Movie revivals — The Unholy Three

Coming soon to a theater near you…

1925_unholy

Above, "The Unholy Three," 1925.

Oct. 7, 2008, 8 p.m. Silent Movie Theatre. Tickets $10.

"The Unholy Three," Lon Chaney, Mae Busch.

 

Posted in Coming Attractions, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Yankees one game away from losing series, October 6, 1958


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Gary Cooper and Julie London in "Man of the West."

1958_october_06_sports
By Keith Thursby

Times Staff Writer

The Yankees were one game away from losing two consecutive World
Series for the first time since the 1920s.  The Milwaukee Braves, led
by left-hander Warren Spahn, blanked New York, 3-0, at Yankee Stadium
to take a 3-1 lead in the series. Spahn gave up only two hits.

The Braves needed seven games to defeat the Yankees in the 1957
Series. The New York Giants were the last team to defeat the Yankees in
consecutive World Series, in 1921-22
 

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Rams win over 49ers, 33-3, October 6, 1958

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The 1958 Rams were known as an offensive bunch. After all, this team
was coached by Sid Gillman, regarded even then as an offensive genius.
But even though the Rams defeated the 49ers, 33-3, the story by The
Times’ Cal Whorton stressed defense.

Players of the game: Team effort on defense. San Francisco gained only 85 yards rushing and 101 yards in the air.

Paragraph of the game: This story was long and thorough but not memorable. If you like play-by-play, this one is for you.

   
   
   

Posted in Front Pages, Sports | Comments Off on Rams win over 49ers, 33-3, October 6, 1958

The fall TV season, October 6, 1958

1958_october_06_tv Highway_patrol_3

The fall 1958 television season begins with some returning shows ("Highway Patrol") and some new programs, including "The Ann Sothern Show" and "Desilu Playhouse."

Although "Desilu Playhouse" had a relatively brief run, it is notable for launching two of the most important series in TV history: "Twilight Zone" ("Time Element," starring William Bendix, which aired Nov. 24, 1958) and "The Untouchables," starring Robert Stack and Kennan Wynn, which aired in two parts beginning April 19, 1959.

   
   
   

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Young cancer patient cheers for Cubs, October 6, 1938


1938_october_06_cover

Nazis bill Czechs for "reparations"; Mayor Fletcher Bowron plans investigation of civic corruption.

1938_october_06_sports

Crowds gather outside on 1st Street outside The Times Building to watch World Series results on the newspaper’s scoreboard. It looks like they had loudspeakers as well.

By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

A young fan of the Chicago Cubs hangs on to life as his beloved team
tries to defeat the New York Yankees in the 1938 World Series. Movie
script or newspaper article?

It’s hard not to be a little cynical regarding this United Press
story about 14-year-old Johnny English. Maybe he really did exist,
propped up with pillows so he could listen to the first game of the
series a little more comfortably. Maybe I’ve just seen too many Disney
movies.

"They’re gonna win," the boy said, according to the story. "They’ve just gotta."

These being the Cubs, of course, they didn’t. The Yankees took Game 1, 3-1.

[Postscript: Johnny English died Jan. 17, 1939, according to the Chicago Tribune].

Posted in #courts, @news, City Hall, Front Pages, Sports | Comments Off on Young cancer patient cheers for Cubs, October 6, 1938

Movie revivals — He Walked by Night


Coming soon to a theater near you…

1948_he_walked

Above, "He Walked by Night,"1948.

Feb. 10, 2009, 8 p.m. Ramo Auditorium at Caltech.

"He Walked by Night," with discussion afterward. Frank Capra Film Series. Free.

 

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October 5, 1958: Lost genius found in homeless camp

October 5, 1958: Los Angeles Times front page, with the story of Elmer Meukel.

October 6, 1958: Elmer "Mox" Meukel is reunited with his wife, Jean and children. Elmer Clarence “Mox” Meukel told his story to a couple of hobos in a shack on Scott Island in the Truckee River near Reno.

Most people wrote him off as a crackpot dreamer. After all, he was a sometime songwriter and self-taught inventor, but these men listened to his story.

Mox said he and some co-workers at Bendix Corp. had been designing a motion detector that would sound an alarm when a child got near a swimming pool.

On Feb. 1, 1958, the day he was laid off at Bendix, two military planes collided over Norwalk, killing 48 people. Mox said he realized that his motion detector could
be turned into a device that would prevent such midair crashes.

Without a job, he began working on the device in the garage of the home at 7716 Bonner Ave., Sun Valley, that he shared with his wife, Jean, and three children.

“Mox sold his engineering books, my jewelry, cameras, a rifle, tools–just about everything we owned to finance this thing,” his wife said. Continue reading

Posted in Front Pages, Science | 2 Comments

In the news: Nicole Brown Simpson, July 3, 1994



Los Angeles Times file photo
Nicole Brown Simpson

Dreams of Better Days Died That Night

Nicole Simpson: A strong woman, she was on a quest to find her identity.

By Shawn Hubler
and Rebecca Trounson
Times Staff Writers

In the beginning, she didn’t even recognize him, that’s how unworldly she was. “That’s O.J. Simpson!” her boss at the nightclub exclaimed. She had never heard of the guy. Continue reading

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‘There is no longer any violence in the eyes of O.J. Simpson,’ October 6, 1968


1968_october_06_cover

 Nixon leads Humphrey in state poll

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By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

It’s easy to pick apart an old profile of a famous person. The
celebrity talks of hopes and dreams and you can see what went according
to the script through the years and what went wrong. Charles Einstein’s
profile of O.J. Simpson in West magazine provides a window into
Simpson’s senior season at USC, when he would win the Heisman Trophy as
the nation’s top college football player. It’s familiar territory but
still interesting reading.

Eisenstein deals with Simpson’s remarkable (and relatively short)
career at USC and looks back on his 64-yard touchdown run the previous
season against UCLA. There’s even an artist’s re-creation of the run
that leaves no doubt the story was published in the 1960s.

But anyone reading about O.J. wants more than details about football.

Simpson talks about how the game changed his life. "I was somebody
who didn’t care about anything and the best thing you can say about me
and trouble is that I was borderline," he tells Einstein. "Maybe I
didn’t actually do anything but I was there when it happened and that’s
all you have to be, is there. Then they pick you up anyway."

He also discusses how he’d like to eventually work with young people, probably in his old San Francisco neighborhood.

"In a way it will be good to have money because money is what
impresses people who don’t have any," Simpson says. "On the other hand,
there’ll be a problem because if my money comes from football what do I
say to a kid who isn’t an athlete? That if he studies hard he can be
like me?"

The author says this is "a practical dilemma" for Simpson in part
because of old friends who were gifted athletes but didn’t get a
college scholarship.

"The publicity mills at Southern Cal make a point of describing
Simpson as ‘humble.’ If they are right, it is likely for a deeper
reason than they know, for Simpson’s humility does not masquerade as
under-confidence," Einstein writes. "Instead, it reflects his
admiration for the ability of others–including those who, perhaps
through no fault of their own, didn’t make it."


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

Coming attractions– Tour of Garfield Heights neighborhood




Marengo_house

Photograph courtesy of the Garfield Heights Neighborhood Assn.
The Garfield Heights area of Pasadena (north of the 210 Freeway between Marengo and Los Robles avenues) will host a home tour Sunday, Oct. 5, noon to 5 p.m. Tickets are $15 and may be picked up at 1247 N. Garfield on the day of the tour.

Garfield Heights is the second-oldest neighborhood in Pasadena, according to the neighborhood association. Architectural styles include Victorian, Craftsman and Spanish revival with homes designed by Greene and Greene, Sylvanus Marston and Arthur Benton. 

More information is available at ghnaboard@garfieldheights.org.


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Fixing what’s wrong with baseball, October 4, 1958




1958_october_04_youth

What young women are wearing today: knee socks with patterns just like dad’s. Hey look! It’s Annette!

1958_october_04_sports
By Keith Thursby

Times staff writer

Sometimes an idea needs a little time to pick up speed.

St. Louis sports journalist Bob Broeg strongly pitched the concept
of interleague play as a way to revive baseball. The Times’ Al Wolf
wrote about his conversation with Broeg, identified as president of the
"big league baseball writers’ fraternity."

"I think the fans would eat it up," Broeg said. "Take Los Angeles
for example. Your fans have seen all the National League stars now. The
crowds might hold up and again they may not–especially when clubs like
Cincinnati and Philadelphia come around again.

"But what kind of business do you think the Dodgers would do if the
Yankees came to town for actual championship games? How about the Red
Sox with Ted Williams? The White Sox with Billy Pierce and Nellie Fox?
And so on."

He had me with the Yankees. And we all now know that if the Red Sox
came to the Coliseum, about 115,000 people would show up. Just don’t
ask about parking.

Baseball finally warmed to the idea in 1997. As for The Times’ Wolf,
he was ready to start in 1959: "I buy it, Brother Broeg, and the sooner
the better."




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Nazis roll into Czechoslovakia, October 4, 1938

Triumphant Hitler enters with troops into the Sudetenland

Cheering crowds greet Nazi leader, shouting, ‘We thank our Fuehrer!’

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Films in production: Claire Trevor is cast is "Stagecoach."

 

1938_october_04_cover

Apes throw hand grenades

British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain defends his actions before the House of Commons, saying that the Munich conference had saved civilization "as we have known it."

Viciously criticized by British lawmakers, Chamberlain replies, "I have nothing to be ashamed of."

In New York, the Queen Mary arrives crammed with people fleeing Europe, including Douglas Fairbanks Sr.

And in Los Angeles, reports that the grand jury will investigate the Civil Service Commission.

1938_october_04_hitler

Times leads in classified ads

At left, the text of Hitler’s address to the Sudeten Germans.


"Never again will this land be torn away from the Reich."
–Adolf Hitler


"And so now we begin our march into the great German future and we want in this hour to thank the Almighty that he has blessed us on our path in the past and we want to ask him that in the future also he may lead our way to a bounteous Germany.

"Sieg Heil."

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$30 weekly pension criticized

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Critics besiege Chamberlain

1938_october_04_pix

Pictures from Czechoslovakia

1938_october_04_sports

Chicago celebrates Cubs’ victory

Posted in #courts, @news, City Hall, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Politics, Sports | Comments Off on Nazis roll into Czechoslovakia, October 4, 1938

Coming attraction — Archives Bazaar




Figueroa_tunnels_card

USC is hosting the third annual Los Angeles Archives Bazaar Oct. 25, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free.

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Anyone who has researched Los Angeles history knows that the material is spread all over the city and not always in the most logical spot. For example, items from the early history of USC’s medical school are housed at UCLA. The archives bazaar, sponsored by L.A. as Subject, is an annual gathering to show off Los Angeles history and provide a clearinghouse for researchers, whether they are working on a scholarly project or family genealogy.

The list of exhibitors shows the amazing diversity of the city’s many archives and libraries. Of course, the better-known collections, like the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Autry National Center, Los Angeles City Archives, Los Angeles Public Library, and UCLA Special Collections, will be represented.

But that’s only the beginning. Consider these groups, which will also be taking part:

Boyle Heights Historical Society; Chinese Historical Society of Southern California; Filipino-American Library; Japanese American National Museum; LA84 Foundation–Sports Library; Mayme A. Clayton Library and Museum; One National Gay and Lesbian Archives; Orange Empire Railway Museum; Society of California Archivists and the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center Library and Archive.

The bazaar will also include screenings of films, presentations on genealogy, teaching sessions and  book signings by William Estrada, "The Los Angeles Plaza"; Jonathan Gold, "Counter Intelligence"; Carina Monica Montoya, "Filipinos in Hollywood"; Icy Smith, "Mei Ling in China City"; Jervey Tervalon, "Lita: All the Trouble You Need Understand This"; and J. Michael Walker, "All the Saints of the City of Angels." 

The Los Angeles Archives Bazaar will be held at USC Davidson Conference Center, 3415 S. Figueroa (at Jefferson Boulevard). Free. Parking at USC Parking Structure D is $8. Visitors can get free or discounted admissions to museums in Exposition Park.


 

Posted in Coming Attractions | 1 Comment

Dodgers trade for Wally Moon, October 3, 1958




1958_october_03_streetcar

1958_october_03_moon
By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer
 
Here’s one story about a potential baseball trade that turned out to be right.

The Times’ Frank Finch reported from the World Series in Milwaukee that the Dodgers were discussing a deal for St. Louis outfielder Wally Moon. The Dodgers, of course, were trying to rebound from a disappointing first season in Los Angeles.

Moon, a left-handed hitter, would turn out to be a great pickup, hitting 19 home runs in 1959 and becoming a fan favorite by golfing "Moon shots" over the Coliseum’s left field screen.  Finch’s story suggested that Moon "would fancy the right-field fence at the Coliseum after it’s moved in next year." Moon was an all-star in 1957 and ’59 and would play for the Dodgers through 1965.

Finch suggested that outfielder Gino Cimoli would go to the Cardinals. The trade didn’t happen until December, with pitcher Phil Paine also coming to the Dodgers.

Another player mentioned in Finch’s story was minor league second baseman George Anderson, who apparently was being sought by the Phillies. Anderson, better known these days as Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson, was expendable because he stuck behind second baseman Charlie Neal with the Dodgers.
 


 

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Coming attraction — Gem of the Ocean

Gem_ocean August Wilson’s "Gem of the Ocean," the first drama in his 10-play cycle on the African American experience,  opens in previews Oct. 3-10 at the Fountain Theatre, 5060 Fountain Ave. The regular run of the play, set in Pittsburgh in 1904, begins Oct. 11 and ends Nov. 16. Tickets are $15-$30.

   
   
   

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Democrats a threat to economy, Nixon says, October 2, 1958

Democrats want to raise taxes, Nixon charges.

Times reporter Ira Greenberg accompanies the vice president on an early morning stroll along Wilshire Boulevard and calls him "a swell guy."

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Brigitte Bardot in "The Light Across the Street."

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Eurailpass introduced

Vice President Richard M. Nixon addresses local Republicans at the Ambassador Hotel and urges them to vote the straight ticket.


"Whatever differences we have in the Republican Party are infinitesimal compared to the gulf between the basic philosophy that motivates this Republican administration with the basic philosophy that will control the economy if more Democrats are elected to Congress."

— Vice President Richard Nixon


Yankees fan Anthony Albano watches the first game of the World Series (Braves, 4-3) from a 135-foot light pole in center field. It seems he couldn’t get a ticket for the game. 

1958_october_02_runover

Democrats’ ‘rotgut thinking’

1958_october_02_sports

Braves take Series Game 1

Posted in Current Affairs, Dodgers, Front Pages, Politics, Sports | 1 Comment

Reading list, 1938

Shirer_diary I dug out my old copy of William L. Shirer’s "Berlin Diary" the other day and was pleasantly surprised to see how much more I understood of what he was saying after going through all these 1938 newspapers. What had once seemed like a tedious rehash loaded with unfamiliar names took on new life after I immersed myself in The Times’ daily coverage of European affairs.

For those who are interested in this era, I would strongly recommend "Berlin Diary" as an illuminating commentary on what’s being posted on the Daily Mirror.

Another interesting account, by the way, is Howard K. Smith’s "Last Train From Berlin," a book I discovered at a thrift store in Seattle many years ago. I’m sure my copy is in a box somewhere around the Daily Mirror H.Q. I’ll have to look for it.

Posted in @news, books, Politics | Comments Off on Reading list, 1938

Rosh Hashana, 1954




Rosh_1954_crop

Los Angeles Times file photo
Rabbi Julian Feingold of University Synagogue of Brentwood sounds the shofar as Cantor Samuel G. Broude, Sigmund Lample and Sanford Barbas watch in a photo published Sept. 26, 1954. The girl in the photo was unidentified. Feingold, the synagogue’s first full-time rabbi, retired in 1963, according to "The American Synagogue."


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Movie revival — ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’

1968_0603_2001 Oct. 12, 2008, 6 p.m. The Edison downtown. Tickets $20.

 Stanley Kubrick’s film based on the script written with Arthur C. Clarke.

Posted in Coming Attractions | Comments Off on Movie revival — ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’

Wilt Chamberlain plays first Laker home game




1968_october_01_twiggy

Above, Twiggy begins a U.S. tour.


1968_october_01_lakers
By Keith Thursby
Times Staff Writer


One game in L.A. and Wilt Chamberlain already felt like a hero in his new home.

"I guess it is mainly because of my size and strength but to most
basketball fans I have been mostly a villain," Chamberlain told The
Times’ Dan Hafner. "It would appear that things here in Los Angeles are going to be different."

Chamberlain led the Lakers
to a 117-95 victory over the San Francisco Warriors at the Forum. It
was only an exhibition, but the early reviews were very positive.

"The
fans really enjoyed watching the big man," Hafner
wrote. "They cheered wildly when he made a free throw. But they
received their biggest kick when Chamberlain grabbed a rebound and
started dribbling up court."

Wilt would average 21 rebounds and 20.5 points per game during the regular season, which on the powerful Lakers would make him only the third scorer behind Jerry West and Elgin Baylor.

Hafner
made an interesting point in his game story: "Instant hero worship is a
malady native to Los Angeles sports fans. For many years in just about
every sport L.A. fans have had their heroes and they have been treated
in the manner of kings."  Manny Ramirez, meet Wilt Chamberlain.

Hafner predicted stardom for another Laker, former USC standout Bill Hewitt.

"He has the moves of Baylor and combines quickness and jumping ability, two essentials for a pro star," Hafner wrote.
Hewitt averaged only 7.2 points a game in 1968-69 and the next year was traded to Detroit for forward Happy Hairston, who became a starter on the Lakers‘ 1971-72 championship team.



keith.thursby@latimes.com

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