California Supreme Court OKs Dodger Deal, January 14, 1959
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About 4,000 worshipers attend a Perpetual Novena for Our Sorrowful Mother at St. Vibiana's Cathedral. People knelt in the aisles, in the doorways and outside praying for peace and for relief of the poor, The Times says. |
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Here's a signed Batchelder tile of a rabbit that's been listed on EBay. Bids start at $24.95. |
Losing Battle
Perhaps you've noticed that a Data Card for Highway Planning came along with your auto registration renewal.Well, a Van Nuysian (or should it be a Van Nuyser?), who felt it was an invasion of his privacy, at first decided not to mail it. It seemed to him Big Brother was breathing on his neck. He changed his mind, however, and sent it. But in response to question No. 6, as to where he went the previous day and what he did when he got there, he wrote, "From: Home, To: Post Office, Purpose: To mail another silly darned questionnaire." Those rebels against bureaucracy may never win but they're still in there fighting.
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GRIPE, GRIPE, gripe. About the smog, the traffic, the distances, whatnot. Some days that's all a person hears from morning to night.And yet there's David Whalen's experience. He is with the Helen Edwards agency. In recent weeks he has interviewed a dozen qualified local men, asking them to consider a $30,000-a-year job elsewhere. They unanimously were reluctant to leave this horrible place although their earnings averaged only one-third of that amount. Whalen, here from the East less than a year, is impressed.
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A REAL SQUIRMER Celebrities on air or channel Give me acute indigestion When they answer the man on the panel: "I'm glad you asked me that question!" - J.R. MCCARTHY
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OH, I TELL YOU the things writers have to put up with are sometimes aggravating to the point of despair. Gene Couglin let an attorney friend read the manuscript of his new book, "A Grand Old Man." When he retrieved it a card dropped out -- a notice to appear in court on a burglary charge. Fortunately it was for one of the attorney's other clients.
* * YOU KNOW HOW it is when you read something so unbelievable you read it a second time, shake your head and reach for the relaxing pills? Well, there it was the other day in, of all places, the National Daily Reporter, the horse players' scratch sheet.
A
news story stated that a Philadelphia lawyer representing a group he
refused to identify offered to endow an Al Capone Chair in Taxation at
the University of Pennsylvania. The group, he said, wished to correct a
false impression of poor old Al. Penn declined, calling the offer a
hoax. The attorney denied this and said he would now offer the chair to
Princeton. No comment from there. Anyone else get the feeling that the bottom has suddenly dropped out of whatever values still remained in our society? Obviously only one thing remains -- to erect a monument to that heroic battler for human rights, Al Capone. * * SECRET IMPULSE No. 27: To own a china shop and put out a sign, "Bulls Welcome." * * PUBLIC AT LARGE -- To prevent freeway fatigue Al Sisto makes up nonsense rhymes. Sample: Had a lark in Buena Park but nada in La Mirada . . . Someone with a ghoulish sense of humor is sending out cards stating, "To my beloved flock, I shall return. Krishna Venta" . . . If the Russians put a manned rocket in space Joe Sloan knows who'll be in it -- two Hungarians. * * AT RANDOM -- A man who spent a few days up there reports that bridge, the card game, is booming in S.F. Has nothing to do with the Golden Gate and Bay spans, however . . . An Alhambra schoolboy studying English history asked his parents seriously, "Are eggheads the descendants of the Roundheads?" . . . Picture postcard from there states the Holiday Inn Motel in Amarillo has "king size gyramatic mattresses." Those Texans! |
Interview With CoatesRussian Stars on TV ShowBy Paul V. Coates, Mirror News Columnist
When President Eisenhower sits down with Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Ivanovich Mikoyan on Saturday to plan give-and-take with West Berlin and Germany, it'll be Ike who'll have to do the giving.This, Mikoyan made clear to me in an exclusive interview last night. "We have advanced our proposals," the traveling trouble-shooter from the Kremlin said. "Now it is up to your side." About West Berlin The latest Russian "solution" to the current tensions that West Berlin be made an unarmed "free" city until the eastern and western divisions are united, that Red China should have a voice in any final decision and that all foreign troops should be removed within one year. "Do you think that the Berlin dispute could ignite a war between your country and mine?" I asked. Quick Reply The deputy premier threw back an immediate answer. "We," he stressed, "do not want any war." Mikoyan sandwiched his stern warning to the White House between small talk which included the revelation that his daughter-in-law, Zena, was one of theMoiseyey ballet troupe which so successfully visited the United States last year, and a confession that he was becoming slightly weary of the zealous protection offered him by our police and State Department on his current national barnstorming tour. Previous U.S. Tour
"I spent two months traveling around the United States in 1936," he pointed out during our KTTV interview last night. "Your State Department sent one very fine representative to accompany me. "This time," he continued, "let me just say that I would certainly enjoy having a cocktail with each of these men who are assigned to me, individually. "But," he added, "I prefer to travel alone." The deputy premier arrived at the studio for his U.S. television debut in a roaring caravan heavily guarded by Los Angeles police and federal agents. His main concern before air time was what type of commercial would be inserted in the program. Not quite understanding, I explained that they'd probably be automobiles, rugs, food -- some similar products. "I can check and tell you exactly," I said. An aide in the party shrugged. "What we mean," he said, questioningly, "there will be no political advertisements?" Second to Khrushchev Mikoyan also made the suggestion that no questions be asked pertaining to his position as the USSR's No. 2 citizen. "To answer that would put me in the position of being immodest," he explained. But on camera, he was smiling and ready with glib replies. Through his official interpreter, Oleg Troyanovski, son of the Soviet Union's World War II ambassador to the United States, he touched on his childhood, "humble" background, lack of a college education and favorable impression of the American "common man." "I have found that the mass of people this time are as friendly to our country as they were the first time I visited," he said. "The American people want peace." He was favorably impressed by Sen. Humphrey's recent visit to Moscow; he acknowledged U.S. progress in building roads and bridges, and in our industrial plants and housing; and he felt -- a feeling which he's been most vocal on since his arrival here -- that more trade between the United States and Russia could quickly stimulate a better relationship. "There Is No God" Only once did the "goodwill" ambassador permit his careful guard to relax. I asked him: "As a former seminary student, do you feel that Marx was right in saying that religion is the opiate of the people?" "I do," he answered immediately. "At the time of the revolution, I became convinced that there is no God. "I did it in spite of what my teachers tried to tell me." When the television interview was finished, Mikoyan seemed particularly anxious to know if I had been pleased with it. Interview Success "Tell him," I told the interpreter, "that I thought it was a very successful interview, and that I certainly am pleased with it." ![]() The interpreter translated my remark to the deputy premier. Fingering the gold star on his lapel -- a medal which he received in World War II for his efforts "in supplying the front" -- he considered it. Then he said something in Russian toTroyanovski. Russian Adieu "Mr. Mikoyan thanks you," the interpreter told me. "But he would like to know if you are just saying this to be kind, or if you really mean it." "Please tell the deputy premier," I replied, "that I really mean it. I don't say things that I don't mean just to be nice." The information was duly reported to Mr. Mikoyan. He received it, beamed, got up, shook my hand and said -- I guess -- the Russian equivalent of "Good night." |
Keith Thursby writes: Ned Cronin was a columnist at The Times until his death in 1958 and his work has been featured often in the Daily Mirror. His son, Jerry, recently discovered the blog and we started an e-mail conversation. I asked him if he’d be willing to share some memories of growing up in Southern California and his dad. Here is a recent e-mail: I have been thinking about writing a book about growing up in L.A. at that period of time in the days of the values of Ozzie and Harriet. Coincidentally, my mother's name was Harriet and she was also a housewife like the role Harriet Nelson portrayed on their television show.In those days, the male was the breadwinner and the female was the domestic engineer in charge of running the household. This created a major problem when my dad died when he was 48 years old. My mother had never had to work and I was their only child going to Loyola. My father's death created a financial strain on my mother so she sold our house near Olympic and La Cienega and we moved downtown to a small studio apartment where I slept on a sofa and she slept on a cot next to the stove. She went to Sawyer's Business School to become a secretary, which took a year. She finished in June at the end of my school year and we moved back to the hometown of my father and mother in Pendleton, Ore. My father was a workaholic. He wrote a humorous daily column about sports figures, but he also wrote columns seven days a week under the byline of Dick Kidson called the Farmers Market Today promoting the different businesses at the classic landmark. When I was 14, I worked for Magee's cutting up fresh fruit for their salads in a warehouse across the street on Fairfax near Canter's Delicatessen. Then, during the other vacations from school, I was promoted to washing pots and pans in the rear of their stall at their main location. I was the only non-Hispanic and learned supplementary vocabulary words that I could not use in my Spanish I class. The quality of food has not changed in 50 years. I mention the Farmers Market because my father used to take me with him on occasion on his daily rounds. He would go the Farmers Market and interview a vendor. We would get gasoline at the Gilmore's first Self Serve gas station in the country next door. He would sometimes go visit his friend, Danny Goodman, at Gilmore Field, which was the home of the Hollywood Stars baseball team. Danny Goodman was a generous man who always sent crates of sodas over to our house. Those were the days of delicious sugary Nehi soda. When the Dodgers moved to L.A. in 1958, the year my father died, Danny Goodman was in charge of concessions at Dodger Stadium. The rest is history considering how much the organization makes a year in concessions. He had years of experience promoting events at Gilmore Field. The press box at Gilmore Field was incredible and I don't mean that in a good way. You had to walk across a catwalk above the fans in order to get to the tiny press box. However, it was always filled with hot dogs and drinks and Danny knew how to take care of the sports writers. The most excitement occurred when the Hollywood Stars played the crosstown rival, the Los Angeles Angels. It was an insane atmosphere. In one game, the Angels manager promised a cashmere suit to the first Angels player to start a fight with a member of the opposing team. If you were a witness to this mayhem, it was the best entertainment in the city. By the fifth inning the fans were drunk and huge fights would erupt right underneath the press box. People would hurl cups of beer into each other's faces. It doesn't get any better than that. The Pan-Pacific was another venue that my father visited frequently. He always gave me tickets to take my girlfriends to the Ice Capades and Ice Follies. It was more fun to go see the Harlem Globetrotters and my father got me an autographed picture of their "Clown" Goose Tatum who had a 7-foot arm span from fingertip to fingertip. I also enjoyed the Sportsmen's Show where I had my first trout fishing experience out of a stocked tank. They would always have a daredevil climb up a narrow tall ladder and dive into a 10-foot tank. Getting back to the routine of accompanying my father, we would then go down 6th Street toward downtown. His first stop was a visit to his doctor, Joe Zeiler, whom he gave boxing tickets and racetrack tickets in exchange for medical services. He got into trouble once when he took the season pass tickets to Santa Anita from another employee's mailbox at the Daily News and gave them to his doctor. The employee raised a stink and called the police not knowing that it was my dad who took the tickets. His doctor was arrested when he showed at Santa Anita to enter the horse races. Needless to say, it was embarrassing for everyone involved. My father had cirrhosis of the liver, an occupational hazard of Irish sports writers in those days. My almost died once and was saved when the UCLA football team donated 10 pints of blood to save him. Somehow, his doctor kept him alive despite many relapses. My father would take me to the Daily News at Pico and Los Angeles streets. There was such a cast of characters at the Daily News. They were talented and very funny despite working in deplorable conditions. Those were the days when you couldn't simply e-mail or fax in your columns. As a result, they spent a lot of time interacting with each other with great camaraderie. The sports department consisted of a bunch of hard drinking rowdies. My father's primary goal in my upbringing was to have me become a professional football player. He facilitated this process by taking me to UCLA football practices where his friend, Red Sanders, gave me advice and my own blocking dummy to take home and set up in my backyard. I am an only child so there was not much resistance when I would hit it. Their punter taught me how to punt a football. He set up an appointment with "Toeless" Ben Agajanian, the famous kicker from the New York Giants. It was embarrassing because my father expected me to kick 50-yard field goals and I was so nervous that I would top the football and it would not go airborne but bounce down the field. Ben's brother, J.C. Agajanian, was a famous race car owner with his famed No. 98 race cars. The next arranged event took place on the football field of Los Angeles High School. My father has set up a date with Hall of Fame Quarterback, Bobby Lane, who led the Detroit Lions to their last championship for 50 years. I nervously got out of my car and spied Bobby Lane running a lap around the track and a bag of footballs next to a bench. He told me to run a fast lap to warm up. I was a sprinter on the track team but not in shape to race a record breaking 440. I was breathing hard before we even started the workout. He then had me run patterns for 30 minutes until I thought I was going to drop dead from exhaustion. He was a party animal who kept himself in great shape. He even challenged the boxer, Art Aragon, to see who had more endurance by showing up early one morning when Aragon did his roadwork. He outlasted Aragon.I had never seen such precise throwing accuracy in my life. Of course, he always gave me a substantial lead to make me run harder to make the catch. It was a great experience. I just wish that I had not been so nearsighted that I could barely see the ball. To continue the theme of my apprenticeship to football, my father decided when I was 14 that I was not mean enough. It is difficult to take an easygoing person and turn them into "Mean Joe Green". Nevertheless, he decided that I needed to get toughened up by making an appointment with one of his wrestler friends, Sandor Szabo, who had a wrestling school near Westwood Boulevard and San Vicente. As usual, my dad was playing golf on this particular Saturday so he made my mother take me to the gym. All the other guys had scars all over their faces and bodies and looked as if they were fugitives found in a rogue's gallery. Most of them were in their 20s with aspirations to become professional wrestlers which paid good money in those days. I tried to retreat to the area in back and try to avoid having to go into the ring with one of hoodlums. Finally, I was spotted and forced to get into the ring. After 10 minutes of being thrown all over the ring and mat burns all over my face, I was allowed to get out of the ring. I had to go there 3 times and was starting to get a cauliflower ear, so my mother convinced my dad that it was inconvenient for her to drive me over there and wait for an hour while I got the crap beat out of me. Anytime my dad invited anyone over to the house, I would go hide in my room. You would think that I would be anxious to meet a celebrity and enjoy the experience. The reason for my reticence was that he would introduce people to me, I would shake their hands, and then he would make me do push ups in front of them to show them how athletic I was. He would have them punch me in the stomach to show the strength of my stomach muscles. The worst experience would be when he would take me to the Wilshire Country Club to accompany him while he played golf.The first time I went, I looked forward to the event because it was fun to ride around in the golf cart which I might be able to drive. The actual fun ceased after about the 4th hole. My father would then stop the cart and make me get out. He would then take off in the cart and make me run full speed to catch it to illustrate to his friends that I could run fast. When he took me to a celebrity golf tournament where he was invited to play, he made Dean Martin feel my bicep. I could go on but you get the idea. You now know the "Good, Bad, and the Ugly." Unfortunately, two years after he died, I received a football scholarship from Stanford and had an unusual experience that had an impact on why I did not realize my father's dream. It was winter term of my freshman year and I was playing rugby to stay in shape as well as lifting weights. I was on my way to the weight room when I ran into my football coach with whom I had no contact since the season ended. He didn't even provide comfort to the players after one of my teammates shot and killed himself in the soccer field. Nevertheless, I put a smile on my face and greeted him. When he finally got next to me, instead of shaking my hand, he grabbed my bicep and asked me if I was lifting weights and working on building up my strength. At that point, I felt as if I were a slab of beef on a hook in a Rocky movie. I had a great Spring Alumni Game to prove to myself that I could play linebacker aggressively and then told them that I would not be back the following year. I played rugby at the University of Oregon for fun and was selected to be a participant in the University People to People Student Ambassador Program in Western Europe. This experience changed my life and I joined the Peace Corps and served two years in Colombia promoting Community Development. I have traveled throughout Europe, South America , Mexico and the U.S. I have been in charge of all the services at ARCO's Prudhoe Bay Operations Center in the Arctic and in charge of Technology for all 25 K-12 schools in Watts. I broke the trend among Cronin men to not die in their 40s. That is not to say that I am in the pillar of good health as I had a heart attack 18 months ago and died twice after a bypass operation. I am going to be 67 on December 12th so I may not have achieved fame as an athlete but I have had an interesting life filled with unique challenges and rewards. Jerry Cronin |
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How surprising was it? Here's the game according to Jim Murray: "On Sunday afternoon, the canary ate the cat. The mailman bit the police dog. The minnow chased the shark out of its waters. The missionaries swallowed the cannibals. The rowboat rammed the battleship. The mouse roared, and the lion jumped on the chair and began to scream for help." -- Keith Thursby |
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A 1956 Thomas Bros. Guide for Los Angeles and Orange counties has turned up on EBay. These are useful for anyone interested in Los Angeles history. Bidding starts at $13.99. |
Here's a story by legendary Times political reporter Dick Bergholz, who died in 2000. From his obituary: When Richard Nixon lost his race for California governor and delivered his famous promise, “You won’t have Nixon to kick around anymore,” every reporter in the room knew who “you” was. It was Richard Bergholz. Read more >>> |
Taxing Times
A young lady singer is very angry at the Internal Revenue Service. Her federal income tax last year came to around $380. She had paid all but about $70. Christmas week the revenuers attached the amount from her checking account in a Hollywood bank. She received no notification that this was to be done. In fact, she learned of it from the bank after the money was taken. Furthermore, she was embarrassed as she had checks written for the money. She thinks the action is an outrage, an invasion of privacy and discrimination against people in the entertainment business. Now the rebuttal.
A PERSON whose
income tax payments are delinquent is notified that he owes the money.
Ten days later, if it has not been paid, the revenue service has the
authority to collect it, under Section 6331, Levy andDistraint, Public Law 591. Distraint means to seize or confiscate. Notice is given that it is going to be seized or when. Revenue men are accustomed to being called Uncle Scrooge and worse but they insist they do not deliberately create hardships for debtors. On the contrary, they say when they find leniency is in order they give debtors every opportunity to come clean. They wish they received more co-operation. However, the rule book is very decisive, so beware. * * ONLY IN L.A. -- A woman attending a funeral a few days ago was introduced to another woman who, after a few minutes of solemn conversation about the deceased, asked bluntly, "Would you like to buy two lots here?" The first mourner, aghast at the impropriety of the question, replied, "No, but I'm curious- why do you want to sell them?" "Well, for one thing, I've decided to be cremated," was the serious reply, "but the main reason is that I need the money." * * SILENT MARCHERS I've taken in my last parade, I find it too dismaying. It makes no difference where I stand, That's where the band stops playing. - ROBERTA MORGAN * *
No beating around the bush, just a nice, clean, honest bite. It can almost be assumed that normalcy has returned. * * ANY TIME NOW Al Gordon, radio newsman expects to learn that his son has been depicted all over Russia as an example of American incorrigibility. Not long ago the boy got into a fight with another boy at Selma Avenue School. As a teacher tried to stop them the Russian social security delegation, visiting L.A. at the time, walked in and one of the group with a camera quickly snapped the picture. * * AT 2:30 P.M. the other day Bob Cushnir went into a Vermont Avenue bank to cash a $500 check. At first the answer was no but six tellers scraped the bottoms of their tills and finally made it. The explanation is simple. Since the market strike more people are cashing checks at banks. Along about closing time depletion sets in. * * WHILE IN San Francisco last week Buddy Gorman stopped in the downtown section at a stand emblazoned with "Going Out of Business" and "Everything Must Go" signs. He selected a hand-carved object priced at $5.99 but the man said he could have it for $1.50. Buddy asked how come the big markdown. "I'm closing up," the owner beamed happily. "I just finished my parole!" * * LOOSE ENDS -- A reader suggests the Society for the Elimination of Obsolete Signs take up at the next meeting the "No on 16" and other political stickers still on some cars . . . What baffles Oscar Kantner is that the horses in TV westerns are never given a drink or the old nosebag after a three-day trek through the desert . . . Among things that bore Walt Hackett: The twin fins and the Finn twins. |
CONFIDENTIAL FILEBatista Death Plot Laid Here
When Fulgencio Batista fled Cuba last week, a fantastic plot by an American war hero to assassinate the dictator died in the planning. The initial secret meeting between the much-decorated World War II Marine and agents of rebel chieftain Fidel Castro was held here in Los Angeles 14 months ago. And the reason the scheme was never enacted was because of the indecision of the rebels themselves. Details of the plan were revealed to me today. The ex-Marine "soldier of fortune" who contacted Castro's 26th of July movement here and proposed to shoot Batista personally is Guy Louis Gabaldon, a Silver Star winner for valor on the Island of Saipan. According to his award citation, Gabaldon, 32, captured more than 1,000 Japanese in the fighting. Then, still in his teens, he conducted a series of lone-wolf forays into enemy territory to bring back prisoners before he eventually was wounded and evacuated. In 1957, a network television show was devoted to his exploits and currently a motion picture is being planned on his life. The assassination plot which Gabaldon presented to the Castro agents was basically this:
He
would go to Cuba as a "tourist." Capitalizing on his "war hero"
reputation, he would attempt to get "in" with military and civil
officials in Batista's government and, finally, to reach the
well-guarded dictator himself. Maps and diagrams of Batista's offices and his residence were reportedly brought from Havana to Los Angeles by rebel couriers and studied in great detail at meetings between Gabaldon and Castro agents. Additional plans which laid out the route by which Gabaldon would reach Havana, the hotel where he would register, and methods of his keeping contact with the underground were also reportedly ready to be put into effect. For a period last year, there was almost daily contact between movement leaders in Cuba, Miami and Los Angeles. Why the rebels never gave the scheme the "go" signal still isn't known. One problem, supposedly, was money. It's possible that Gabaldon wanted more than the rebels felt they could afford. Then there's the question of what effect Batista's assassination by a foreigner would have on the Cuban people. And would the dictator's death automatically assure Castro's rise to power? At one point, an alternative plan, to be masterminded by Gabaldon and carried out by two fanatics willing to sacrifice their lives for the rebel cause was also allegedly discussed. Reared in East Los Angeles Gabaldon, one of seven children, was brought up in East Los Angeles. At the age of 11, he left home. He was raised by the parents of a Japanese-American school friend of his until, in 1942, they were herded into an internment camp. Then, barely tall enough to meet the height requirement, he enlisted in the Marines. The knowledge of Japanese which he had picked up from his "foster parents" aided him immeasurably in his one-man raids on the enemy. After receiving the Silver Star for his "impossible" achievements, he was quoted: "I will keep going out and hoping I'd get killed and get a medal, so they could send it home to show people I did something good." Following his discharge, he worked variously as a fisherman, truck driver, pilot, TV repairman, farmer and interpreter. In addition to English, he speaks Japanese, Russian and Spanish. Married, with three children, he is self-employed in television repair work and charter flying. |
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