisor to President Clinton for policy and strategy

It’s often said of generals that they fight the last war. Increasingly, I think the same can be said of presidents. It is certainly true of George W. Bush, who seems determined to win the battle that made a casualty of his father’s presidency: the battle for loyalty from the Republican right wing.

As a veteran of a few political fights myself, I think there are always lessons to be drawn from the last one. I understand that the memories of 1992–especially the grudge match with Pat Buchanan in the snows of New Hampshire–are still fresh for the Bush family. But the political world has changed since then, and the new president’s political challenges are not his father’s.

If President Bush is looking for an analogy that fits, he should do two things that will not come naturally or painlessly. He should look past his father’s presidency and look to the man who defeated him in 1992: Bill Clinton. One lesson that Bush should take from his immediate predecessor is that first impressions count, and they take a lot of work to correct.

The Clinton administration’s early missteps–gays in the military, health care–gave the impression that we were more liberal than we had said we were. These were big mistakes, ones we and our party paid for dearly in 1994.

It took another two years for Clinton to move back to the political center and to prove he had meant what he said about reforming the Democratic Party. On issues such as free trade, welfare reform and criminal justice, Clinton opposed key constituencies in his own party. His willingness to challenge and overrule narrow party interests in favor of the national interest was essential to turning around his political fortunes. It was the price of modernizing our party and taking back the middle ground we had long ceded to our opponents.

First impressions of Bush are setting in. The image left with much of the public is of an administration held hostage by the extreme right and a president willing to mortgage his political future to the likes of conservative strategist Grover G. Norquist and Free Congress Foundation leader Paul Weyrich.

Intent on avoiding his father’s mistakes, Bush is mirroring Clinton’s, abandoning the mainstream for the margins–in Bush’s case, the far right. The new president has shown himself to be utterly beholden to special interests in addition to hard-line cultural and economic conservatives. Last week, the head of the Heritage Foundation approvingly called the new administration "more Reaganite than the Reagan administration."

More to the point, it is more Reaganite than the previous Bush administration. From the appointment of John Ashcroft as attorney general to abortion policy to the abandonment of American Bar Assn. ratings for judicial nominees, Bush has allowed legal policy to be made by the right. He has let special-interest contributors shape our nation’s environmental policy, as evidenced by his dramatic reversal on CO2 emissions and his surprising taste for arsenic in our drinking water.

Despite his early promise to change the GOP, Bush has yet to challenge core Republican constituencies, overturn orthodoxies or stand up to special interests in his party.

There’s a second lesson Bush should learn from Clinton: If you haven’t won a popular majority (Clinton won a plurality), don’t govern as if you had.

However badly the Clinton White House stumbled at first, it always had a strategy to win over moderate voters who cast their ballots for Ross Perot. We knew we weren’t going to win a second term without them.

I haven’t been out of Washington so long that I’d suggest Bush seek the third-party Nader vote. But as the president rushes rightward, he should pause long enough to consider the Gore vote, which, after all, was larger than his own. Vice President Al Gore captured a surprising percentage of the suburban vote in battleground states, which ought to have been Bush country.

The differences between Gore and Bush on legal and environmental policy played a significant role in eroding the once-safe Republican stronghold of suburban America. President Bush, by bowing to special-interest pressure in both areas, risks alienating the very voters who control his future, who could lift his non-mandate above the 47% of the vote he received.

Bush lost the popular vote. The country he leads is evenly divided. And the longer he huddles at the right end of the playing field, especially on issues like the environment and civil liberties, the more running room he gives his opponents in the great, wide center.

I’m not in the business of doling out political advice to Republicans. Nor do I think Bush will take counsel from a Clinton advisor. But I believe he should learn from Clinton’s experience and embrace our example. If not, he risks that history will repeat itself in the way he must fear most: another one-term Bush presidency.


 

Posted in @news, Current Affairs, Politics | 2 Comments

Changeling — Part X




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Los Angeles Times file photo

Gordon Northcott ignores his attorneys and argues with the judge, Dec. 5, 1928.

1928_1017_cover

Oct. 17, 1928: The Police Commission decides not to punish Capt. J.J. Jones for putting Christine Collins in a mental ward.



The most enduring question from "Changeling" is what became of Christine Collins. Unfortunately, the answer is fairly murky. We know from The Times that she lived at 217 N. Avenue 23, above, when Walter was killed by Gordon Northcott in 1928.

   
   
 

Gordon_northcott_1929_0113_crop

Los Angeles Times file photo

Prosecutors asked for an all-male jury, saying that the evidence would be too gruesome for any woman.
 

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Oct. 17, 1928: Neighbors say Christine Collins was delusional.

1930_0913_collins

Sept. 13, 1930: Collins wins $10,800 in damages against Capt J.J. Jones.


"Attorney Hahn pictured Mrs. Collins
as an anguished mother thrown in among deranged persons to emerge disgraced, unnerved and branded as
of unsound mind."


1930_0914_collins

1930_1001_cover


Sept. 14, 1930, left: Christine Collins plans to use the damages assessed against Capt. J.J. Jones to find out what happened to her son Walter.

Oct. 1, 1930, above: Shortly before Gordon Northcott was executed, Collins met with him one more time. She spoke with him for an hour, never asking directly if he killed her son. He finished the interview by saying:

"I only have two days to live, Mrs. Collins, and I am telling you the truth. I know nothing about your boy."
 

1930_1001_collins

Oct. 1, 1930: Northcott makes obscene goodbyes to death row inmates on his way to the execution cell.

1941_0129_collins

Jan. 29, 1941: The last time we hear of Christine Collins. The Times did not publish her address.

 
    

According to the 1936 city directory, a woman named Christine Collins lived at 584 E. Avenue 28, but no one by that name appears in the later online directories. I was also unable to find her in my 1941 city directory and 1946 Los Angeles phone book. The 1940-1997 California death records list 16 women named Christine Collins. A search in the Social Security Death Index produces 60 women by that name.



Posted in #courts, Changeling, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD | 50 Comments

Found on EBay — Batchelder tile

Batchelder_tile_ebay_crop
This piece of Batchelder tile caught my eye. It’s listed on EBay with bidding at $12. It’s stamped "Batchelder Los Angeles" on the back.

   
   

Posted in Architecture, art and artists | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Batchelder tile

Voices — Michael Crichton, 1942 – 2008




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Photograph by Ken Hively / Los Angeles Times

Author Michael Crichton in Santa Monica in 2002

Michael Crichton

‘Rising Sun’ Author Taps Darkest Fears of America’s Psyche

Sunday July 5, 1992

By T. Jefferson Parker, T. Jefferson Parker’s most recent novel, "Pacific Beat," was published in paperback last month by St. Martin’s Press. He interviewed Michael Crichton at the author’s Santa Monica office.

Michael Crichton’s new novel, "Rising Sun," rose to the bestseller list and stayed there 19 weeks–buoyed largely by the controversy and heated opinions the book has aroused. Crichton’s premise–that Japan’s rise to economic power is a serious danger to our own economy–has left people predictably polarized.

"Rising Sun" is a cautionary tale couched as a mystery. In it, Crichton argues that the United States is a second-rate economic power and is going to have to make some profound changes if it wishes to compete with vigor in the changing world economy.

Crichton, of course, has already proved himself a master at tapping into the near-atavistic fears of American readers. In his movie, "Westworld," and novel, "Jurassic Park," technology runs amok and attacks its handlers with a serious vengeance. In "Rising Sun," the Japanese pose a similarly dramatic threat by which our darkest intimations of a collapsed U.S. economy dominated by Japanese interests are encouraged to flourish. Crichton is fluent in the language of America’s popular nightmares.

Crichton himself is a well-spoken and deliberate man, apparently used to bringing all of his considerable attention to bear on whatever situation is before him. Though just 49, he has written eight novels, four works of nonfiction (ranging in subject from Jasper Johns to "electronic life") and has directed the movies "Westworld," "Coma" and "The Great Train Robbery." On top of all that, he graduated Harvard Medical School and, in 1969, was a post-doctoral fellow at the Salk Institute in La Jolla. For the record, Crichton stands six feet nine inches tall, and weighs a slender 235 pounds. He was not prone, in this situation at least, to jocularity. He is married, has one child and lives in Los Angeles. He sat talking amid books ranging from "Strategic Use of Scientific Evidence" to Gary Larson’s "The PreHistory of the Far Side." A bevy of toy dinosaurs sat atop one end table–presumably they were his, not his child’s.

Question: "Rising Sun" makes a strong argument that Japanese business is unfairly aggressive and Americans are foolish to have tolerated this unfairness for so long. Is that a decent synopsis?

Answer: Not exactly. Let me just restate it. In the immortal words of my hero, Ross Perot: "It’s not a two-way street. It never has been a two-way street. It’s not their fault." It’s our fault.

Q: That stated, then, I’d like to talk to you about two things–Japanese-American economics and race. Let’s get to the dangerous stuff first. Are you a racist?

A: No.

Q: Do you consider the Japanese racist?

A: Yes. Well, first of all, let’s track. There’s an extended discussion of race in the book. Different characters represent different views on perceptions of race. The central character, John Connor, who is the voice the reader is asked to believe, says, "Japan is the most racist country in the world."

Now, how people respond to this comment is, in my experience, a function of how much they know about Japan and how much experience they’ve had there.

Many people who have worked extensively in Japan will point to that statement and say, "That’s true." When I did the Dick Cavett show–and Dick Cavett has a good knowledge of Japan–he made a joke. He said, "Yes, that’s true. In fact, I invented racism. Ha, ha."

But what are we talking about here?

We’re talking about a historically inward-looking nation, an island nation, largely monoracial. That’s a good structure in which to have the rise of feelings of superiority about your own people as opposed to other people in the world. Of course, these broad statements can’t be applied to the individual Japanese person. One of the things that Americans, as a multiracial society, feel is a tremendous sensitivity to racial comments of all kinds.

In the book, one of the things I tried to say to Americans was: Hey, while you’re tiptoeing around the race issue, your competitors are a monoracial country, very much aligned, and tend to hold in common beliefs that would astound you.

Q: Have you been accused of Japan- bashing in "Rising Sun?"

A: Yeah, sure. I think that people who read the book tend to see one of two attitudes. Either they see this is a book about Japan, or a book about America. I think this is a book about America. My interest is America, and my whole focus is on how America is responding and behaving in the contemporary world. I’m not interested so much in how Japan is behaving because we have no control over that.

Unfortunately, our postwar policy has been to ask Japan to change so that our economic policies will dovetail. I think that is completely wrong. The solution is for America to change.

Anyway, you asked bashing. If Japan- bashing means an unreasoned and intemperate attack based on some irrational motive, then "Rising Sun" is not Japan- bashing.

Q: If we loosely define racism as an inherent desire in a person to promote and advance the interests of his or her race, I would contend, for the sake of discussion, that most people are racist. And that racism, as defined, can be a good and healthy thing. Would you agree?

A: No. No, I think we live in an increasingly small world, and to make divisions based on race is not to anyone’s benefit.

Q: How about nationality?

A: I think nationality is inevitable and necessary. The reason is that, although we may be moving toward a world economy, many aspects of economic behavior are still determined by nationality–they just are. In other words, I can buy a car that comes from many parts of the world now. But I will drive it on an American road; if I get in an accident, I will be in the American legal system; if I get injured, I’ll be in the American health- care system.

So, it’s not unreasonable to imagine that, at least as we’re in a transition to a world economy, it’s still necessary now to pay attention to how our country is doing economically in comparison with other countries. To become poor, to move in the direction of decline, to have the good- paying jobs disappear, to abandon our manufacturing sector, to not have a national economic policy as do our competitors–these are all bad ideas.

Q: Has the continued decline in the Japanese stock market, their falling real-estate value and shrinking foreign investment caused you to rethink your views of Japanese-American business dealings?

A: No, not at all. I’ve not seen figures on what the growth of the Japanese GNP will be this year. You hear stories about economic distress in Japan, but you see that the growth rate is going down to 4% from 5%. If this country had a 4% growth rate, we’d all feel like we were pumped full of testosterone.

Q: How did you feel when Matsushita bought Universal Studios?

A: Fine. It didn’t bother me a bit, because that sale doesn’t have large economic consequences for the nation. Did it bother you?

Q: Yes. My reaction was best put by Akio Morita, whom you quoted at the end of "Rising Sun," saying, "If you don’t want Japan to buy it, don’t sell it." I was more aggravated by the owners of Universal than I was by Matsushita. In the book, you seem as ready to blame the U.S. for its own decline as you are to blame Japan. True?

A: I think there’s no question it’s an American problem.

Q: What allowed us to contribute so willingly to our own weakening? Greed? Altruism? Shortsightedness? Arrogance?

A: (following a large sigh) You have to look back at
broad time periods. It’s possible now to argue that Americans have had no increase in real earnings power since 1962. Some economists would dispute that, and set the date at 1973.

Either way, the country is in a steady, consistent and ongoing decline. Why? That’s an extended conversation. I’ll just mention three things I think are of equal importance.

First, American business emerged from the postwar period in a position of tremendous superiority. Principal competitors of pre-World War II–Germany and Japan–are devastated. So American business is pumped up from wartime production, and everyone is feeling really good. We are on top of the world. That inevitably breeds complacency, and Americans had a long period of complacency.

Secondly, in the postwar period, Americans turned away from quality as the principal goal of manufacturing and made cost the principal goal. Japanese, restructuring their companies, made exactly the opposite decision. American quality-control experts who worked in America during the Second World War, became very nearly living treasures in Japan. So Japan and Germany have had decades of structuring business in the direction of quality, whereas Americans have had decades structuring business according to . . . other principles.

Thirdly, the cost of capital. The decline of the individual investor and rise of the institutional investor as the primary player in the stock market, and the change in tax laws so there’s no advantage in long-term as opposed to short-term investment, have meant that the American stock market is now entirely speculative.

No one invests in a company anymore, in the way it was done in the ’50s, say, because they believe the company is good. They buy because they think the price of the stock will rise or fall. What this means is that American managers are obliged to manage in the short term. There’s no incentive for an investor to hang on with a company for the long term. In Japan, savings–up to a certain point–are tax free. Why is that not also true in America? You want savings? Then don’t tax it as ordinary income.

Q: OK, a shift of focus. As you probably know, your statement in "Rising Sun," that two floors of the Hitachi Chemical Research building at the University of California, Irvine, are accessible only with Japanese passports, caused quite a ripple at UCI. But the university says your statement isn’t true. What do you say?

A: My understanding is there is a building on that campus, part of which is private and closed. How closed is the subject of this debate. My answer would be that the sentence I have in the book is not technically accurate. But the feeling is not wrong. Is the sentence wrong? It’s not wrong enough. There’s a problem of Japanese investment in American universities. We are not being careful about where the money is coming from. More than 10% of the endowed chairs at MIT are paid for by Japanese corporations. Is anybody worried about that?

Q: Your critics say that you’re exploiting an irrational fear of Japan, making Japan a kind of economic great white shark. Was "Rising Sun" written with an eye for the U.S. book market, or from your heart?

A: Absolutely from my heart.

Q: Do you have Japanese friends?

A: (laughs) Yes, I still do.

Q: Without talking specifics, would you describe the advance from your Japanese publisher as large, small or in-between?

A: I would say the advance is a lot.

Q: Any tugging at your soul there?

A: For a Japanese translation? No. I think it’s very important it be translated in Japan. I’m not xenophobic. I believe we should be in business with Japan. What would I do, say "no" to a translation? I wrote the book to be read.


 

Posted in books, Obituaries | Comments Off on Voices — Michael Crichton, 1942 – 2008

Changeling — Part IX


1929_0211_picture

Gordon_northcott_nd_21_crop

Los Angeles Times file photo

Gordon Northcott

On the eve of Gordon Northcott’s sentencing, a mob goes to the jail where he is being held. One of the leaders is N.H. Winslow, the father of two of Northcott’s victims, Lewis and Nelson Winslow.


   
   
   
"I want the bodies of my boys. There are more than 250 men surrounding
this jail. If you allow us to take Northcott from here we will create
no disturbance. All we ask is that he reveal where he buried the bodies
of my children."

–N.H. Winslow

1929_0211_cover

 "You must allow the law to take its course."
1929_0211_runover
 Youth turns deathly pale.
Posted in Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD | Comments Off on Changeling — Part IX

How to dress like a librarian for Halloween

Lanyard_2

From Librarian on the Run:

I’ve been getting a lot of hits recently by people searching for "how
to dress like a librarian."

Will there be a lot of librarians
trick-or-treating this year? My guess is that most people dressing as
librarians will go for the "hot librarian" vs. "dowdy librarian" look.

It’s been my experience, that real-life librarians fall somewhere in
the middle of these 2 stereotypes. That is, we don’t look like we’ll
give you a spanking you’ll enjoy and we also don’t look like a
character from the Revenge of the Nerds movies.

Read more >>>

   

Posted in Fashion | Comments Off on How to dress like a librarian for Halloween

Box Set — Hank Williams




1953_0102_williams

Hank Williams’ obituary in The Times, Jan. 2, 1953

October 28, 2008

By Robert Hilburn

More than a half century after his death, Hank Williams remains so revered as a songwriter that his gifts as a singer are often underappreciated. But one of the strengths of "The Unreleased Recordings," a remarkable new CD boxed set released today, is the way it showcases the brilliance of his vocal skills.

Besides his singing prowess, the three-disc package, which features 54 radio show performances, also underscores Williams’ musical influences, including his affinity for gospel songs and his playful personality

Read more >>>


 

Posted in Blues, Music, Nightclubs, Obituaries | Comments Off on Box Set — Hank Williams

Architecture — Craig Ellwood


Photograph courtesy of Architecture for Sale

The exterior of the Johnson/Stone residence, designed by Craig Ellwood

Craig_ellwood_interior

Currently listed: The Johnson/Stone residence, 1515 Tigertail Road, Los Angeles. $2.795 million.

More information is here >>>

Posted in Architecture, Real Estate | Comments Off on Architecture — Craig Ellwood

Changeling — Part VIII




Gordon_northcott_nd_16_crop

Los Angeles Times file photo

Gordon Northcott: "Youth Convicted as Boy-Butcher."

Gordon_northcott_1928_1203_crop

Los Angeles Times file photo

"I killed Alvin Gothea on the ranch…"

Gordon Northcott is convicted and sentenced to death. There were appeals but he was hanged at San Quentin.

Several people have asked what became of Christine Collins, the mother of victim Walter Collins. The answer is vague. I’ll try to tie up the loose ends as best I can in the next few days.

The Times stories are available via ProQuest. Those with a Los Angeles Public Library card may access them here. Otherwise you may get them from The Times archives.

   
   
   

1929_0203_cover
Trial nears conclusion.
1929_0203_runover
"I will reveal many things in connection with these so-called murders … "
Gordon_northcott_1929_0111_crop

Los Angeles Times file photo

Court Clerk O.A. Lowentrout with a .22 rifle introduced as evidence.

1929_0207_page

"We consider it your duty to the state of California that you rid it once and for all of the malignant influence of Gordon Stewart Northcott."
1929_0208_cover
NORTHCOTT FOUND GUILTY;
MUST DIE ON GALLOWS
1929_0208_runover
Almost Unbelievable Crimes Woven Into History of State’s Most Erratic Criminal

 
    

Gordon_northcott_1929_0128_crop

Los Angeles Times file photo

Gordon Northcott, right, questions Rex Welch, analytical expert, about bloodstains on a bucket introduced as evidence in a photograph published Jan. 28, 1929.


Posted in #courts, Changeling, Film, Hollywood, Homicide | Comments Off on Changeling — Part VIII

Vintage fashions on EBay — Bullock’s Wynshire

Ebay_wynshire
Here’s a little black number by Rimini from the Wynshire department at Bullock’s Wilshire, which was converted to a Macy’s in 1995. Bidding starts at $49.

   
   
   

Posted in Architecture, Fashion | Comments Off on Vintage fashions on EBay — Bullock’s Wynshire

Nixon, Humphrey close in poll; Rams win over Lions, November 4, 1968




1968_1104_cover

1968, when percentages were calculated by hand.



1968_1104_sports
The Rams defeated the Detroit Lions, 10-7, but few people apparently
left the Coliseum happy. Mal Florence’s story in The Times said the
Rams were "repeatedly" booed during the fourth quarter when they
stopped trying to pass. Quarterback Roman Gabriel missed his last seven
pass attempts.

Quotes of the game: "That’s got to be the most agonizing game I’ve
ever seen. How long did it last? Five hours?" Coach George Allen asked.

"I have nothing to say," Gabriel told Florence in the locker room. "Let’s just say it’s self-imposed silence."

Headline on the game: "Rams Prevail in Stone-Age Battle." Despite
all the complaints, the Rams moved to 7-1 and were tied with Baltimore
for their division lead.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in @news, Front Pages, Politics, Sports | 1 Comment

Billy Wilder on ‘Some Like It Hot’; Dodger stars pay a visit, November 4, 1958




1958_1104_scheuer

Billy Wilder discusses the strengths of typecasting in "Some Like It Hot," a movie that was filmed in 1958.



1958_1104_sports

Movie note: Ernest Hemingway makes a cameo appearance in "The Old Man and the Sea."

Add this story to the list of things from the 1950s you’d rarely see today.

Don Drysdale and Carl Furillo visited The Times and The Mirror to
kick off the Dodgers’ tour of local businesses. What a smart, easy way
to meet some fans and keep the team in the newspaper during football
and basketball seasons.

"We want them to meet as many fans as possible at handshaking range
and we believe that the best way to do this will be to have them visit
plants where our Dodger fans work," General Manager Buzzie Bavasi said.

Hard to imagine seeing Manny Ramirez at the office.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Dodgers, Downtown, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood | Comments Off on Billy Wilder on ‘Some Like It Hot’; Dodger stars pay a visit, November 4, 1958

Changeling –Part VII

                                    

Gordon_northcott_nd_20_crop
Los Angeles Times file photo

From left, prosecutor Earl (sometimes spelled Earle) Redwine, Loyal Kelley, A.H. de Tremaudan (sometimes spelled Tremandon), J. McKinley Cameron, David Sokol, Gordon Northcott and Norbert Savay.

1928_1201_cover
Trial planned for Riverside.
Another installment of the Gordon Northcott saga. As I noted previously, The Times published far more stories than I can possibly post here. These are selected highlights. The Times stories are available via ProQuest. Those with a Los Angeles Public Library card may access them here. Otherwise you may get them from The Times archives.

Spoiler alert: The actual Gordon Northcott story takes a surprise turn when the defendant, acting as his own attorney, questions Louisa Northcott. 

            

1928_1201_runoverGordon Northcott denies confession. 1929_0102_northcott
Trial begins today.

            

1929_0103_cover
Insanity plea denied.
1929_0103_runover
Louisa Northcott denies killing.

            

Gordon_northcott_1928_1213_crop
Los Angeles Times file photo

Gordon Northcott, left, and Louisa Northcott in court, Dec. 13, 1928.

1929_0111_page
Gruesome evidence.
1929_0117_northcott
Gordon Northcott fires lawyer.
Figures of the Old West gather for Wyatt Earp’s funeral.

         

1929_0122_page
Skull fragment examined.
1929_0201_cover
Gordon Northcott may confess.

            

1929_0201_runover
Louisa Northcott reveals that Gordon Northcott is her daughter’s child.
1929_0202_page
Christine Collins testifies.

            

Posted in #courts, @news, Changeling, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD | 1 Comment

November 3, 1958: 44 shopping days until Christmas

November 3, 1958: Only 44 shopping days until Christmas!
Honestly! The Christmas ads start earlier every year. I remember when they used to wait until after Thanksgiving! Continue reading

Posted in Fashion, Food and Drink, Religion | 1 Comment

Officials turn away football crowds at Coliseum, November 3, 1958

November 3, 1958: The all-new Studebaker!Look beyond the nostalgia factor in this film produced for Studebaker dealers. Listen to the comments. The Studebaker Lark was, according to this film, intended to give consumers what they wanted: a low-priced, fuel economy car. We know today, of course, that Studebaker failed for many reasons. But these executives were positive they had read the market correctly.

“Your product philosophy is right. This is exactly what our customers want.”

Continue reading

Posted in @news, Film, Freeways, Front Pages, Sports, Transportation | Comments Off on Officials turn away football crowds at Coliseum, November 3, 1958

Changeling — Part VI

Los Angeles Times file photo

In going through the photographs from the Gordon Northcott case, I’m struck by how different Northcott looks from one image to another. Sometimes he appears  thoughtful, even bookish. In others, he looks quite demonic. In the undated picture above, probably taken at San Quentin, he seems sensitive and reflective.

Los Angeles Times file photo

At Kamloops, B.C., Sgt. Fraser of the British Columbia Provincial Police, left, escorts Gordon Northcott to Vancouver after Northcott was captured in Vernon, B.C.. The Times published this photo Sept. 23, 1928.

Los Angeles Times file photosHere, he looks like a young writer. And here, he looks demonic.
Los Angeles Times file photo

C.F. Rayburn, left, and Jack Brown in the drawing room of the Southern Pacific’s Owl train as they escort Gordon Northcott to San Quentin, where he was hanged.

Northcott executed “Don’t hang me. Don’t hang me.”
Posted in #courts, @news, Changeling, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD | 4 Comments