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Paul V. Coates -- Confidential File, June 23, 1959

June 23, 2009 |  2:00 pm


 

Confidential File

Spoil-Sport Coates Tilts the Machine


Paul CoatesFor a boy barely out of knickers, I have remarkable mental powers.

Invariably, I can pick out the good guys from the bad guys on western TV.
I'm uncanny at predicting the forest-fire season, and, with rare error, can tell you whether a man's happily married or not after only one casual conversation with his wife.

Where I fall down is politics. 

They confuse me.

Ordinances, issues, propositions -- no matter how simple they're spelled out on the ballot, they have a way of reducing me to a gibbering shadow of my former precocious self.

Take, for example, the one and only item in the city of El Monte's municipal election today. According to the sample ballot I read, it concerns pinball machine pay-offs.

The question before the people is: Should the machines be banned?

June 23, 1959, Mirror Cover A couple of months ago I detailed the fight that some of the town's citizens were having in prodding their local politicians to take action to get the apparatuses out of cafes and bars where school kids were pouring their nickels, dimes, and --these being times of inflation --dollars into them.

I pointed out that the machines weren't fun games. They were paying off. They were thinly disguised, syndicate-controlled slot machines.

I admitted that there was greater sin in the world today. But I just couldn't understand how some small-time politicos would fight so hard to keep this happy little vice within arm's reach of the sons and daughters of their community. Especially when their own police chief begged them to ban the machines, as so many other towns in this area have done.

That's what I said two months ago.

But now, I see by the El Monte Herald, that I'm taking a stand against children. I want to snatch away their toys.

In last Thursday's edition a full-page, paid political ad exposed me for what I really am. The ad read:

June 23, 1959. George Reeves Superman Autopsy "ON TUESDAY, June 23, 1959, VOTE NO * VOTE NO* VOTE NO

"DID YOU KNOW:

"1 -- THAT UNLESS YOU VOTE NO, you cannot own or keep in your home any miniature mechanical bowling game or shuffleboard game?

"2 -- THAT UNLESS YOU VOTE NO, you cannot own or keep in your own home a game where, among other things, a ball is released or thrown by hand on a table with obstructions, even though this game is a TOY and only for you and your children's amusement?

"3 -- THAT UNLESS YOU VOTE NO, you and your children may not own or possess certain games that are for sale in all leading department and toy stores?

"KEEP OUR CITY FREE FROM POLITICS."

It was an unnerving experience for me, after all these years of thinking I liked children, to find out that I really hated them.

So yesterday I telephoned some of the people -- clergymen, PTA leaders and El Monte Betterment Assn. members -- who had conned me into taking such an un-American stand.

Youth and Its Flingding

They assured me that the political ad was a desperation effort by the pinball faction to scare the citizens into voting against the ban. They said the ordinance was carefully worded so as not to deprive El Monte's younger generation of its toys.

They admitted that they were shocked and caught off guard by the clever maneuver, and surprised that the El Monte Herald would print it without checking its veracity.

But I'm afraid, in my case, it's too late. The damage is done.

I've got to go home and face my kids tonight, and they don't understand politics any better than I do.

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