The Daily Mirror

Larry Harnisch reflects on Los Angeles history

Category: June 1, 2008 - June 7, 2008

| The Daily Mirror Home |

Paul Coates




1958_0607_coates
 

Matt Weinstock


1958_0607_weinstock
 

June 6-7, 1908


1907_uss_tennessee
Photograph by the U.S. Navy

1908_0607_funeral

1908_0606_page

Four men are scalded to death and 10 are badly burned when a steam pipe bursts on  the Navy cruiser Tennessee during tests of ship's top speed off Port Hueneme.

The most seriously injured are brought ashore and treated at Angelus Hospital after the ship docks at San Pedro. Three burn victims die in the next few days, raising the toll to seven. The men were buried at San Pedro's Harbor View Memorial Cemetery.

Email me







June, 7, 1958


1958_0606_clennon_king

1958_0607_mirror

Above and at left, what do you do with an African American professor who is a faculty member at an African American school, Alcorn A&M College, and attempts to enroll at an all-white campus, the University of Mississippi at Oxford?

Obviously, the poor man is insane. Obviously the poor man needs to be taken into custody for his own protection and sent to the state mental hospital for psychiatric evaluation.

This story was front-page news for the Mirror--and completely ignored by The Times. Ouch.

Email me


June 7, 1938


Chinatwn

New Chinatown opens, 1938.


1938_0607_page
1938_0607_runover

Above and at right, a special feature of New Chinatown is a dragon salvaged from the old Times Building, presumably the one built at 1st Street and Broadway after the 1910 bombing. The metal dragon was part of the flagpole, according to Times columnist Ed Ainsworth.

Stay tuned as I go looking for the Harry Carr Gate on Main Street and let's see if the old dragon from The Times is still around.

And in case you don't know, New Chinatown was built to replace the original, which was demolished to make way for Union Station. This is why you can find Chinese artifacts whenever you stick a shovel in the ground in that neighborhood.

Planners and civic improvement groups had been trying to consolidate the city's various railroad depots for more than 30 years when Union Station was built. When it comes to transportation, nothing ever happens quickly in Los Angeles.

Email me

Howard Decker writes:

Interesting stuff about Chinatown. There was a third Chinatown in El Lay. A Chinese friend of mine took me
there in 1979, and a very few Chinese shops were still there, including a restaurant. As I recall it is was in the vicinity of Pico and Broadway. I seem to recall it came into use after the Chinese got kicked out of the Union Station area.

Spent some mighty good times in "the new" Chinatown. There was a restaurant/bar owner there back in the 1950s who loved newspaper people and would pour monster drinks and half of the time would forget to charge ya. Also, when I was with the East West Players we used to go there. Some folks in the know would lead us down dark alleyways and take us to great noodle
places, dirt cheap, full of Chinese folks. That's always a good sign. And one actress had been married to Gen. Lee's son and they were friendly and would serve up a vast dinner for peanuts at his restaurant.

As a cub reporter on the midnight to 8 am shift we'd go a lot of the time to Chung Mee's, near Chinatown, which was one of the few places you could get a decent meal at 4 a.m. in them days. Their lobster in black bean sauce was $3.50 -- a little pricey, but worth it.




1938_0403_ainsworth

 

Home of the week


June 7, 1908

1908_0607_shorb

1908_0607_home


Above, the home of J. de Barth Shorb (1842-1896) in San Marino, which Henry Huntington has torn down to make way for his cozy little cottage.  True confession: I have been a member of the Huntington for years and spent many hours on the grounds, but I never really thought about what used to be there, rather foolishly assuming that it had all been vacant. In a word, no.

"Mr. Huntington was asked how much the building will cost and he remarked that it looked to him as though it will cost $75,000 ($1,649,028.64 USD 2007) at least, perhaps it will cost more. He said he will find out about that later on."

Email me






June 6, 1958


1958_0606_cover

1958_0606_weinstock

1968_0606_coates



A couple of odd, sad stories... A Spanish American War veteran's widow dies while donating the flag from his casket to a junior high ... A student with polio graduates as valedictorian from Washington and Lee University ... And the Mirror praises passage of Proposition B as a sign that Los Angeles has come of age. Placing Dodger Stadium downtown, the heart of the metropolis, spells "Big City," the Mirror says ...

On the cover of Part 2, Dear Abby offers advice to a woman whose husband is too romantic, and Matt Weinstock talks about city traffic ... and Jack Webb is getting married again.

Inside, Paul Coates describes the uses and abuses of a newspaper legman.

Bonus factoids: Yes, the John McCone in the cover story is the same one who was director of the Central Intelligence Agency and headed the commission investigating the Watts riots.

Email me

 

RFK-postscripts


Chicago_1968_0829_demo_file
Los Angeles Times file photo

Antiwar demonstrators fight with Chicago police during the 1968 Democratic National Convention.

1968_0808_nixon At left, former Vice President Richard M. Nixon wins the Republican nomination for the 1968 presidential race. He selects Maryland Gov. Spiro T. Agnew as his
running mate.


Humbert_humphrey_1968_0901_edmund_m
Los Angeles Times file photo

The 1968 Democratic ticket: Vice President Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota and Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine.


1968_0830_humphrey



Demo_convention_detail_1968_0829_fi

Humphrey wins the nomination, provoking boos and catcalls when he mentions President Lyndon Johnson. Humphrey says of the violence in Chicago: "We do not want a police state, but we do need a state of law and order. Neither mob violence nor police brutality have any place in America."


1968_1107_nixon



Richard_nixon_1968_1110_file
Los Angeles Times file photo

Richard Nixon is elected president, Nov. 9, 1968, promising peace with honor in Vietnam.


1969_0522_sirhan
Sirhan_1968_0604_ben_oldender_copy Sirhan Bishara Sirhan is convicted and sentenced to the gas chamber May 21, 1969. His sentence is commuted to life in prison when the California Supreme Court overturns the death penalty in 1972.









Richard_nixon_1972_0824_spiro_agnew
Los Angeles Times file photo

Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and President Richard M. Nixon are reelected in 1972. Agnew is charged with income tax evasion and resigns Oct. 10, 1973, to be replaced by Rep. Gerald R. Ford. Nixon resigns Aug. 8, 1974, over the Watergate scandal, making Ford president. On April 23, 1975, Ford declares the Vietnam War over. Saigon falls to the North Vietnamese on April 30, 1975.



Ambassador_1991_0619_robert_durell
Los Angeles Times Photograph
In 2006, the Los Angeles Unified School District finishes demolition of the Ambassador Hotel despite efforts by the Los Angeles Conservancy to save the landmark. A $4-million settlement with the Conservancy clears the way for destruction  of the Cocoanut Grove.

Email me

Remembering RFK

Robert_kennedy_1968_screen_grab01

Image courtesy of KTLA-TV
Robert F. Kennedy, Ambassador Hotel, June 5, 1968.

1968_rfk_0605_hed

Beginning June 1, the Daily Mirror will follow Robert F. Kennedy in the final days of his campaign for the American presidency, from hope and triumph at the polls to tragedy in a cramped corridor in a kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel.

We want you to share your recollections of this day that changed the course of U.S. history. Please share your comments below (all posts must be approved before they are published) or send them to me by e-mail.

Continue reading »

June 6, 1968

June 6, 1968

By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

1968_rfk_0606_page631 The Angels were struggling in 1968. Attendance was down again and the team was playing "like zombies in a fog," Bob Reynolds, the team's president, told The Times' Ross Newhan.

This was only the Angels' third season in Anaheim and Reynolds said they had to draw 1 million fans "if a team is to cut it in a major market." And a new competitor was preparing to open soon.

San Diego would join the National League the following season and Reynolds was asked if the Dodgers supported the new franchise as a way to dilute the Anaheim crowds.

"If this was Walter's idea to hurt the Angels, then he was cutting off his own nose," Reynolds said. "The San Diego attendance won't reduce Angel attendance as much as it will affect the Dodgers' television and radio market, and of course, our own."

Walter, of course, was Walter O'Malley, the Dodger owner who had the Angels as a tenant when Dodger Stadium opened in 1962.  Reynolds stressed that there had been areas of cooperation between the teams. I can't imagine the Dodgers even thinking about the Angels when the National League approved expanding into San Diego. The Angels just weren't on the same level as the Dodgers.

I remember going to Angels' games in the late 1960s and '70s when you could just about pick your seat location on the night of the game. Bad teams meant lousy attendance. Winning would eventually solve a lot of problems.

Amid the gloom of the 1968 season, Reynolds tried to be optimistic. "San Diego has only one direction to draw from and that's north," he said. "The farther north they come, the more it cuts into our territory. However, Anaheim draws from the north, south, east and west. We have many ways to turn and do not expect major problems."

keith.thursby@latimes.com

June 6, 1968

1968_rfk_0606_conrad
Drawing by Paul Conrad / Los Angeles Times
1968_rfk_0606_hed
1968_rfk_0606_cover 1968_0606_gun_2A heavy news day at the Los Angeles Times. Nearly every section carried a story about the death of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, whether it was the mainbar, various sidebars, sports columnists Jim Murray and John Hall, the effect on the stock market or Charles Champlin in Calendar.  In going through the archives, I found images by Times photographers that haven't been seen in 40 years.

Step back into history in the pages of The Times.

Email me


Paul_schrade_1968_rfk_0606_steve__2
Photograph by Steve Fontanini / Los Angeles Times

Shot in the head, union official Paul Schrade lies on the pantry floor at the Ambassador Hotel, one of Sirhan Bishara Sirhan's other victims.



1968_rfk_0606_map

Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-Minn.), left, suspends his campaign. Secret Service agents are sent to guard political candidates. Below right, Jack Smith writes about Kennedy's quiet day leading up to the shooting.
1968_rfk_0606_page3
1968_rfk_0606_page4
 
1968_rfk_0606_page5
1968_rfk_0606_mlk

Below left, Kennedy's injuries and prayers for him among people at Resurrection City in Washington, D.C. Below right, the continuation of Jack Smith's story on Kennedy's evening leading up to the shooting.
1968_rfk_0606_page11 1968_rfk_0606_page12
Below left, Paul Schrade, one of five other people shot by Sirhan, is making progress. A comment after the shooting touches off a search for a woman in a polka-dot dress. Below right, the first look at Sirhan's life.
1968_rfk_0606_page13 1968_rfk_0606_page14
Tom_reddin_1968_rfk_0604_ben_olen_2
Photograph by Ben Olender / Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Police Chief Tom Reddin holds a news conference to discuss the latest developments in the shooting.

Below left, many Arabs viewed Kennedy favorably and said U.S.-Arab relations would have been better if President John F. Kennedy had lived. Sirhan is under guard to prevent anyone from killing him. And an interview with busboy Juan Romero. Below right, a description of the shooting.
1968_rfk_0606_page15_2 1968_rfk_0606_page17

Kennedy_children_1968_0605_george_2
Photograph by George R. Fry / Los Angeles Times

Kennedy's children, Kathleen, Matthew, Michael, Mary Kerry, Christopher and Mary Courtney and the family dog Freckles leave the Beverly Hills Hotel to return to Virginia after Vice President Hubert Humphrey sent a plane to get them.

Below left, California Gov. Ronald Reagan blames the shooting on "demagogism." Below right, Latin America is stunned by the shooting.
1968_rfk_0606_page20 1968_rfk_0606_page29
Patricia_lawford_1968_0606_jim_wh_2
Photograph by Charles O'Rear / Los Angeles Times

Patricia Lawford, Kennedy's sister, is escorted from Good Samaritan Hospital by family friend Jim Whitaker.

Below left, Kennedy receives last rites from the Rev. Thomas Peacha. The hospital chaplain, the Rev. Laurence Joy, also administers last rites. Jimmy Breslin describes the shooting and officials call for tighter gun controls. Below right, Kennedy's victory speech was upbeat, Times staff writer Daryl E. Lembke says.


1968_rfk_0606_page55 1968_rfk_0606_page56
Robert_kennedy_1963_0212_patricia_2
Photograph by Ben Olender / Los Angeles Times

Patricia Lawford picks up her brother, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, at Los Angeles International Airport in a photo dated Feb. 12, 1963. Notice the complete lack of any security personnel.

Below left, hundreds of people gather at Good Samaritan in a vigil for the wounded candidate.

1968_rfk_0606_page57 1968_rfk_0606_flowers
1968_rfk_0606_interlandi
Drawing by Frank Interlandi / Los Angeles Times

Below, The Times' editorial and op-ed pages.

1968_rfk_0606_page58 1968_rfk_0606_page59

Jimmy Breslin, cont'd

1968_rfk_0606_page60
Reactions to shooting

1968_rfk_0606_page62
Juan_romero_1968_rfk_0605_bruce_c_2
Photograph by Bruce Cox / Los Angeles Times

Busboy Juan Romero describes the shooting.

Below left, sports columnist Jim Murray and below right, Charles Maher.


1968_rfk_0606_page63 1968_rfk_0606_page64
John Hall

1968_rfk_0606_page65
Jim Murray, cont'd

1968_rfk_0606_page68
Paul_schrade_rfk_1986_0204_michae_2
Photograph by Michael Edwards / Los Angeles Times

Paul Schrade points to where he was shot in the head by Sirhan, Feb. 4, 1986.

Below, Kennedy's shooting sends the stock market down slightly, with the Dow closing at 907.42. Standard and Poor's 500 closes at 99.89, off 0.49.

1968_rfk_0606_page75 1968_rfk_0606_page77
2007_rfk_cooley_2_2
Photograph by Brian Vander Brug / Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley displays Kennedy's jacket, kept as evidence in Sirhan's trial, in the prosecutor's vault, 2007.

Below, Charles Champlin describes the live TV drama of the Kennedy shooting.

1968_rfk_0606_page83 1968_rfk_0606_page91

June 6, 1938

1938_0606_magnin
1938_0606_page
Above and at left, Rabbi Edgar F. Magnin poses with Jewish ceremonial items brought from Europe by Henry Weinberger and his wife and presented to Wilshire Boulevard Temple. The Times says the donations include Paroches (hangings for the Ark) from the 17th, 18th and early 19th centuries.

Officer Fred A. Browne is scheduled to testify in the trial of Police Capt. Earle Kynette in the Harry Raymond bombing ... Seniors graduate at Occidental College and Mt. St. Mary's College ... And the Knights of Pythias hold an elaborate ceremony at Forest Lawn in tribute to deceased members.
Email me
Connect

Recommended on Facebook


Advertisement

In Case You Missed It...



Recent Posts
The Daily Mirror Is Moving |  June 16, 2011, 2:42 am »
Movieland Mystery Photo |  June 11, 2011, 9:26 am »
Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated] |  June 11, 2011, 8:06 am »
Found on EBay 1909 Mayor's Race |  June 9, 2011, 2:33 pm »


Categories


Archives
 



In Case You Missed It...